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Epidemiology and Public Health Preparedness

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Title: Epidemiology and Public Health Preparedness


1
Epidemiology and Public Health Preparedness
Kristen Pogreba-Brown, MPH
2
Learning Objectives
  • Describe public health preparedness
  • Describe the role of Epidemiologists in
    preparedness
  • List events that may require a public health
    response
  • Explore ways in which Promotores can participate
    in a public health emergency response

3
Learning Objectives cont.
  • Describe the general layout of an Incident
    Command Structure
  • Describe why public health investigates
    outbreaks
  • List the basic steps involved in conducting an
    outbreak investigation
  • Conduct an investigative interview

4
The Need for Public Health Preparedness
  • The possibility of public health emergencies
    arising in the United States concerns many people
    in the wake of recent hurricanes, tsunamis, acts
    of terrorism, and the threat of pandemic
    influenza. Though some people feel it is
    impossible to be prepared for unexpected events,
    the truth is that taking preparedness actions
    helps people deal with disasters of all sorts
    much more effectively when they do occur.
    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

5
Stages Surrounding an Event
EVENT
6
What is Public Health Preparedness?
  • Planning, Planning, Planning!!
  • Training and Education
  • Engaging community partners in discussion of
    their needs
  • Addressing the challenges of special needs
    populations
  • Creating partnerships across various agencies and
    jurisdictions

7
What Types of Events would PH Respond to?
  • Infectious Disease Outbreaks
  • Wild Land Fires
  • Terrorism or Bioterrorism Events
  • Environmental Disasters
  • Large-scale Industrial Accidents
  • Natural Disasters
  • Mass Casualties

8
Pictures
9
PH Following a Natural Disaster
  • Goal is to safeguard the population from disease
    related to
  • Sanitation
  • Personal hygiene
  • Water supply
  • Diarrheal disease
  • Heating and shelter
  • Mental Health

10
Public Healths Role During an Event
  • Activate emergency response plan
  • Road map of when and how to respond
  • Deploy personnel
  • Trained persons to a command center
  • Evaluate information
  • Agencies can conduct epidemiology investigations
    or enhanced surveillance
  • Invoke public health emergency powers
  • Mandatory testing reporting procedures

11
Public Healths Role During an Event cont.
  • Coordinate medical services
  • Overflow to other treatment facilities
  • Monitor requests for support
  • More equipment, supplies, or personnel
  • Deactivate emergency response plan
  • Depends on the level of threat remaining

12
What Other Agencies Does Public Health Partner
With?
  • Emergency Management, FEMA
  • Law Enforcement, Fire Department, National Guard
  • EMS, Red Cross, health care providers, hospitals
  • Medical examiners
  • Mental health agencies and providers
  • Clinical labs, Public health labs
  • Environmental and Agricultural agencies
  • Department of Public Works
  • Tribal Counter-Parts
  • Non-Governmental Organizations

13
National Incident Management System
  • NIMS
  • A system for achieving unified interagency
    management during emergency response operations
  • Training in NIMS courses required for individuals
    to be compliant
  • Funding for agencies reliant upon their employees
    being trained

14
National Incident Management System
  • What does all that mean?
  • Everyone needs to speak the same language
  • Systems need to work together
  • Agreements need to be put in place ahead of time
    to share resources

15
Incident Command Structure
  • ICS is a management organization tool that unites
    all emergency response agencies into one cohesive
    and coherent system, enabling responders at all
    levels (local, state, and national) to work
    together more effectively and efficiently to
    manage domestic incidents no matter what the
    cause, size or complexity.

16
ICS Features
  • Flexible
  • Can expand and contract
  • Common nomenclature/language
  • Management by objectives
  • Clearly defined chain of command
  • Clearly delineated functional roles
  • Positions within ICS are not necessarily related
    to a persons everyday job function

17
ICS General Chain of Command
18
ICS Knowing your Role
  • May not be the same as your everyday roles, but
    some of the same skills may overlap
  • It may vary depending on the incident
  • Ways to Prepare
  • Become familiar with any emergency response plans
    your agency might have and consider ways you may
    be involved

19
Questions?
20
What are Potential Roles for Promotoras in a
Public Health Event?
21
What is an Outbreak?
  • A sudden rise in the incidence of a disease
  • Clinician, infection control nurse, or clinical
    laboratory worker first notices an unusual
    disease or an unusual number of cases of a
    disease and alerts public health officials

22
Outbreak Investigations
  • Public health is rooted in the investigation of
    infectious disease outbreaks.
  • Infectious disease outbreak investigations are
    initiated and conducted at the local level.
  • Local health departments are responsible for all
    of the steps of an outbreak investigation and
    work with larger state or federal agencies during
    large-scale events.

