1. Evaluating the Timeliness of Enteric Disease Surveillance in British Columbia, Canada, 2012-13
- Author
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Sophie Li, Jason Stone, Jennifer Jeyes, Craig Nowakowski, M. Taylor, Kamila Romanowski, Michelle Murti, Sara Forsting, Linda Hoang, Ana Paccagnella, Olga Bitzikos, and Eleni Galanis
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Article Subject ,Operations research ,business.industry ,030106 microbiology ,Outbreak ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 ,Laboratory results ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Subtyping ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Infectious Diseases ,Median time ,Enteric disease ,Emergency medicine ,International literature ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
Timely surveillance of enteric diseases is necessary to identify and control cases and outbreaks. Our objective was to evaluate the timeliness of enteric disease surveillance in British Columbia, Canada, compare these results to other settings, and recommend improvements. In 2012 and 2013, information was collected from case report forms and laboratory information systems on 2615Salmonella, shigatoxin-producingE. coli,Shigella, andListeriainfections. Twelve date variables representing the surveillance process from onset of symptoms to case interview and final laboratory results were collected, and intervals were measured. The median time from onset of symptoms to reporting subtyping results to BC epidemiologists was 26–36 days and from onset of symptoms to case interview was 12–14 days. Our findings were comparable to the international literature except for a longer time (up to 29 day difference) to reporting of PFGE results to epidemiologists in BC. Such a delay may impact our ability to identify and solve outbreaks. Several process and system changes were implemented which should improve the timeliness of enteric disease surveillance.
- Published
- 2017
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