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• 2004 Article
Building a Better Biosurveillance System
by Eric Skjei

Article originally printed in CAP Today – February, 2004

View article on cap.org | Download printable pdf

The advantages of computerizing a public health reporting system that is still largely manual are so compelling that they've spawned a number of initiatives to do so. These projects, organized under the Public Health Information Network, are enjoying renewed attention not only because of the specter of bioterrorism but also because of new infectious and communicable disease threats, such as SARS.

In a process being duplicated in urban regions around the country, software and hardware, phone lines, and virtual private networks are first complementing and then replacing fax, phone, and traditional mail or courier-based reporting systems. The result: Diseases and threats are identified and responded to more quickly, and more such cases are picked up in the first place.

In Florida, for example, the state Department of Health implemented a pilot project more than a year ago that was designed to pull laboratory data for infectious or communicable diseases from the state laboratories and pass the data electronically to appropriate caseworkers, in this instance those working with sexually transmitted diseases. Before the pilot project was launched, reporting was done via hard copy only.

"We've been pretty successful," says Janet Firestone, integration program manager and data administrator for the state's Department of Health. "We've reduced the lag time in getting caseworkers access to the data from four to 10 days down to under 72 hours." In many cases, she adds, that notification takes place even sooner, within 24 hours of the time the tests are done.

This depends heavily on rules that operate automatically in the system's software. "Once we get the test in, our integration broker applies certain user-defined rules to it," Firestone says. "We look for circumstances relevant to that test-for example, is the child under a certain age, is the test positive for a specific STD, and so on." Cases that fit the profile may generate an e-mail alert to the caseworker, who then investigates further. In one recent instance, the caseworker showed up at the hospital and began the process of getting treatment for an infant even before the child was discharged. "That made us real happy-IT people don't get to save too many babies," Firestone says.

The next step in the project is to bring in a laboratory that does not operate within the state system. To this end, she has gained the participation of Integrated Regional Laboratories in Fort Lauderdale, whose medical director is James Robb, MD. Dr. Robb is also vice president for medical affairs at MDS Laboratory Services, U.S.

Dr. Robb and Firestone point to the value of incorporating data communication and exchange standards in making an interlaboratory project like theirs a success.

"We're using the HL7 format, which is standard with the CDC, as the message standard, and we're working with Dr. Robb's laboratory staff so we can do a crosswalk on the local laboratory test codes and the national standards, which are LOINC codes for the tests and SNOMED codes for the lab results," Firestone explains. Without this step, the process can become unmanageable. "Every laboratory uses its own local codes," she notes. "For us to figure out which tests need to go into which program areas, we need to know what those tests are and have a standard way to identify them. That's where standards like HL7, LOINC, and SNOMED CT come in."

Once the new process is in place, reacting to requests to add a new test or result becomes straightforward. "We had a request in the middle of last week from our infectious disease people indicating that they would like to receive positive tests for influenza," Firestone says. "It's not bioterrorism, but for public health it's very important."

Because influenza had not until that point been a reportable disease, Firestone's lab had not been filtering out state laboratory data for it. "Within a day and a half we were able to modify our system so we could pull that test out of the file that we get from the state laboratory, and now we're reporting that electronically to our infectious disease people so they have access to that data within 24 to 36 hours of the time the tests are completed," she says.

Adds Dr. Robb: "This is exactly what we want to carry on to a regional, national, global level, where you can use coding that will take that information and rapidly alert back when you have a proper constellation of symptoms, age groups, and data, including lab, radiology, and clinical data. And it will throw up warning signs in the proper facility, even hopefully at some point with the physician and his or her Palm Pilot."

Firestone notes that alternative mechanisms must still exist to circumvent the standard procedures when the need to act urgently is paramount. "There are certain cases and circumstances that will continue to bypass this process," she says. "If Dr. Robb were to get a lab test in and find he's got a positive for anthrax, our basic alerting system will continue to work. But he has protocols in place that he will continue to follow that say, for example, When you get one of these tests, you pick up the phone and you call somebody at the state department of health or the CDC now."

Linking private and public labs to build better Public Health Information Networks is going on all across the country, with different regions advancing at different paces, Firestone says.

"We participate in a monthly conference call with a lot of other places that are trying to implement this process," she reports, "and they have all implemented pieces or parts of it, or they are in different stages of implementation." In New York, private labs are supplying HIV data to state health officials, and the PHIN group there is hoping to enlist the help of the national reference laboratories.

Los Angeles County has been working with Visual CMR (Confidential Morbidity Report), a disease-tracking and case-management system, and is seeing "great results," says Robert Gregory, managing director of Atlas' new Public Health division. David Dassey, MD, deputy chief of Los Angeles' Acute Communicable Disease Control, and others designed the system in the late '90s, and Atlas created the software. It was deployed by the L.A. County Department of Health and Human Services in May 2000 and has been operating ever since.

"The county has found it to be a huge boon to its efficiency in terms of its ability to gain a great deal of data about what's happening in the field and its ability to investigate and resolve incidents and outbreaks on a much quicker timeline," Gregory says. What might have taken a month now takes a week.
The vision of a national electronic disease surveillance system is not all that new to the CDC, explains Gregory. "Originally, they referred to it as the NEDSS [National Electronic Disease Surveillance System] program. About a year and a half ago, CDC began to use the term Public Health Information Network, PHIN, which has now become the new label for the emerging mandate that the CDC is putting forward to create a national network of interconnected public health departments and other public health entities."

