Influenza: The Texas ExperienceAndrea Salinas, MPH, CPH, CIC October 23, 2019 Objectives •List...

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10/16/2019 1 Influenza Surveillance in Texas Andrea Salinas, MPH, CPH, CIC October 23, 2019 Objectives List influenza surveillance activities performed in Texas Describe current and past flu season trends Recognize the strengths and limitations of current surveillance practices 2 1 2

Transcript of Influenza: The Texas ExperienceAndrea Salinas, MPH, CPH, CIC October 23, 2019 Objectives •List...

Page 1: Influenza: The Texas ExperienceAndrea Salinas, MPH, CPH, CIC October 23, 2019 Objectives •List influenza surveillance activities performed in Texas •Describe current and past flu

10/16/2019

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Influenza Surveillance in Texas

Andrea Salinas, MPH, CPH, CIC

October 23, 2019

Objectives

• List influenza surveillance activities performed in Texas

• Describe current and past flu season trends

• Recognize the strengths and limitations of current surveillance practices

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Page 2: Influenza: The Texas ExperienceAndrea Salinas, MPH, CPH, CIC October 23, 2019 Objectives •List influenza surveillance activities performed in Texas •Describe current and past flu

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Influenza Surveillance

• The Influenza Surveillance System is a multi-component surveillance network with local, regional, state, and national activities

• Data collection is based on a reporting week that starts on Sunday and ends on Saturday of each week.

• CDC MMWR Weeks

• October 23 = Week 43

• Flu surveillance season: week 40 to week 20

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Goals of Influenza Surveillance

• Find out when and where influenza activity is occurring

• Determine what type of influenza viruses are circulating

• Detect changes in the influenza virus

• Track influenza-related illness

• Measure the impact influenza is having on deaths

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Page 3: Influenza: The Texas ExperienceAndrea Salinas, MPH, CPH, CIC October 23, 2019 Objectives •List influenza surveillance activities performed in Texas •Describe current and past flu

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Texas Influenza Surveillance Activities

• Morbidity

• ILINet: Outpatient ILI

• Outbreaks

• Syndromic

• Mortality

• Influenza-associated pediatric deaths

• Death certificate data

• Viral

• NREVSS: Hospital laboratory reporting

• Public Health Lab testing

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What’s Reportable in Texas?

1.Novel influenza A cases in humans

2.Influenza-associated pediatric deaths

3.Outbreaks (influenza, ILI, etc.)

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Page 4: Influenza: The Texas ExperienceAndrea Salinas, MPH, CPH, CIC October 23, 2019 Objectives •List influenza surveillance activities performed in Texas •Describe current and past flu

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Key Term: ILI

• ILI = Influenza-like Illness

• Fever > 100o F, and:

• Cough and/or

• Sore throat

• In the absence of another known cause other than influenza

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Morbidity

ILINet

• US Outpatient ILI Surveillance Network

• Collects aggregate counts of all patients seen and the count of patients with ILI by age group

• Data is reported weekly

• Participation is voluntary2018-2019 influenza season: 114 regularly reporting Texas facilities

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ILINet

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Percentage of Visits Due to ILI Reported by TX ILINet Providers, 2015-2016 to 2018-2019 Seasons

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Page 6: Influenza: The Texas ExperienceAndrea Salinas, MPH, CPH, CIC October 23, 2019 Objectives •List influenza surveillance activities performed in Texas •Describe current and past flu

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Morbidity

Outbreaks

• Outbreak reporting is required by lawBoth lab-confirmed influenza and ILI outbreaks

• 183 reported outbreaks in Texas during the 2018-2019 influenza season

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Morbidity

Syndromic Surveillance

• Selected elements of the electronic health record sent to syndromic surveillance system from hospitals, urgent cares, free-standing ERs, etc.

• Symptoms and diagnoses get categorized into “syndromes”

• Data is analyzed for trends and abnormalities

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Mortality

Influenza-associated Pediatric Deaths

• A death in a child under 18 years of age resulting from a clinically compatible illness that was confirmed to be influenza by an appropriate laboratory or rapid diagnostic test

• 2018 – 2019 influenza season statistics• 17 deaths reported• 64.7%* known to be unvaccinated• 35.3% had no known underlying risk

factors

*likely much higher due to 23.5% of cases with unknown vaccination status

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Influenza-associated Pediatric Mortality

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Mortality

Pneumonia & Influenza Mortality

• Data obtained from death certificates

• Underlying or contributing cause(s) of death is reported as pneumonia or influenza

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Age Category (years)

Number of P&I Deaths*

Mortality Rate (per 100,000)

0 - 4 42 1.96

5 - 17 40 0.72

18 - 49 642 4.84

50 - 64 1702 32.81

65 + 7594 198.0

Overall 10020 33.46

HSRNumber of

P&I Deaths*Mortality Rate (per 100,000)

1 369 39.62

2/3 2926 33.77

4/5N 787 48.02

6/5S 2375 30.29

7 1114 30.36

8 1087 35.16

9/10 508 31.76

11 848 33.75

Unknown <10 N/A

Overall 10020 33.46

*NOTE: Data are provisional and subject to

change, errors, and duplicates

Viral Surveillance

NREVSS

• National Respiratory and Enteric Virus Surveillance System

• Healthcare providers voluntarily report total number of respiratory specimens tested and number of positivesData is reported weekly

• Captures influenza test results, along with: Adenovirus, human metapneumovirus, parainfluenza, rhinovirus, enterovirus, RSV, and coronavirus

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Viral Surveillance

Laboratory Surveillance

• Specimens are voluntarily sent to the DSHS lab or Texas LRNs by healthcare providers

• Specimens get tested by PCR Identification and subtyping

• A subset of submitted specimens are sent every two weeks to CDC for further testing

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Laboratory Surveillance

1.Numbered list

a.Second level

i. Third level

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Influenza Surveillance

• Strengths

• Multiple data sources

• Many electronic surveillance systems available

• Weaknesses

• Most reporting is voluntary

• ILI vs Influenza

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Thank youAndrea Salinas, MPH, CPH, CIC

[email protected]

[email protected]

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