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Evaluating the Variation on Public Health’s Perceived Field Need of Communicable Disease Reports

OBJECTIVE: To assess communicable disease report fields required by public health practitioners and evaluate the variation in the perceived utility of these fields. INTRODUCTION: Communicable disease surveillance is a core Public Health function. Many diseases must be reported to state and federal a...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kirbiyik, Uzay, Gamache, Roland, Dixon, Brian E., Grannis, Shaun
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: University of Illinois at Chicago Library 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3692816/
Descripción
Sumario:OBJECTIVE: To assess communicable disease report fields required by public health practitioners and evaluate the variation in the perceived utility of these fields. INTRODUCTION: Communicable disease surveillance is a core Public Health function. Many diseases must be reported to state and federal agencies (1). To manage and adjudicate such cases, public health stakeholders gather various data elements. Since cases are identified in various healthcare settings, not all information sought by public health is available (2) resulting in varied field completeness, which affects the measured and perceived data quality. To better understand this variation, we evaluated public health practitioners’ perceived value of these fields to initiate or complete communicable disease reports. METHODS: We chose four diseases: Histoplasmosis, acute hepatitis B, hepatitis C and salmonella. We asked public health practitioners from Mar-ion County Health Department (MCHD) of Indianapolis to list the fields they felt were necessary when submitting a communicable disease report. We then asked them to evaluate those fields using the following criteria: Required – A critical case attribute, when missing or unknown, would make the task of initiating and/or closing a case impossible or exceedingly difficult. Desired – A case attribute allowing more complete epidemiologic profiles to be developed but, if missing, would not prohibit initiating and/or closing a case. Not applicable – A case attribute that is not usually collected to initiate and/or close a case for the particular condition. To quantify the need for the fields, we assigned a number to each response as follows: 0 - Not applicable 1 - Desired  2- Required We summed the numbers for each field for each disease and created a table for the perceived need of that field (table 1). RESULTS: The perceived needs table showed a difference between the fields needed to initiate or close a case. Moreover the perceived need for fields varied by disease as well. To assess the difference in perceived needs, we calculated the standard deviation of the fields (table 2). CONCLUSIONS: Data quality is essential, not only for research but to support routine public health practice as well. Many factors affect data quality; one of them is perceived need of the information by Public Health Practitioners. Despite working with public health stakeholders from the same organization we observed variation in their perceived needs for these fields to initiate or close a communicable case. These results highlight another source of the problem regarding health information quality and its goodness of fit issues.