Syndromic surveillance to detect disease outbreaks using time between ED presentations

Objective

Early warning of disease outbreaks is paramount for health jurisdictions. The objective of this study was to develop syndromic surveillance monitoring plans from routinely collected Emergency Department data with application to detecting disease outbreaks.

Methods

The study involved Secondary Data Analysis of ED presentations to major public hospitals in Queensland and South Australia spanning 2017 to 2020. Monitoring plans were developed for all major Queensland and South Australian public hospitals using an adaptation of Exponentially Weighted Moving Averages - a process control method used in detecting anomalies in industrial production processes. The methods rely on setting a threshold (control limit) relating to the time between an event of interest (e.g. flu outbreak) using ED presentations as a signal to monitor. An outbreak is flagged as this time gets significantly smaller, and each event offers a decision point on whether an outbreak has occurred. The models incorporate differing levels of temporal memory to cover outbreaks of different sizes.

Results

The novel approach to real time outbreak detection indicates outbreaks for individual hospitals coinciding with the first-wave of the COVID-19 outbreak in Queensland and South Australia as well as the large 2017 and 2019 influenza seasons.

Conclusion

Outbreak detection models demonstrate the ability to quickly flag an outbreak based on clinician-assigned ED diagnoses. An implemented syndromic surveillance approach can pick up geographic outbreaks quickly so they can be contained. Such capability can help with surveillance related to the current COVID-19 pandemic and potential future pandemics.

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