Title: Unit 1: Objectives and Approaches to HIV Surveillance
1Unit 1 Objectives and Approaches to HIV
Surveillance
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2Warm Up Questions Instructions
- Take five minutes now to try the Unit 1 warm up
questions in your manual. - Please do not compare answers with other
participants. - Your answers will not be collected or graded.
- We will review your answers at the end of the
unit.
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3What You Will Learn
- By the end of this unit you should be able to
- define the following terms
- HIV surveillance
- second-generation HIV surveillance
- HIV sero-surveillance
- HIV sentinel surveillance
- describe how epidemiologic principles, and also
the state of the epidemic in a given location,
guide HIV sero-surveillance
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4What You Will Learn, Cont.
- By the end of this unit you should be able to
- compare AIDS case surveillance and HIV
sero-surveillance - identify the strengths and weaknesses of each
- describe how the two are complementary
- identify the main objectives of HIV
sero-surveillance - describe the three main approaches to conducting
HIV sero-surveillance
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5What You Will Learn, Cont.
- By the end of this unit you should be able to
- describe HIV incidence surveillance
- identify other sources of HIV testing data that
can be used for HIV surveillance, in the context
of a second-generation HIV surveillance system
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6Overview of HIV Surveillance
- HIV surveillance is the systematic and regular
collection of information on the occurrence,
distribution and trends in HIV infection and
factors associated with its transmission. - It monitors the risk of infection among specific
populations - It is done on an on-going basis for the purpose
of public health action
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7Overview of HIV Surveillance, Cont.
- There are two general approaches to HIV
surveillance - HIV case reporting
- HIV sero-surveillance
- Surveillance activities can either be active or
passive.
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8HIV Sero-Surveillance
- The core HIV surveillance activity in the African
region is HIV sero-surveillance. - HIV sero-surveillance is when you determine HIV
prevalence by testing blood for HIV antibodies. - Sero-prevalence means prevalence estimates
obtained through sero-surveillance - Surveys that collect blood for HIV or other tests
(for example, syphilis) are called sero-surveys.
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9HIV Sero-Surveillance, Cont.
- HIV sero-surveillance data focus primarily on
three factors - Person
- Place
- Time
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10Epidemiologic Principles Underlying HIV
Sero-Surveillance
- HIV infections are not uniformly distributed in a
population. - There are a limited number of modes of HIV
transmission - HIV infection enters into different geographic
areas and populations at different times, and
spreads at different rates.
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11HIV Sentinel Surveillance
- HIV sentinel surveillance is the main activity of
HIV sero-surveillance, and includes - Measuring the sero-prevalence of HIV infection in
selected populations who are regularly seen at
sentinel sites - Collecting demographic characteristics and some
data on high-risk behaviours
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12Sentinel Sites Represent the General Population
or High-Risk Populations
- General Population
- Antenatal clinics
- Military conscription health intake centres
- High Risk Populations
- STI clinics
- Drug treatment centres
- Jails
- Tuberculosis (TB) clinics
- Hospital wards
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13HIV Sero-SurveillanceObjectives
- assess the prevalence of HIV infection in
population sub-groups - monitor trends in the prevalence of HIV infection
over time - identify behaviours and risk factors for HIV
transmission
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14HIV Sero-SurveillanceObjectives, Cont.
- provide data to assist with public health
decision-making - educate the public on HIV
- guide scientific research
- make estimates and projections
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15HIV Sero-Surveillance Approaches
- Clinic-based sero-surveys are cross-sectional
surveys of persons seen at selected clinics or
sites - Community-based sero-surveys may be needed to
reach specific difficult-to-reach populations who
are not included in clinic-based sentinel sites. - Population-based sero-surveys are designed to
measure HIV prevalence in the general population
directly.
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16Sero-Surveillance Recommendations for
Sub-Saharan Africa
- Conduct HIV sentinel surveillance at ANCs.
- Consider periodic community and population-based
sero-surveys, and HIV sentinel surveillance at
other sites.
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17HIV Incidence and Prevalence
- Prevalence measures the number of people with a
given illness at a given time - Incidence refers to the number of new cases in a
given period of time
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18HIV Incidence and Prevalence, Cont.
- Incidence
- provides a measure of the speed of spread of HIV
in a population - indicates where HIV prevention is needed
- influenced by levels of infection and risky
behaviours
- Prevalence
- a measure of the level of infection in a
population - provides a measure of current and future need for
care - influenced by both the rate of new infections
(incidence) and the rate at which infected people
leave the population
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19Measuring HIV Incidence
- Cohort studies
- Laboratory-based methods
- Repeat testers
- Mathematical modelling
- HIV prevalence in young age groups
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20Other Sources ofHIV Prevalence Data
- Voluntary counselling and testing (VCT)
programmes - Routine HIV testing
- Blood transfusion safety checks
- Scientific research
- Screening of persons entering the military,
seeking employment, or seeking other benefits
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21Second-Generation HIV Surveillance
- Second generation surveillance is a group of
goals and principles for tracking the epidemic,
including - a focus on trends of the epidemic over time
- a better understanding of the behaviours that
drive the epidemic - emphasis on the sub-populations at highest risk
for infection - better use of existing data
- flexibility to the states of the epidemic
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22Possible Sources of Data in Second Generation
Surveillance
- data collected from sero-surveys
- data from behavioural surveys
- AIDS case reporting
- death registries
- STI surveillance
- TB surveillance
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23Figure 1.1, Primary Components of
Second-Generation HIV Surveillance
Monitoring and evaluation is on-going
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24States of the Epidemic
- Low-Level HIV prevalence has not consistently
exceeded 5 in any defined sub-population and
remains below 1 in pregnant women in urban
areas. - Concentrated HIV prevalence is consistently over
5 in at least one defined sub-population but
below 1 in pregnant women in urban areas - Generalized HIV prevalence is consistently over
1 in pregnant women.
