Abstract

BackgroundMost public health agencies expect reporting of diseases to be initiated by hospital, laboratory or clinic staff even though so-called passive approaches are known to be burdensome for reporters and produce incomplete as well as delayed reports, which can hinder assessment of disease and delay recognition of outbreaks. In this study, we analyze patterns of reporting as well as data completeness and timeliness for traditional, passive reporting of notifiable disease by two distinct sources of information: hospital and clinic staff versus clinical laboratory staff. Reports were submitted via fax machine as well as electronic health information exchange interfaces.MethodsData were extracted from all submitted notifiable disease reports for seven representative diseases. Reporting rates are the proportion of known cases having a corresponding case report from a provider, a faxed laboratory report or an electronic laboratory report. Reporting rates were stratified by disease and compared using McNemar’s test. For key data fields on the reports, completeness was calculated as the proportion of non-blank fields. Timeliness was measured as the difference between date of laboratory confirmed diagnosis and the date the report was received by the health department. Differences in completeness and timeliness by data source were evaluated using a generalized linear model with Pearson’s goodness of fit statistic.ResultsWe assessed 13,269 reports representing 9034 unique cases. Reporting rates varied by disease with overall rates of 19.1% for providers and 84.4% for laboratories (p < 0.001). All but three of 15 data fields in provider reports were more often complete than those fields within laboratory reports (p <0.001). Laboratory reports, whether faxed or electronically sent, were received, on average, 2.2 days after diagnosis versus a week for provider reports (p <0.001).ConclusionsDespite growth in the use of electronic methods to enhance notifiable disease reporting, there still exists much room for improvement.

Highlights

  • Most public health agencies expect reporting of diseases to be initiated by hospital, laboratory or clinic staff even though so-called passive approaches are known to be burdensome for reporters and produce incomplete as well as delayed reports, which can hinder assessment of disease and delay recognition of outbreaks

  • The adoption of electronic health record (EHR) systems and health information exchange (HIE) among clinical organizations and systems [7,8,9], driven by policies like the ‘meaningful use’ program in the United States [10], is creating an information infrastructure that public health organizations can leverage for improving surveillance practice [11,12,13,14]

  • We describe patterns of reporting as well as data completeness and timeliness for traditional, passive reporting of notifiable disease

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Summary

Introduction

Most public health agencies expect reporting of diseases to be initiated by hospital, laboratory or clinic staff even though so-called passive approaches are known to be burdensome for reporters and produce incomplete as well as delayed reports, which can hinder assessment of disease and delay recognition of outbreaks. Health departments wait for hospital, laboratory or clinic staff to initiate most case reports [3]. Such passive approaches are known to be burdensome for reporters, producing incomplete and delayed reports, which can hinder assessment of disease in the community and potentially delay recognition of patterns and outbreaks [4,5,6]. Provider-based case reporting continues to be largely paper-based via fax machines [15, 16]

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