Evaluation of Australia's National Notifiable Disease Surveillance System
Date
2004
Authors
Miller, Megge
Roche, Paul W
Spencer, Jenean
Deeble, Mary
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Centre for Disease Control
Abstract
The Australian National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System (NNDSS) is a passive surveillance system that collects information on communicable diseases. The Australian Government manages NNDSS under the auspices of the Communicable Diseases Network Australia (CDNA). Data collected by each state and territory are collated, analysed and disseminated by the Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing. We report the first evaluation of NNDSS since it was established in 1991. Three primary stakeholder groups were surveyed: (a) CDNA members, (b) the National Surveillance Committee and (c) the readership of Communicable Diseases Intelligence, the primary means of data dissemination from NNDSS. The evaluation revealed that the system was acceptable, structurally simple, and that the data collected were actively used by stakeholders. However, the lack of clearly documented aims and objectives for NNDSS, inflexibility to changing needs, lack of timeliness and complexity in processes were seen as problematic. The results of this evaluation, supported by recent federal funding to enhance national biosecurity, will provide the framework for enhancing NNDSS to meet national communicable disease surveillance requirements in Australia.
Description
Keywords
Keywords: article; Australia; epidemic; evaluation; government; health survey; human; infection control; legal aspect; methodology; questionnaire; Australia; Disease Notification; Disease Outbreaks; Federal Government; Humans; Population Surveillance; Questionnaire
Citation
Collections
Source
Communicable Diseases Intelligence
Type
Journal article