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25AIDS Case Surveillance
- AIDS case surveillance and HIV sero-surveillance
are complementary - AIDS case surveillance describes the clinical
disease burden caused by the HIV epidemic - There are several drawbacks to AIDS case
reporting, due to the long latent period and,
frequently, resource constraints.
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26Integrated Disease Surveillance
- WHO Regional Office for Africa (AFRO) recommends
improving AIDS case reporting in the context of
Integrated Disease Surveillance (IDS). - IDS is a system whereby all priority communicable
diseases are reported together using the same
form.
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27Comparing AIDS Case Surveillance HIV
Sero-Surveillance
AIDS Case Surveillance HIV Sero-Surveillance
usually passively reported by care providers at healthcare facilities usually actively implemented by public health surveillance departments
under-reporting by providers may be severe under-reporting not an issue
measures morbidity or clinical disease burden usually collects no information on morbidity
AIDS has a long latent period before clinically apparent symptoms appear HIV may be detected very early in the course of infection
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28Comparing AIDS Case Surveillance HIV
Sero-Surveillance, Cont.
AIDS Case Surveillance HIV Sero-Surveillance
low specificity of case definition high specificity of case definition
does not accurately indicate prevalence of HIV infection in population groups measures levels and trends in HIV prevalence in population groups
does not measure incidence of HIV infection does not measure incidence of HIV infection, although sero-prevalence in younger age groups may approximate recent incidence
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29Warm Up Review
- Take a few minutes now to look back at your
answers to the warm up questions at the beginning
of the unit. - Make any changes you want to.
- We will discuss the questions and answers in a
few minutes.
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30Answers to Warm Up Questions
- HIV sero-surveillance refers to the component of
second-generation HIV surveillance that measures
HIV prevalence.
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31Answers to Warm Up Questions, Cont.
- Which of the following is one of the
epidemiologic principles that guide HIV
surveillance? - HIV infections are not uniformly distributed in a
population. - There are a limited number of ways that HIV can
be transmitted. - HIV infection enters different areas and
populations at different times, and spreads at
different rates. - all of the above
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32Answers to Warm Up Questions, Cont.
- Because, ideally, blood donation is voluntary and
measures to select donors at lowest risk of
infection are in place, HIV prevalence data from
blood banks are likely to under -estimate true
prevalence in a population.
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33Answers to Warm Up Questions, Cont.
- True or false? In low level epidemics, HIV
surveillance should primarily focus on measuring
HIV prevalence in antenatal clinics. False
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34Answers to Warm Up Questions, Cont.
- True or false? Second-generation HIV surveillance
is a single method of conducting HIV
surveillance. False
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35Answers to Warm Up Questions, Cont.
- Which type of surveillance better describes the
clinical disease burden of the HIV epidemic? - AIDS case surveillance
- HIV sero-surveillance
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36Answers to Warm Up Questions, Cont.
- Because of the long latent period from HIV
infection to the onset of AIDS, AIDS case
surveillance may ________ the magnitude of the
epidemic early on, when the HIV epidemic is
expanding. - over-represent
- under-represent
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37Answers to Warm Up Questions, Cont.
- Which of the following is an objective of HIV
surveillance? - identifying sub-groups at greater or lesser risk
for infection - monitoring trends in the prevalence of infection
over time - assessing risk factors of HIV transmission
- all of the above
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38Answers to Warm Up Questions, Cont.
- True or false? Sentinel surveys are harder to do
than population-based surveys. They give more
accurate picture of the over-all HIV prevalence
in a population. False.
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39Answers to Warm Up Questions, Cont.
- Selection bias is especially a concern for
sentinel surveys, since people who choose to
attend a particular facility may be different
from those who do not use those sites.
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40Small Group Discussion Instructions
- Get into small groups to discuss these questions.
- Choose a speaker for your group who will report
back to the class. - Take 15 minutes for this exercise.
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41Small Group Reports
- Select one member from your group to present your
answers. - Discuss with the rest of the class.
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42Case Study Instructions
- Try this case study individually.
- Well discuss the answers in class.
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43Case Study Review
- Follow along as we go over the case study in
class. - Discuss your answers with the rest of the class.
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44Questions, Process Check
- Do you have any questions on the information we
just covered? - Are you happy with how we worked on Unit 1?
- Do you want to try something different that will
help the group?
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