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Sensitivity of an international notification system for wildlife diseases: A case study using the OIE‐WAHIS data on tularemia

The World Organization for Animal Health (OIE) has recently developed a Wildlife Health Framework to respond to the need of members to manage the risk from emerging diseases at the animal–human–ecosystem interface. One of its objectives is to improve surveillance systems, early detection and notific...

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Autores principales: Fanelli, Angela, Awada, Lina, Caceres‐Soto, Paula, Diaz, François, Grillo, Tiggy, Gizo, Itlala, Hamilton, Keith, Rolez, Christine Leon, Melens, Peter, Morales, Roberta, Mur, Lina, Muset, Sophie, Nake, Lorenz, Thompson, Lesa, Wannous, Chadia, Tizzani, Paolo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9306881/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35092712
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/zph.12916
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author Fanelli, Angela
Awada, Lina
Caceres‐Soto, Paula
Diaz, François
Grillo, Tiggy
Gizo, Itlala
Hamilton, Keith
Rolez, Christine Leon
Melens, Peter
Morales, Roberta
Mur, Lina
Muset, Sophie
Nake, Lorenz
Thompson, Lesa
Wannous, Chadia
Tizzani, Paolo
author_facet Fanelli, Angela
Awada, Lina
Caceres‐Soto, Paula
Diaz, François
Grillo, Tiggy
Gizo, Itlala
Hamilton, Keith
Rolez, Christine Leon
Melens, Peter
Morales, Roberta
Mur, Lina
Muset, Sophie
Nake, Lorenz
Thompson, Lesa
Wannous, Chadia
Tizzani, Paolo
author_sort Fanelli, Angela
collection PubMed
description The World Organization for Animal Health (OIE) has recently developed a Wildlife Health Framework to respond to the need of members to manage the risk from emerging diseases at the animal–human–ecosystem interface. One of its objectives is to improve surveillance systems, early detection and notification of wildlife diseases. Members share information on disease occurrence by reporting through the OIE World Animal Health Information System (OIE‐WAHIS—formerly known as ‘WAHIS’). To evaluate the capacity of a surveillance system to detect disease events, it is important to quantify the gap between all known events and those officially notified to the OIE. This study used capture–recapture analysis to estimate the sensitivity of the OIE‐WAHIS system for a OIE‐listed wildlife disease by comparing information from publicly available sources to identify undetected events. This article presents a case study of the occurrence of tularemia in lagomorphs among selected North American and European countries during the period 2014–2019. First, an analysis using three data sources (OIE‐WAHIS, ProMED, WHO‐EIOS [Epidemic Intelligence from Open Sources]) was conducted. Subsequent analysis then explored the model integrating information from a fourth source (scientific literature collected in PubMed). Two models were built to evaluate both the sensitivity of the OIE‐WAHIS using media reports (ProMED and WHO‐EIOS), which is likely to represent current closer to real‐time events, and published scientific data, which is more useful for retrospective analysis. Using the three‐source approach, the predicted number of tularemia events was 93 (95% CI: 75–114), with an OIE‐WAHIS sensitivity of 90%. In the four‐source approach, the number of predicted events increased to 120 (95% CI: 99–143), dropping the sensitivity of the OIE‐WAHIS to 70%. The results indicate a good sensitivity of the OIE‐WAHIS system using the three‐source approach, but lower sensitivity when including information from the scientific literature. Further analysis should be undertaken to identify diseases and regions for which international reporting presents a low sensitivity. This will enable evaluation and prioritization of underreported OIE‐listed wildlife diseases and identify areas of focus as part of the Wildlife Health Framework. This study also highlights the need for stronger collaborations between academia and National Veterinary Services to enhance surveillance systems for notifiable diseases.
