2.Meeting measles elimination indicators: surveillance performance in a regional area of Australia
Julie Kohlhagen ; Peter D Massey ; David N Durrheim
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response 2011;2(3):5-9
The World Health Organization (WHO) Western Pacific Region has established specific measles elimination surveillance indicators. There has been concern in Australia that these indicators may be too stringent and that measles elimination can occur without all surveillance prerequisites being met, in particular the minimum fever and rash clinician-suspected measles reporting rate with subsequent laboratory exclusion of measles. A regional public health unit in northern New South Wales, Australia, prompted local general practitioners to report fever and rash presentations that met the measles case definition or that they considered to be clinical measles. These notifications from July 2006 to June 2008 were reviewed to determine whether measles indicators for monitoring progress towards measles elimination could be achieved in Australia. Results confirmed that the surveillance indicators of “>2 reported suspected measles cases per 100 000 population,” “at least 80% of suspected cases adequately investigated within 48 hours” and “greater than 80% of cases had adequate blood samples collected” could be met. Only half the cases had virology that would allow genotyping of measles virus. Special efforts to engage and convince Australian medical doctors about the public health value of reporting clinically suggestive measles cases and collecting confirmatory blood tests resulted in the current WHO Western Pacific Region indicators for progress towards measles elimination being met in a regional area of Australia.
3.Invasive meningococcal disease in elderly people, New South Wales, Australia, 1993 to 2012
Gunaratnam Praveena ; Massey Peter ; Durrheim David ; Torvaldsen Siranda
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response 2013;4(4):4-10
Little information is available publicly on invasive meningococcal disease (IMD) in elderly people in Australia. This study analysed IMD notifications data from New South Wales between 1993 and 2012 to determine the distribution of IMD among people aged 65 years and older and to describe the characteristics of IMD in this age group compared to younger age groups with respect to notification trends, serogroup distribution and mortality rates. Following introduction of a childhood vaccination programme against meningococcal type C in 2003, notification rates in all age groups decreased, but the proportion of IMD notifications in people aged 65 years and over rose significantly (from 4% to 6%,
4.Improving ethnocultural data to inform public health responses to communicable diseases in Australia
Emma Quinn ; Peter Massey ; Alexander Rosewell ; Mitchell Smith ; David Durrheim
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response 2014;5(2):1-4
It is well established that ethnocultural groups of migrants are associated with a differential risk of communicable disease, including measles, tuberculosis and hepatitis B. Global public health agencies
5.Invasive pneumococcal disease in New South Wales, Australia: reporting Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander status improves epidemiology
Peter D Massey ; Kerry Todd ; Maggi Osborne ; Kylie Taylor ; David N Durrheim
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response 2011;2(3):1-4
The aim of this work was to determine the feasibility of improving Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander status recording for notifiable diseases using all Invasive Pneumococcal Disease (IPD) notifications in a regional area of New South Wales, Australia.
In Australia people with IPD are nearly always admitted to hospital and their Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander status is recorded. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander status was determined for IPD notifications by referring to the routine hospital admission data in a regional area of New South Wales, Australia.
There were 234 notifications in the regional area of Hunter New England during the period 2007–2009. Initially, 168 (72%) notifications had Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander status recorded. After referring to the routine hospital admission data, the recorded status increased to 232 (99%). Updating the surveillance data required less than five minutes per notification.
Referring to routine hospital admission data proved a useful and time-efficient surveillance strategy to increase the proportion of notifications with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander status. These data can then be used to better understand the current epidemiology of IPD. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children aged 0–4 years have a two- to threefold higher rate of invasive pneumococcal disease than non-Aboriginal children, thus high levels of timely pneumococcal immunization coverage remain important for young Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children.
6.Community-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus infections in Aboriginal children attending hospital emergency departments in a regional area of New South Wales, Australia: a seven-year descriptive study
Susan THOMAS ; Kristy CROOKS ; Fakhrul ISLAM ; Peter D MASSEY
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response 2017;8(4):6-12
Objective: Community-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) can cause bacterial skin infections that are common problems for Aboriginal children in New South Wales (NSW). MRSA is not notifiable in NSW and surveillance data describing incidence and prevalence are not routinely collected. The study aims to describe the epidemiology of CA-MRSA in Aboriginal children in the Hunter New England Local Health District (HNELHD).
Methods: We linked data from Pathology North Laboratory Management System (AUSLAB) and the HNELHD patient administration system from 33 hospital emergency departments. Data from 2008–2014 for CA-MRSA isolates were extracted. Demographic characteristics included age, gender, Aboriginality, rurality and seasonality.
Results: Of the 1222 individuals in this study, 408 (33.4%) were Aboriginal people. Aboriginal people were younger with 45.8% aged less than 10 years compared to 25.9% of non-Aboriginal people. Most isolates came from Aboriginal people who attended the regional Tamworth Hospital (193/511 isolates from 149 people). A larger proportion of Aboriginal people, compared to non-Aboriginal people, resided in outer regional (64.9% vs 37.2%) or remote/very remote areas (2.5% vs 0.5%). Most infections occurred in summer and early autumn. For Aboriginal patients, there was a downward trend through autumn, continuing through winter and spring.
Discussion: Aboriginal people at HNELHD emergency departments appear to represent a greater proportion of people with skin infections with CA-MRSA than non-Aboriginal people. CA-MRSA is not notifiable in NSW; however, pathology and hospital data are available and can provide valuable indicative data to health districts for planning and policy development.
