A test of syndromic surveillance using a severe acute respiratory syndrome model |
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Authors: | David J. Wallace MD Bonnie Arquilla Richard Heffernan Todd Anderson David BernsteinMichael Augenbraun MD |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Internal Medicine, Department of Emergency Medicine, Kings County Hospital Center, Brooklyn, NY, USA;2. Department of Emergency Medicine, Kings County Hospital Center, Brooklyn, NY 11203, USA;3. Data Analysis Unit, Bureau of Communicable Disease, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, New York, NY, USA;4. Department of Internal Medicine, Kings County Hospital Center, Brooklyn, NY, USA |
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Abstract: | ObjectivesWe describe a field simulation that was conducted using volunteers to assess the ability of 3 hospitals in a network to manage a large influx of patients with a potentially communicable disease. This drill provided the opportunity to evaluate the ability of the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene's (NYC-DOHMH) emergency department chief complaint syndromic surveillance system to detect a cluster of patients with febrile respiratory illness.MethodsThe evaluation was a prospective simulation. The clinical picture was modeled on severe acute respiratory syndrome symptoms. Forty-four volunteers participated in the drill as mock patients.ResultsRecords from 42 patients (95%) were successfully transmitted to the NYC-DOHMH. The electronic chief complaint for 24 (57%) of these patients indicated febrile or respiratory illness. The drill did not generate a statistical signal in the NYC-DOHMH SaTScan analysis. The 42 drill patients were classified in 8 hierarchical categories based on chief complaints: sepsis (2), cold (3), diarrhea (2), respiratory (20), fever/flu (4), vomit (3), and other (8). The number of respiratory visits, while elevated on the day of the drill, did not appear particularly unusual when compared with the 14-day baseline period used for spatial analyses.ConclusionsThis drill with a cluster of patients with febrile respiratory illness failed to trigger a signal from the NYC-DOHMH emergency department chief complaint syndromic surveillance system. This highlighted several limitations and challenges to syndromic surveillance monitoring. |
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