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Enhanced surveillance for the Third United Nations Conference on Small Island Developing States, Apia, Samoa, September 2014

The Ministry of Health in Samoa, in partnership with the Pacific Community, successfully implemented enhanced surveillance for the high-profile Third United Nations Conference on Small Island Developing States held concurrently with the popular local Teuila festival during a widespread chikungunya o...

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Autores principales: White, Paul, Saketa, Salanieta, Durand, Alexis, Vaai-Nielsen, Saine, Leong-Lui, Tile Ah, Naseri, Take, Matalima, Ailuai, Amosa, Filipina, Mercier, Alize, Lepers, Christelle, Lal, Vjesh, Wojcik, Richard, Lewis, Sheri, Roth, Adam, Souares, Yvan, Merilles, Onofre Edwin, Hoy, Damian
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: World Health Organization 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5375095/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28409055
http://dx.doi.org/10.5365/WPSAR.2016.7.4.002
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author White, Paul
Saketa, Salanieta
Durand, Alexis
Vaai-Nielsen, Saine
Leong-Lui, Tile Ah
Naseri, Take
Matalima, Ailuai
Amosa, Filipina
Mercier, Alize
Lepers, Christelle
Lal, Vjesh
Wojcik, Richard
Lewis, Sheri
Roth, Adam
Souares, Yvan
Merilles, Onofre Edwin
Hoy, Damian
author_facet White, Paul
Saketa, Salanieta
Durand, Alexis
Vaai-Nielsen, Saine
Leong-Lui, Tile Ah
Naseri, Take
Matalima, Ailuai
Amosa, Filipina
Mercier, Alize
Lepers, Christelle
Lal, Vjesh
Wojcik, Richard
Lewis, Sheri
Roth, Adam
Souares, Yvan
Merilles, Onofre Edwin
Hoy, Damian
author_sort White, Paul
collection PubMed
description The Ministry of Health in Samoa, in partnership with the Pacific Community, successfully implemented enhanced surveillance for the high-profile Third United Nations Conference on Small Island Developing States held concurrently with the popular local Teuila festival during a widespread chikungunya outbreak in September 2014. Samoa’s weekly syndromic surveillance system was expanded to 12 syndromes and 10 sentinel sites from four syndromes and seven sentinel sites; sites included the national hospital, four private health clinics and three national health service clinics. Daily situation reports were produced and were disseminated through PacNet (the e-mail alert and communication tool of the Pacific Public Health Surveillance Network) together with daily prioritized line lists of syndrome activity to facilitate rapid response and investigation by the Samoan EpiNet team. Standard operating procedures for surveillance and response were introduced, together with a sustainability plan, including a monitoring and evaluation framework, to facilitate the transition of the mass gathering surveillance improvements to routine surveillance. The enhanced surveillance performed well, providing vital disease early warning and health security assurance. A total of 2386 encounters and 708 syndrome cases were reported. Influenza-like illness was the most frequently seen syndrome (17%). No new infectious disease outbreaks were recorded. The experience emphasized: (1) the need for a long lead time to pilot the surveillance enhancements and to maximize their sustainability; (2) the importance of good communication between key stakeholders; and (3) having sufficient staff dedicated to both surveillance and response.
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spelling pubmed-53750952017-04-13 Enhanced surveillance for the Third United Nations Conference on Small Island Developing States, Apia, Samoa, September 2014 White, Paul Saketa, Salanieta Durand, Alexis Vaai-Nielsen, Saine Leong-Lui, Tile Ah Naseri, Take Matalima, Ailuai Amosa, Filipina Mercier, Alize Lepers, Christelle Lal, Vjesh Wojcik, Richard Lewis, Sheri Roth, Adam Souares, Yvan Merilles, Onofre Edwin Hoy, Damian Western Pac Surveill Response J Non theme issue The Ministry of Health in Samoa, in partnership with the Pacific Community, successfully implemented enhanced surveillance for the high-profile Third United Nations Conference on Small Island Developing States held concurrently with the popular local Teuila festival during a widespread chikungunya outbreak in September 2014. Samoa’s weekly syndromic surveillance system was expanded to 12 syndromes and 10 sentinel sites from four syndromes and seven sentinel sites; sites included the national hospital, four private health clinics and three national health service clinics. Daily situation reports were produced and were disseminated through PacNet (the e-mail alert and communication tool of the Pacific Public Health Surveillance Network) together with daily prioritized line lists of syndrome activity to facilitate rapid response and investigation by the Samoan EpiNet team. Standard operating procedures for surveillance and response were introduced, together with a sustainability plan, including a monitoring and evaluation framework, to facilitate the transition of the mass gathering surveillance improvements to routine surveillance. The enhanced surveillance performed well, providing vital disease early warning and health security assurance. A total of 2386 encounters and 708 syndrome cases were reported. Influenza-like illness was the most frequently seen syndrome (17%). No new infectious disease outbreaks were recorded. The experience emphasized: (1) the need for a long lead time to pilot the surveillance enhancements and to maximize their sustainability; (2) the importance of good communication between key stakeholders; and (3) having sufficient staff dedicated to both surveillance and response. World Health Organization 2017-02-06 /pmc/articles/PMC5375095/ /pubmed/28409055 http://dx.doi.org/10.5365/WPSAR.2016.7.4.002 Text en (c) 2017 The authors; licensee World Health Organization. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution IGO License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/legalcode), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. In any reproduction of this article there should not be any suggestion that WHO or this article endorse any specific organization or products. The use of the WHO logo is not permitted. This notice should be preserved along with the article's original URL.
spellingShingle Non theme issue
White, Paul
Saketa, Salanieta
Durand, Alexis
Vaai-Nielsen, Saine
Leong-Lui, Tile Ah
Naseri, Take
Matalima, Ailuai
Amosa, Filipina
Mercier, Alize
Lepers, Christelle
Lal, Vjesh
Wojcik, Richard
Lewis, Sheri
Roth, Adam
Souares, Yvan
Merilles, Onofre Edwin
Hoy, Damian
Enhanced surveillance for the Third United Nations Conference on Small Island Developing States, Apia, Samoa, September 2014
title Enhanced surveillance for the Third United Nations Conference on Small Island Developing States, Apia, Samoa, September 2014
title_full Enhanced surveillance for the Third United Nations Conference on Small Island Developing States, Apia, Samoa, September 2014
title_fullStr Enhanced surveillance for the Third United Nations Conference on Small Island Developing States, Apia, Samoa, September 2014
title_full_unstemmed Enhanced surveillance for the Third United Nations Conference on Small Island Developing States, Apia, Samoa, September 2014
title_short Enhanced surveillance for the Third United Nations Conference on Small Island Developing States, Apia, Samoa, September 2014
title_sort enhanced surveillance for the third united nations conference on small island developing states, apia, samoa, september 2014
topic Non theme issue
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5375095/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28409055
http://dx.doi.org/10.5365/WPSAR.2016.7.4.002
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