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Update to 2010 State Influenza Coordinator’s Conference Session Two – New and Enhanced Surveillance Sunday June 6, 2010 - 3:00-3:15pm, Portland, OR Distribute Project Division of Healthcare Information (DHI) (proposed) Public Health Surveillance Program Office (proposed) Office of Surveillance, Epidemiology, & Laboratory Services (OSELS) (Proposed) Centers for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC) Taha A. Kass-Hout, MD, MS Deputy Director for Information Science (Acting) Disclaimer: The findings and conclusions in this presentation are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official position of The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

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Distribute Project. Taha A. Kass-Hout, MD, MS Deputy Director for Information Science (Acting). Update to 2010 State Influenza Coordinator’s Conference Session Two – New and Enhanced Surveillance Sunday June 6, 2010 - 3:00-3:15pm, Portland, OR. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Distribute Project

Update to 2010 State Influenza Coordinator’s ConferenceSession Two – New and Enhanced SurveillanceSunday June 6, 2010 - 3:00-3:15pm, Portland, OR

Distribute Project

Division of Healthcare Information (DHI) (proposed)Public Health Surveillance Program Office (proposed)Office of Surveillance, Epidemiology, & Laboratory Services (OSELS) (Proposed)Centers for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC)

Taha A. Kass-Hout, MD, MSDeputy Director for Information Science (Acting)

Disclaimer: The findings and conclusions in this presentation are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official position of The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Page 2: Distribute Project

Principles & Characteristics• Aggregates counts of ILI and total ED

visits from existing health dept ED-SS systems– Cross-tabulated by a limited number of

variables

• Allows flexibility in use of “chief complaint” (or ICD9) ILI Syndromic criteria that HDs had already developed

• Fosters “community of users”

Page 3: Distribute Project

A Brief History of Distribute• Proof-of-concept Phase (2006 to July 2009)

– Funding from CDC and Markle Foundation– Recruited nine sites in US and three internationally– Focused on establishing viability of approach

• Pandemic Phase (August 2009 to June 2010)– Expanded funding from CDC lead to CDC, PHII and

ISDS collaboration– Expanded from 10 to 34 sites (including 10

BioSense sites) in ~4months– Enhanced information systems, analyses– Strengthened community support

Page 4: Distribute Project

Current Status• ED Coverage Estimates

– 34 Health departments (~1,300 EDs) with 8 HDs ≥ 90% ED visit coverage

• Local ILI Syndrome Definitions– Narrow: attempts to replicate ILINet

definition, may exclude many with influenza due to brevity of CC recording

– Broad: less restrictive, yields parallel, higher amplitude signal

Page 5: Distribute Project

Current Jurisdictions

Page 6: Distribute Project

Information Pathways

Hospitals HD SS system

Hospitals HD SS system CDC BioSense*

Hospitals HD SS system

Hospitals CDC BioSense*Hospitals

* With HD approval

Via ISDS (UW)

Hospitals HD SS systemHospitals HD SS system Via CDC

Page 7: Distribute Project

Stratifying Variables

Temperature Disposition Age

6 8

34Number of Jurisdictions

Page 8: Distribute Project

Disposition (Admission) of ILI Pts

4/1

4/11

4/21 5/

15/

115/

215/

316/

106/

206/

307/

107/

207/

30 8/9

8/19

8/29 9/

89/

189/

2810

/810

/18

10/2

811

/711

/17

11/2

712

/712

/17

12/2

71/

61/

161/

26 2/5

2/15

2/25 3/

73/

173/

27 4/6

4/16

4/26 5/

65/

16

02468

1012141618

% o

f ILI

pat

ient

s ho

spita

lized

% o

f ED

vis

its b

y IL

I pat

ient

s w

ho w

ere

hosp

italiz

ed

% o

f ED

vis

its b

y IL

I pat

ient

sno

t hos

pita

lized

Week Ending

Yellow: ILI patients hospitalized ILI patients 

Red: ILI patients hospitalized Total ED patients Green: ILI patients non-hospitalized Total ED patients

Source: BioSense

Page 9: Distribute Project

Public Site

Restricted(Contributor’s) Site

Online Data

http://ISDSDistribute.org

Page 10: Distribute Project

Comparison to ILINet• State-based

jurisdictions– Correlations ranged from

0.64 to 0.96 with mean and median of 0.83 and 0.83, respectively

• Local-based jurisdictions– Correlations ranged from

0.38 to 0.91 with mean and median of 0.76 and 0.81, respectively

• Visually, major peaks in % ILI in the 2 systems tracked well together

Page 11: Distribute Project

Community of Practice• Approximately 90 state and local

epidemiologists

• Representing 43 health departments

• Wide range of expertise in syndromic surveillance

Page 12: Distribute Project

Trade-Offs• Timeliness

– Possible to collect and display daily, HD-specific ILI data (2-3 day lag for most HDs, including censoring for dates with incomplete reporting)

– Instability of daily data: most recent 2-3 day “trends” not consistently born out by subsequent observations

• Flexibility in ILI syndrome criteria– Allowed by using criteria “validated” by state/local

flu surveillance experience– Variability in amplitude of signal precluded

comparisons of H1N1 impact or summary estimate of H1N1 ED visits

Page 13: Distribute Project

Next Steps• Identification of EDs participating in Distribute and

ILINet to prevent duplication

• Assignment of ED surveillance POC at health departments and collaboration with influenza coordinators

• ILINet and Distribute comparison– CSTE recommended continuing to display Distribute data

separate from ILI-Net (aka, co-visualize)

• Increase coverage (ongoing)

• Address variability in ILI criteria (aka “Harmonize” ILI criteria)

Page 14: Distribute Project

Acknowledgements• ISDS Staff and Volunteers• Public Health Informatics Institute (PHII)• Project liaisons from NACCHO/CSTE/ASTHO• Support to ISDS

– Tufts Health Care Institute (THCI)– Markle Foundation

• CDC:– NCIRD, Influenza Division– OSELS & former NCPHI – H1N1 response team– OPHPR

Page 15: Distribute Project

For more information please contact Centers for Disease Control and Prevention1600 Clifton Road NE, Atlanta, GA 30333Telephone, 1-800-CDC-INFO (232-4636)/TTY: 1-888-232-6348E-mail: [email protected] Web: www.atsdr.cdc.gov

Thank You!