National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, Australian National University, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia.
Center for Global Health Science and Security, Georgetown University, Washington, DC, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2024 Aug 29;19(8):e0300077. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0300077. eCollection 2024.
The COVID-19 pandemic has raised concerns about the global capacity for timely outbreak reporting. However, gaps remain in our understanding of barriers and enablers to outbreak reporting, particularly at the local level. Field epidemiology training program (FETP) fellows often participate in the outbreak reporting process as part of both their training and the public health roles they assume after graduating; they therefore represent a potentially valuable source of information for better understanding these barriers and enablers. This study will investigate the barriers and enablers to outbreak reporting through a mixed methods approach that will encompass a review of the existing literature as well as surveying and interviewing FETP trainees and graduates from the Asia-Pacific region.
This study will begin with a scoping review of the literature to identify existing evidence of barriers and enablers to outbreak reporting. Based on our findings from the scoping review, we will administer a survey to FETP trainees and graduates from the World Health Organization Western Pacific and South-East Asian Regions and conduct interviews with a subset of survey respondents to investigate the survey findings in more detail. We will summarise and compare the survey results according to various country-level economic and political indicators, and we will employ thematic analysis to evaluate the interview responses. Based on the findings from the scoping review, survey, and interviews, we will construct a model to comprehensively describe the various barriers and enablers to outbreak reporting.
This study will contribute to our understanding of the determinants of outbreak reporting across several geographic, political, and economic contexts by eliciting the viewpoints and experiences of persons involved with outbreak reporting, particularly at the local level. This information will help improve the outbreak reporting process, allowing for more timely reporting and helping prevent future outbreaks from becoming pandemics.
COVID-19 大流行引发了人们对及时报告疫情的全球能力的担忧。然而,我们对于疫情报告的障碍和促进因素的理解仍存在差距,尤其是在地方层面。现场流行病学培训计划(FETP)的学员通常作为培训的一部分,以及毕业后承担的公共卫生角色,参与疫情报告过程;因此,他们是更好地了解这些障碍和促进因素的潜在有价值的信息来源。本研究将通过混合方法研究调查疫情报告的障碍和促进因素,该方法将包括对现有文献的回顾,以及对来自亚太地区的 FETP 学员和毕业生进行调查和访谈。
本研究将首先进行文献范围的回顾,以确定现有关于疫情报告障碍和促进因素的证据。根据我们从范围回顾中得出的发现,我们将向世界卫生组织西太平洋和东南亚地区的 FETP 学员和毕业生进行调查,并对调查受访者中的一部分进行访谈,以更详细地调查调查结果。我们将根据各种国家层面的经济和政治指标总结和比较调查结果,并采用主题分析来评估访谈回应。根据范围回顾、调查和访谈的结果,我们将构建一个模型,全面描述疫情报告的各种障碍和促进因素。
本研究通过征求参与疫情报告的人员的观点和经验,特别是在地方层面,将有助于我们了解在几个地理、政治和经济背景下疫情报告的决定因素。这些信息将有助于改善疫情报告过程,实现更及时的报告,并帮助防止未来的疫情成为大流行。