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Conceptual framework of public health surveillance and action and its application in health sector reform

BACKGROUND: Because both public health surveillance and action are crucial, the authors initiated meetings at regional and national levels to assess and reform surveillance and action systems. These meetings emphasized improved epidemic preparedness, epidemic response, and highlighted standardized a...

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Autores principales: McNabb, Scott JN, Chungong, Stella, Ryan, Mike, Wuhib, Tadesse, Nsubuga, Peter, Alemu, Wondi, Carande-Kulis, Vilma, Rodier, Guenael
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2002
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC65598/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11846889
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-2-2
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author McNabb, Scott JN
Chungong, Stella
Ryan, Mike
Wuhib, Tadesse
Nsubuga, Peter
Alemu, Wondi
Carande-Kulis, Vilma
Rodier, Guenael
author_facet McNabb, Scott JN
Chungong, Stella
Ryan, Mike
Wuhib, Tadesse
Nsubuga, Peter
Alemu, Wondi
Carande-Kulis, Vilma
Rodier, Guenael
author_sort McNabb, Scott JN
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Because both public health surveillance and action are crucial, the authors initiated meetings at regional and national levels to assess and reform surveillance and action systems. These meetings emphasized improved epidemic preparedness, epidemic response, and highlighted standardized assessment and reform. METHODS: To standardize assessments, the authors designed a conceptual framework for surveillance and action that categorized the framework into eight core and four support activities, measured with indicators. RESULTS: In application, country-level reformers measure both the presence and performance of the six core activities comprising public health surveillance (detection, registration, reporting, confirmation, analyses, and feedback) and acute (epidemic-type) and planned (management-type) responses composing the two core activities of public health action. Four support activities – communications, supervision, training, and resource provision – enable these eight core processes. National, multiple systems can then be concurrently assessed at each level for effectiveness, technical efficiency, and cost. CONCLUSIONS: This approach permits a cost analysis, highlights areas amenable to integration, and provides focused intervention. The final public health model becomes a district-focused, action-oriented integration of core and support activities with enhanced effectiveness, technical efficiency, and cost savings. This reform approach leads to sustained capacity development by an empowerment strategy defined as facilitated, process-oriented action steps transforming staff and the system.
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spelling pubmed-655982002-02-22 Conceptual framework of public health surveillance and action and its application in health sector reform McNabb, Scott JN Chungong, Stella Ryan, Mike Wuhib, Tadesse Nsubuga, Peter Alemu, Wondi Carande-Kulis, Vilma Rodier, Guenael BMC Public Health Research Article BACKGROUND: Because both public health surveillance and action are crucial, the authors initiated meetings at regional and national levels to assess and reform surveillance and action systems. These meetings emphasized improved epidemic preparedness, epidemic response, and highlighted standardized assessment and reform. METHODS: To standardize assessments, the authors designed a conceptual framework for surveillance and action that categorized the framework into eight core and four support activities, measured with indicators. RESULTS: In application, country-level reformers measure both the presence and performance of the six core activities comprising public health surveillance (detection, registration, reporting, confirmation, analyses, and feedback) and acute (epidemic-type) and planned (management-type) responses composing the two core activities of public health action. Four support activities – communications, supervision, training, and resource provision – enable these eight core processes. National, multiple systems can then be concurrently assessed at each level for effectiveness, technical efficiency, and cost. CONCLUSIONS: This approach permits a cost analysis, highlights areas amenable to integration, and provides focused intervention. The final public health model becomes a district-focused, action-oriented integration of core and support activities with enhanced effectiveness, technical efficiency, and cost savings. This reform approach leads to sustained capacity development by an empowerment strategy defined as facilitated, process-oriented action steps transforming staff and the system. BioMed Central 2002-01-29 /pmc/articles/PMC65598/ /pubmed/11846889 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-2-2 Text en Copyright © 2002 McNabb et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article: verbatim copying and redistribution of this article are permitted in all media for any purpose, provided this notice is preserved along with the article's original URL.
spellingShingle Research Article
McNabb, Scott JN
Chungong, Stella
Ryan, Mike
Wuhib, Tadesse
Nsubuga, Peter
Alemu, Wondi
Carande-Kulis, Vilma
Rodier, Guenael
Conceptual framework of public health surveillance and action and its application in health sector reform
title Conceptual framework of public health surveillance and action and its application in health sector reform
title_full Conceptual framework of public health surveillance and action and its application in health sector reform
title_fullStr Conceptual framework of public health surveillance and action and its application in health sector reform
title_full_unstemmed Conceptual framework of public health surveillance and action and its application in health sector reform
title_short Conceptual framework of public health surveillance and action and its application in health sector reform
title_sort conceptual framework of public health surveillance and action and its application in health sector reform
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC65598/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11846889
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-2-2
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