23
Why Does PH Investigate Outbreaks?
  • Control and Prevention
  • Help identify the source of ongoing outbreaks and
    prevent additional cases
  • Research Opportunities
  • Thorough investigations often can increase
    knowledge of a given disease and prevent future
    outbreaks
  • Training
  • Public, Political, or Legal Concerns
  • Program Considerations

24
Basic Steps for Outbreak Investigations
  • Prepare for Fieldwork
  • Confirm the Existence of an Outbreak
  • Verify the Diagnosis
  • Define Case Definition
  • Identify Cases and Exposed Persons
  • Develop a Questionnaire
  • Choose a Study Design
  • Descriptive Epidemiology
  • Formulate, Evaluate and Refine the Hypothesis
  • Conduct Studies
  • Implement Control and Prevention Measures
  • Communicate Findings

25
Basic Steps for Outbreak Investigations
  • Verify the diagnosis and confirm the outbreak
  • Confirm laboratory testing
  • Rule out misdiagnoses or laboratory error
  • Define a case and conduct case findings
  • Develop a specific case definition using
  • Symptoms or laboratory results
  • Time period
  • Location
  • Conduct surveillance using case definition
  • Existing surveillance
  • Active surveillance (e.g. review medical
    records)
  • Interview case patients

26
Basic Steps for Outbreak Investigations cont.
  • Count/record and orient data time, place,
    person
  • Create line listing (case plotted on a graph)
  • Person
  • Who was Infected?
  • What do the cases have in common?
  • Place
  • Where were they infected?
  • May be useful to draw a map
  • Time
  • When were they infected?
  • Create an epidemic curve

27
Basic Steps for Outbreak Investigations cont.
  • Take immediate control measures
  • If an obvious source of contamination is
    identifiedinstitute control measures
    immediately!
  • Formulate and test hypothesis
  • Develop hypothesis
  • Literature reviews of previous outbreaks
  • Interviews of several case-patients
  • Conduct an analytic study to test hypotheses
  • Retrospective cohort study
  • Case-control study

28
Basic Steps for Outbreak Investigations cont.
  • Plan and execute additional studies
  • Environmental sampling
  • Collect appropriate samples
  • Allow epidemiological data to guide testing
  • If analytic study results are conclusive, dont
    wait for positive samples before implementing
    prevention
  • Implement and evaluate control measures
  • Prevent further exposure and future outbreaks by
    eliminating or treating the source
  • Work with regulators, industry, and health
    educators to institute measures
  • Create mechanism to evaluate both short- and
    long-term success

29
Basic Steps for Outbreak Investigations cont.
  • Communicate finding
  • Identify a single member of the investigation
    team to interact with media and communicate
    progress and findings
  • Summarize investigation, make recommendations,
    and disseminate report to all participants

30
Partnering with an Epidemiologist
  • Case Investigations
  • Case Interviews
  • Contact Tracing
  • Case Follow-Up

31
What is Epidemiology???
  • Epidemiology is the study of disease trends
    within a specific population. It is used to
    describe, quantify and postulate the causal
    mechanisms for health related issues.

32
Epidemiology Triad
Host
Pathogen
Environment
33
Epidemic??
  • Epidemics are defined as a number of cases of
    disease above the normal endemic number.
  • How many cases are needed to qualify the event as
    an epidemic?

34
How can I get sick?
Transmission of Disease
  • Direct Transmission
  • Droplet
  • Body Fluid
  • Close contact
  • Indirect Transmission
  • Vectors
  • Food borne
  • Fomites
  • Airborne

35
An Epis Definition of you
  • Case someone who becomes ill with the disease
    in question
  • Carrier/Reservoir someone who carries the
    disease and can pass it on to others but does not
    become ill themselves
  • Susceptible you can get the disease
  • Immune you cant get the disease (usually
    because you have already had it or had a
    vaccination against it)
  • Control someone who did not get sick but has
    other similarities to the case (they needed to
    have the same likelihood of becoming exposed as
    the case)

36
Is it an outbreak?
  • In epidemiology, we LOVE statistics!!!
  • The more numbers the betterso, weve designed a
    formula that will tell us if the results are
    real, or just due to chance.
  • Odds Ratio measure of the odds of exposure of a
    given disease
  • An OR of 1.0 means that the odds of exposure
    among cases and controls is the same (and implies
    that the exposure in question is not a risk
    factor for the disease in question)
  • An OR above 1.0 implies a negative effect
  • An OR less than 1.0 implies a protective effect
  • Assuming your stats are set up correctly!