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spelling pubmed-93068812022-07-28 Sensitivity of an international notification system for wildlife diseases: A case study using the OIE‐WAHIS data on tularemia Fanelli, Angela Awada, Lina Caceres‐Soto, Paula Diaz, François Grillo, Tiggy Gizo, Itlala Hamilton, Keith Rolez, Christine Leon Melens, Peter Morales, Roberta Mur, Lina Muset, Sophie Nake, Lorenz Thompson, Lesa Wannous, Chadia Tizzani, Paolo Zoonoses Public Health Original Articles The World Organization for Animal Health (OIE) has recently developed a Wildlife Health Framework to respond to the need of members to manage the risk from emerging diseases at the animal–human–ecosystem interface. One of its objectives is to improve surveillance systems, early detection and notification of wildlife diseases. Members share information on disease occurrence by reporting through the OIE World Animal Health Information System (OIE‐WAHIS—formerly known as ‘WAHIS’). To evaluate the capacity of a surveillance system to detect disease events, it is important to quantify the gap between all known events and those officially notified to the OIE. This study used capture–recapture analysis to estimate the sensitivity of the OIE‐WAHIS system for a OIE‐listed wildlife disease by comparing information from publicly available sources to identify undetected events. This article presents a case study of the occurrence of tularemia in lagomorphs among selected North American and European countries during the period 2014–2019. First, an analysis using three data sources (OIE‐WAHIS, ProMED, WHO‐EIOS [Epidemic Intelligence from Open Sources]) was conducted. Subsequent analysis then explored the model integrating information from a fourth source (scientific literature collected in PubMed). Two models were built to evaluate both the sensitivity of the OIE‐WAHIS using media reports (ProMED and WHO‐EIOS), which is likely to represent current closer to real‐time events, and published scientific data, which is more useful for retrospective analysis. Using the three‐source approach, the predicted number of tularemia events was 93 (95% CI: 75–114), with an OIE‐WAHIS sensitivity of 90%. In the four‐source approach, the number of predicted events increased to 120 (95% CI: 99–143), dropping the sensitivity of the OIE‐WAHIS to 70%. The results indicate a good sensitivity of the OIE‐WAHIS system using the three‐source approach, but lower sensitivity when including information from the scientific literature. Further analysis should be undertaken to identify diseases and regions for which international reporting presents a low sensitivity. This will enable evaluation and prioritization of underreported OIE‐listed wildlife diseases and identify areas of focus as part of the Wildlife Health Framework. This study also highlights the need for stronger collaborations between academia and National Veterinary Services to enhance surveillance systems for notifiable diseases. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022-01-29 2022-06 /pmc/articles/PMC9306881/ /pubmed/35092712 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/zph.12916 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Zoonoses and Public Health published by Wiley‐VCH GmbH https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Fanelli, Angela
Awada, Lina
Caceres‐Soto, Paula
Diaz, François
Grillo, Tiggy
Gizo, Itlala
Hamilton, Keith
Rolez, Christine Leon
Melens, Peter
Morales, Roberta
Mur, Lina
Muset, Sophie
Nake, Lorenz
Thompson, Lesa
Wannous, Chadia
Tizzani, Paolo
Sensitivity of an international notification system for wildlife diseases: A case study using the OIE‐WAHIS data on tularemia
title Sensitivity of an international notification system for wildlife diseases: A case study using the OIE‐WAHIS data on tularemia
title_full Sensitivity of an international notification system for wildlife diseases: A case study using the OIE‐WAHIS data on tularemia
title_fullStr Sensitivity of an international notification system for wildlife diseases: A case study using the OIE‐WAHIS data on tularemia
title_full_unstemmed Sensitivity of an international notification system for wildlife diseases: A case study using the OIE‐WAHIS data on tularemia
title_short Sensitivity of an international notification system for wildlife diseases: A case study using the OIE‐WAHIS data on tularemia
title_sort sensitivity of an international notification system for wildlife diseases: a case study using the oie‐wahis data on tularemia
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9306881/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35092712
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/zph.12916
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