Abstract

BackgroundThe International Health Regulations (IHR (2005)) require countries to notify WHO of any event which may constitute a public health emergency of international concern. This notification relies on reports of events occurring at the local level reaching the national public health authorities. By June 2012 WHO member states are expected to have implemented the capacity to "detect events involving disease or death above expected levels for the particular time and place" on the local level and report essential information to the appropriate level of public health authority. Our objective was to develop tools to assist European countries improve the reporting of unusual events of public health significance from frontline healthcare workers to public health authorities.MethodsWe investigated obstacles and incentives to event reporting through a systematic literature review and expert consultations with national public health officials from various European countries. Multi-day expert meetings and qualitative interviews were used to gather experiences and examples of public health event reporting. Feedback on specific components of the toolkit was collected from healthcare workers and public health officials throughout the design process.ResultsEvidence from 79 scientific publications, two multi-day expert meetings and seven qualitative interviews stressed the need to clarify concepts and expectations around event reporting in European countries between the frontline and public health authorities. An analytical framework based on three priority areas for improved event reporting (professional engagement, communication and infrastructure) was developed and guided the development of the various tools. We developed a toolkit adaptable to country-specific needs that includes a guidance document for IHR National Focal Points and nine tool templates targeted at clinicians and laboratory staff: five awareness campaign tools, three education and training tools, and an implementation plan. The toolkit emphasizes what to report, the reporting process and the need for follow-up, supported by real examples.ConclusionThis toolkit addresses the importance of mutual exchange of information between frontline healthcare workers and public health authorities. It may potentially increase frontline healthcare workers' awareness of their role in the detection of events of public health concern, improve communication channels and contribute to creating an enabling environment for event reporting. However, the effectiveness of the toolkit will depend on the national body responsible for dissemination and training.

Highlights

  • The International Health Regulations (IHR (2005)) require countries to notify WHO of any event which may constitute a public health emergency of international concern

  • The public health risk assessment process that occurs between healthcare workers (HCWs) and public health authorities related to an event may need elucidation

  • The second part was structured to identify issues directly associated with national implementation of the IHR (2005), in relation to identifying and reporting potential ‘public health events of international concern’, using the following key words: “international health regulations”, “health intelligence”, “epidemic intelligence” and “event based surveillance”

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Summary

Introduction

The International Health Regulations (IHR (2005)) require countries to notify WHO of any event which may constitute a public health emergency of international concern This notification relies on reports of events occurring at the local level reaching the national public health authorities. By June 2012 WHO member states are expected to have implemented the capacity to “detect events involving disease or death above expected levels for the particular time and place” on the local level and report essential information to the appropriate level of public health authority. At the local community and/or primary public health response level, member states are required to have implemented the capacity to “detect events involving disease or death above expected levels for the particular time and place” and report essential information to the appropriate level of public health authority. Event reporting is uniquely challenging due to a lack of definitions of what to report and prescribed timelines for when to report

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