37
Odds Ratios and 2 x 2 Tables
  • Disease Status
  • Yes No
  • Exposure Yes
  • Status
  • No

a
b
c
d
OR ad/bc
38
Outbreak! What do you do??
  • The health department receives a phone call on
    Wednesday morning from a camp counselor. A group
    dinner was served Friday night and by Saturday
    night 7 people had become ill with
    gastrointestinal symptoms. Another 4 became ill
    on Sunday morning. Of the 11 students who became
    ill, 3 went to the doctor where a stool sample
    was collected and sent to the state lab. The
    results are pending. What do you do?

39
Interviews and Data Collection
  • Today, you will (for a short period) play the
    role of two people.
  • The first role is that of a student who attended
    last weekss infamous dinner.
  • The second role is of a public health worker who
    needs to interview the student to try and
    determine the source of infection.

40
Tips for Interviewing
  • Follow the questions in order
  • Dont skip something because you dont think it
    applies or you think you already know the answer
  • Be courteous
  • People are telling you about an illness they have
    and in doing so are helping YOU out (they are not
    required to answer any of your questions)
  • Dont be embarrassed
  • Everyone has been sick at some point in their
    lives, but not everyone likes to talk about it in
    detail. If you are too uncomfortable to ask the
    question, they wont be comfortable in giving you
    the answers!

41
Interviews
  • Pair up and interview each other.
  • Use the scripts to ask your questions.
  • Use the information given to you to answer the
    questions.

42
Updated Information
  • The state lab called and confirmed that the three
    samples they received were positive for
    Salmonella.
  • Symptoms of salmonellosis include
  • Sudden onset of headache
  • Abdominal pain
  • Diarrhea
  • Nausea
  • Vomiting
  • Mode of transmission
  • Ingestion of the organisms in food derived from
    infected food-animals or contaminated by the
    feces of an infected animal or person
  • Includes raw or undercooked eggs, milk or milk
    products, meat, poultry
  • Also associated with pet turtles and reptiles
  • Incubation period
  • From 6 to 72 hours (usually 12-36 hours)

43
Line Lists
  • Make a list of everyone who attended the event,
    what they ate, and whether or not they became
    ill.
  • Do you notice any trends or items that should be
    investigated further?

44
Line List Example
45
Epi Curve
  • Graphing the number of cases over time can show
    many things
  • When the outbreak began
  • A possible index case for the outbreak
  • Length of time that people became ill
  • Is the outbreak still occurring?

46
Epi Curve for this Outbreak
47
What made me sick?
  • In many foodborne outbreaks, investigators will
    never find out the exact food that made people
    illwhy?
  • Bad recall
  • Cross contamination
  • Too many foods to analyze

48
2 x 2 Tables for this Outbreak
Disease-Yes
Disease-No
Exposure-Yes
Pizza
Exposure-No
Ice Cream
Chicken
49
Odds Ratios for this Outbreak
  • Pizza 2.0
  • Chicken .0667
  • Ice Cream 11.0
  • People who were ill were two times more likely to
    have eaten pizza and 11 times more likely to have
    eaten ice cream over people who did not become
    ill!

50
Public Health Implications
  • What, as public health professionals, do you do
    with this information?
  • What, if anything, can you do to prevent people
    from becoming ill in the future?

51
Recent Salmonella Outbreaks
  • As of March 7th 2007, 425 persons infected with
    the outbreak strain of Salmonella Tennessee have
    been reported to CDC from 44 states.
  • Among 351 patients for whom clinical information
    is available, 71 (20) were hospitalized.
  • No deaths have been attributed to this
    infection.
  • Product testing has confirmed the presence of the
    outbreak strain of Salmonella Tennessee in opened
    jars of peanut butter obtained from ill persons.
  • How did the CDC determine this outbreak was
    occurring?
  • Investigation same manufacturing plant in
    Georgia
  • Surveillance - PulseNet

52
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