An evaluation of enhanced surveillance of hospitalised COVID-19 patients to inform the public health response in Victoria
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Date
Authors
Curtis, Stephanie
Cutcher, Zoe
Brett, Judith
Burrell, Simon
Richards, Michael J
Hennessy, Daneeta
Gang, Rebecca
Lau, Colleen
Rowe, Stacey
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Volume Title
Publisher
National Centre for Disease Control
Abstract
B a c k g r o u n d
Public health surveillance is crucial for supporting a rapid and effective response to public health
emergencies. In response to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, an enhanced surveillance
system of hospitalised COVID-19 patients was established by the Victorian Department of Health
and Human Services (DHHS) and the Victorian Healthcare Associated Infection Surveillance System
Coordinating Centre. The system aimed to reduce workforce capacity constraints and increase situational awareness on the status of hospitalised patients.
M e t h o d s
The system was evaluated, using guidelines from the United States Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, against eight attributes: acceptability; data quality; flexibility; representativeness; simplicity; stability; timeliness; and usefulness. Evidence was generated from stakeholder consultation,
participant observation, document review, systems review, issues log review and audits. Data were
collected and analysed over a period of up to three months, covering pre- and post-implementation
from March to June 2020.
R e s u l t s
This system was rapidly established by leveraging established relationships and infrastructure.
Stakeholders agreed that the system was important but was limited by a reliance on daily manual
labour (including weekends), which impeded scalability. The ability of the system to perform well in
each attribute was expected to shift with the severity of the pandemic; however, at the time of this
evaluation, when there were an average 23 new cases per day (0.3 cases per 100,000 population per
day), the system performed well.
C o n c lu s i o n
This enhanced surveillance system was useful and achieved its key DHHS objectives during the
COVID-19 public health emergency in Victoria. Recommendations for improvement were made to
the current and future systems, including the need to plan alternatives to improve the system’s scalability and to maintain stakeholder acceptability.
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Communicable Diseases Intelligence
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Open Access
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Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License
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