7.Field exercises are useful for improving public health emergency responses
Eastwood Keith ; Durrheim David ; Merritt Tony ; Massey Peter D ; Huppatz Claire ; Dalton Craig ; Hope Kirsty ; Moran Lucille ; Speare Richard ; Farrar Kris
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response 2010;1(1):12-18
Problem:Emergencies resulting from disease outbreaks and extreme environmental events present significant challenges for health services.
Context: Preparing public health units to effectively manage emergencies is a core activity. Field exercises support consolidation of biopreparedness by testing plans, identifying weaknesses, providing training opportunities and developing surge capacity.
Action: An extended field exercise to test the health response to a novel influenza strain was conducted in northern New South Wales, Australia in September 2008, eight months before the influenza AH1N1 pandemic emerged. Lasting four days and involving over 300 participants, the exercise was set in the early response phase with the staggered presentation of 41 cases to 36 emergency departments in the health area. An additional 150 contacts were written into a complex scenario to test the public health response.
Outcome: The subsequent pandemic emergence in mid-2009 offered a unique opportunity to assess the field exercise format for disaster preparedness. Most roles were adequately tested with recognized benefit during the actual pandemic response. However, the exercise did not adequately challenge the public health planning team that synthesizes surveillance data and forecasts risk, nor did it identify planning issues that became evident during the subsequent pandemic.
Discussion: Field exercises offer the opportunity to rigorously test public health emergency preparedness but can be expensive and labour-intensive. Our exercise provided effective and timely preparation for the 2009 influenza pandemic but showed that more emphasis needs to be placed on the role and training of the public health planning team, an area that may be neglected.
8.A marked decline in the incidence of malaria in a remote region of Malaita, Solomon Islands, 2008 to 2013
Oloifana-Polosovai Hellen ; Gwala John ; Harrington Humpress ; Massey Peter D ; Ribeyro Elmer ; Flores Angelica ; Speare Christopher ; McBride Edwin ; MacLaren David ; Speare Rick
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response 2014;5(3):30-39
Setting:Atoifi Adventist Hospital (AAH), Solomon Islands, the only hospital in the East Kwaio region.
Objective:To use routine surveillance data to assess the trends in malaria from 2008 to 2013.
Design:Descriptive study of records from (1) AAH laboratory malaria records; (2) admissions to AAH for malaria; and (3) malaria treatments from outpatient records.
Results:AAH examined 35 608 blood films and diagnosed malaria in 4443 samples comprised of 2667
9.Survey and Phylogenetic Analysis of Rodents and Important Rodent-Borne Zoonotic Pathogens in Gedu, Bhutan
Yoenten PHUENTSHOK ; Kezang DORJI ; Tandin ZANGPO ; Silas A DAVIDSON ; Ratree TAKHAMPUNYA ; Tenzinla TENZINLA ; Chencho DORJEE ; Roger S MORRIS ; Peter D JOLLY ; Sithar DORJEE ; Joanna S MCKENZIE
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2018;56(5):521-525
Rodents are well-known reservoirs and vectors of many emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases, but little is known about their role in zoonotic disease transmission in Bhutan. In this study, a cross-sectional investigation of zoonotic disease pathogens in rodents was performed in Chukha district, Bhutan, where a high incidence of scrub typhus and cases of acute undifferentiated febrile illness had been reported in people during the preceding 4–6 months. Twelve rodents were trapped alive using wire-mesh traps. Following euthanasia, liver and kidney tissues were removed and tested using PCR for Orientia tsutsugamushi and other bacterial and rickettsial pathogens causing bartonellosis, borreliosis, human monocytic ehrlichiosis, human granulocytic anaplasmosis, leptospirosis, and rickettsiosis. A phylogenetic analysis was performed on all rodent species captured and pathogens detected. Four out of the 12 rodents (33.3%) tested positive by PCR for zoonotic pathogens. Anaplasma phagocytophilum, Bartonella grahamii, and B. queenslandensis were identified for the first time in Bhutan. Leptospira interrogans was also detected for the first time from rodents in Bhutan. The findings demonstrate the presence of these zoonotic pathogens in rodents in Bhutan, which may pose a risk of disease transmission to humans.
Anaplasma
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Anaplasma phagocytophilum
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Anaplasmosis
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Animals
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Bartonella
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Bartonella Infections
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Bhutan
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Communicable Diseases, Emerging
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Ehrlichiosis
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Euthanasia
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Humans
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Incidence
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Kidney
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Leptospira
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Leptospira interrogans
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Leptospirosis
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Liver
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Orientia tsutsugamushi
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Polymerase Chain Reaction
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Rodentia
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Scrub Typhus
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Zoonoses
10.Community first responders: A missing key to reducing the impact of injury and illness in low- and middle-income countries in the Western Pacific?
Andrew Hodgetts ; Peter Massey ; Michelle Redman-MacLaren ; Roxanne Bainbridge
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response 2021;12(2):01-03
This perspective article discusses the potential role community first responders could play in reducing injury and illness in low- and middle-income countries in the Western Pacific. Community first responders are reportedly making a difference in low- and middle-income countries in Asia and Africa in reducing injury and illness, and in disease surveillance and reporting. Efforts must be made to explore the appropriate and effective introduction of locally tailored community first responder programs in the Western Pacific.