Abstract

The 21st Commonwealth Games (the Games) was hosted on the Gold Coast, Australia in April 2018. With a large number of international travellers congregating at the mass gathering, it was important to monitor international communicable disease outbreaks with potential to be imported into Australia. The Australian Government Department of Health (DoH) conducted and reported enhanced international communicable disease surveillance during and surrounding the Games period. Surveillance focused on diseases with higher than normal incidence in Commonwealth countries with potential to be imported through travellers and ability to continue transmission in Australia. Over four months, 27 disease events were identified, monitored and reported to local, state and federal public health authorities, as well as general practitioners and pathologists throughout Queensland. Surveillance provided situational awareness for decision making and risk assessment during the Games. It complemented and informed surveillance of local disease activity during the Games and allowed frontline health professionals to contextualise disease presentations.

Highlights

  • From 4-15 April 2018, the 21st Commonwealth Games were held on the Gold Coast in Queensland, Australia

  • It was essential for local, state and federal public health agencies to be prepared to detect and respond to communicable disease events at the Games

  • The DoH worked with the Gold Coast Public Health Unit (GCPHU) and the Queensland Department of Health to establish surveillance and reporting needs

Read more

Summary

Introduction

From 4-15 April 2018, the 21st Commonwealth Games (the Games) were held on the Gold Coast in Queensland, Australia. The large influx of travellers and the temporospatial concentration of people at a mass gathering provides the ideal conditions for introduction of international communicable diseases and heightened local transmission [4]. As a result, it was essential for local, state and federal public health agencies to be prepared to detect and respond to communicable disease events at the Games. With the aim of providing information for risk assessments and informing preparedness and response activities, enhanced international communicable disease surveillance was instigated for the Games

Methods
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call