" PHIN is basically a series of guidelines that the CDC has been finalizing for some time," Gregory says.

The PHIN standards are directed to state and local health departments, which still must determine what specific IT solutions to deploy. "The standards don't dictate exactly what each system should be," Gregory says. "They provide a framework that emphasizes open technologies that can communicate easily, in particular HL7 3.0 RIM, which is an emerging standard for HL7 messaging that will include public health-specific messaging, and ebXML as the transfer layer, an electronic business XML standard that will allow for secure standard message passing using HL7."

The Atlas system, Gregory says, was designed by L.A. County to address its local needs, to handle exactly the kind of case management and workflow that's needed to make sure public health nurses out in the field are doing the investigation and analysis, and that all followups are done to ensure information is correct and up to date. "But the system also complies with the standards as they exist today for PHIN, and we are working to ensure continuing compliance," he adds.

Atlas recently expanded that system by bringing San Diego County online. "We have had additional conversations with others in California as well as with several prospects throughout the United States," Gregory says.
Larger integrated health delivery networks or academic medical centers also are interested in the case investigation possibilities of Atlas Visual CMR within their own health systems, Gregory says.

At the same time, Atlas is approaching private-sector laboratories it has worked with on the LabWorks side of the equation, he says. LabWorks is an order-entry solution that outreach programs use. To make this strategy workable, Atlas is establishing a centralized data-brokering capability through its data center in Agoura Hills, Calif. The center will receive incident reports that come out of any laboratory information system enrolled in the program.
" We'll take those incident reports, filtered to determine that they are in fact reportable incidents, and then broker them to the appropriate local health department that is supposed to receive that report by statute," Gregory says. "We call this the public health information link, or PHIL."

L.A. County has been receiving electronic transmissions of reportable disease incidents from Kaiser Permanente Reference Laboratories in southern California. Kaiser's reports constitute 40 percent of all the communicable disease reports that L.A. County Public Health receives; they're transmitted using LOINC standard encoding. At CAP TODAY press time, Atlas was planning to add incident reporting from Kaiser to San Diego County within a few weeks, using PHIL.

Atlas has begun to deploy a Web-based CMR system in Los Angeles County. It's a Web-based reporting module that physicians and other health care providers can use to file reports, by way of a Web browser. They are able to log on to a secure system administered by the county that provides them with a Web-based form that is virtually indistinguishable from the paper form they're used to using. They complete it online, submit it electronically, and receive an instant electronic response from the server, which functions as a receipt to show their compliance.

Cerner Corp. has, with the cooperation of local clinical laboratories, operated an automated reporting system for the Kansas City (Mo.) Health Department for 18 months now. It has already demonstrated significant improvements in the speed and completeness of reporting over the older, manual system it is intended to eventually replace. So successful has the first phase of this project, dubbed Health Sentry, been that it is now slowly being expanded to the state level.

" The key benefits observed were that not only was the speed of reporting improved, but there were a lot of underreported diseases that we were able to capture and deliver to the health department," says Mark Hoffman, PhD, genomic solutions manager for Cerner Corp.

Dr. Hoffman and colleagues reported in the October 2003 issue of Emerging Infectious Diseases that notification of chlamydia cases arrived two days earlier, invasive group A streptococcal disease cases arrived 2.3 days sooner, and salmonellosis cases arrived 2.7 days sooner. "Data were more complete for all demographic fields, including address, age, sex, race, and date of birth. Two hundred fourteen cases reported electronically were not received by conventional means," they wrote.

The health department receives three types of reports daily. "The electronic reports are usually available for download around midday," says Tiffany Wilkinson, assistant division manager for communicable disease prevention and public health preparedness, Kansas City Health Department. "These can then be reviewed to monitor for disease trends. The data from the reports can also be exported to allow for uploading into our existing surveillance system."
The first report is an isolate report that includes all the available reportable disease information from the contributing laboratories. The laboratory results, along with available demographic data, are provided, Wilkinson says.
The second report is a laboratory orders report. "That report assists in identifying actual lab orders before the results even come back," Wilkinson explains. "So regardless of the results, whether they're positive or negative, we can monitor the ordering patterns within the hospitals. For example, examining the number of stool specimens ordered may give insight a little bit sooner as far as potential foodborne illness outbreaks or something else that's going on within the community."

The final report is a full-text document. "It's very common for laboratories to report things differently," Wilkinson says. "And because the templates they use aren't necessarily standardized across facilities, the addition of this full-text report allows us to see the information on a more detailed basis for microbiology orders." This report also provides, in some cases, additional information such as colony counts and serotyping information, as well as information on whether the result has been reported and who it was reported to.

The Cerner-operated data clearinghouse takes the reportable results from all the contributing laboratories and translates them into a standardized nomenclature. The clearinghouse maps these results to common codes, aggregates the information, and delivers the encrypted reports through a secure shell network.

" What we do is download these reports and cull through them based on a set of criteria that we've developed," says Karen Miscavish, an epidemiology specialist at the health department. "We go back a week at a time, picking up all the isolates, further sort them by diseases that are reportable in our area, and then we compare that with our existing surveillance system so we're not entering duplicates or anything like that." Information received on people who reside outside the department's jurisdiction is forwarded to the correct agency. "And we do that basically every single day," says Miscavish.

Eric Skjei is a writer in Stinson Beach, California

 
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