Using Ambulatory Syndromic Surveillance Data for Chronic Disease: A BMI Case Study
نویسنده
چکیده
Introduction Syndromic surveillance is one of the meaningful use public health menu set objectives for eligible professionals. The value of this data for syndromic surveillance as an adjunct to the more widely adopted emergency department registrations has not been studied extensively. It may be that it would improve the sensitivity or timeliness of detecting certain communicable disease events, or it may just contain signals comparable to what is available via other syndromic surveillance data streams. The value of making the effort to collect this data is considered contingent on the answer to that question. Public health is concerned with more than just communicable diseases, however. Chronic diseases and their underlying causes are also a significant public health concern. Obesity alone is estimated to be responsible for 2.5% of the global disease burden, and represents a higher fraction in many developed nations. Since chronic diseases are not associated with singular events of brief duration, they are difficult to track with traditional surveillance methods. They are also not typically managed via emergency departments, so syndromic surveillance does not capture them well either. Chronic diseases are often treated by physicians at ambulatory practices. Thus data from eligible professionals may provide a means for monitoring chronic diseases, or metrics associated with chronic diseases, that would not otherwise be as feasible. As a proof of concept, this study seeks to determine if body mass index (BMI), the standard measure of obesity, can be obtained from ambulatory syndromic surveillance messages.
منابع مشابه
Utility of Syndromic Surveillance Using Novel Clinical Data Sources
reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Objective To document the current evidence base for the use of electronic health record (EHR) data for syndromic surveillance using emergency department, urgent care clinic, hospital inpatient, and ambulatory clinical care data. Introduction Historically, syndromic surveillance has primarily involved the use of near real-...
متن کاملSyndromic Surveillance for Influenzalike Illness in Ambulatory Care Setting
Conventional disease surveillance mechanisms that rely on passive reporting may be too slow and insensitive to rapidly detect a large-scale infectious disease outbreak; the reporting time from a patient's initial symptoms to specific disease diagnosis takes days to weeks. To meet this need, new surveillance methods are being developed. Referred to as nontraditional or syndromic surveillance, th...
متن کامل2012 International Society for Disease Surveillance Conference
under the theme Expanding Collaborations to Chart a New Course in Public Health Surveillance. During these two days, practitioners and researchers across many disciplines gathered to share best practices , lessons learned and cutting edge approaches to timely disease surveillance. A record number of abstracts were received, reviewed and presented – the schedule included 99 orals, 4 panels, 94 p...
متن کاملSyndromic Surveillance during Pandemic (H1N1) 2009 Outbreak, New York, New York, USA
We compared emergency department and ambulatory care syndromic surveillance systems during the pandemic (H1N1) 2009 outbreak in New York City. Emergency departments likely experienced increases in influenza-like-illness significantly earlier than ambulatory care facilities because more patients sought care at emergency departments, differences in case definitions existed, or a combination thereof.
متن کاملModeling and Syndromic Surveillance for Estimating Weather-Induced Heat-Related Illness
This paper compares syndromic surveillance and predictive weather-based models for estimating emergency department (ED) visits for Heat-Related Illness (HRI). A retrospective time-series analysis of weather station observations and ICD-coded HRI ED visits to ten hospitals in south eastern Ontario, Canada, was performed from April 2003 to December 2008 using hospital data from the National Ambul...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
دوره 7 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2015