Abstract

Background: Global COVID-19 outbreaks in early 2020 have burdened health workers, among them surveillance workers who have the responsibility to undertake routine disease surveillance activities. The aim of this study was to describe the quality of the implementation of Indonesia’s Early Warning and Response Alert System (EWARS) for disease surveillance and to measure the burden of disease surveillance reporting quality before and during the COVID-19 epidemic in Indonesia. Methods: A mixed-method approach was used. A total of 38 informants from regional health offices participated in Focus Group Discussion (FGD) and In-Depth Interview (IDI) for informants from Ministry of Health. The FGD and IDI were conducted using online video communication. Yearly completeness and timeliness of reporting of 34 provinces were collected from the application. Qualitative data were analyzed thematically, and quantitative data were analyzed descriptively. Results: Major implementation gaps were found in poorly distributed human resources and regional infrastructure inequity. National reporting from 2017–2019 showed an increasing trend of completeness (55%, 64%, and 75%, respectively) and timeliness (55%, 64%, and 75%, respectively). However, the quality of the reporting dropped to 53% and 34% in 2020 concomitant with the SARS-CoV2 epidemic. Conclusions: Report completeness and timeliness are likely related to regional infrastructure inequity and the COVID-19 epidemic. It is recommended to increase report capacities with an automatic EWARS application linked systems in hospitals and laboratories.

Highlights

  • We further address the following questions in this study: (a) What is the quality of Indonesia’s Early Warning and Response Alert System (EWARS)? and (b) Does COVID-19 put more burden in disease surveillance reporting using EWARS compared to previous years before the pandemic?

  • Our study evaluated the quality of EWARS implementation in Indonesia

  • The results show existing gaps in surveillance reporting quality based on EWARS application in Indonesia and the burden of disease among surveillance worker in primary health care facility during COVID-19 pandemic

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of this study was to describe the quality of the implementation of Indonesia’s. This study aims to evaluate the quality of implementation of Indonesia’s EWARS for disease surveillance, to determine whether COVID-19 affects the data reporting quality before and during the COVID-19 epidemic in Indonesia

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