Point-of-Care Testing as an Influenza Surveillance Tool: Methodology and Lessons Learned from Implementation

Author:

Gren Lisa H.1ORCID,Porucznik Christina A.1,Joy Elizabeth A.1,Lyon Joseph L.1ORCID,Staes Catherine J.2,Alder Stephen C.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, University of Utah, 375 Chipeta Way, Suite A, Salt Lake City, UT 84108, USA

2. Department of Biomedical Informatics, University of Utah, 26 S 2000 E RM 5700, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, USA

Abstract

Objectives. Disease surveillance combines data collection and analysis with dissemination of findings to decision makers. The timeliness of these activities affects the ability to implement preventive measures. Influenza surveillance has traditionally been hampered by delays in both data collection and dissemination. Methods. We used statistical process control (SPC) to evaluate the daily percentage of outpatient visits with a positive point-of-care (POC) influenza test in the University of Utah Primary Care Research Network. Results. Retrospectively, POC testing generated an alert in each of 4 seasons (2004–2008, median 16 days before epidemic onset), suggesting that email notification of clinicians would be 9 days earlier than surveillance alerts posted to the Utah Department of Health website. In the 2008-09 season, the algorithm generated a real-time alert 19 days before epidemic onset. Clinicians in 4 intervention clinics received email notification of the alert within 4 days. Compared with clinicians in 6 control clinics, intervention clinicians were 40% more likely to perform rapid testing () and twice as likely to vaccinate for seasonal influenza () after notification. Conclusions. Email notification of SPC-generated alerts provided significantly earlier notification of the epidemic onset than traditional surveillance. Clinician preventive behavior was not significantly different in intervention clinics.

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Virology,Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology

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