Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/115378
Title: Digitalizing and upgrading severe acute respiratory infections surveillance in Malta : system development
Authors: Cauchi, John Paul
Borg, Maria-Louise
Džiugytė, Aušra
Attard, Jessica
Melillo, Tanya
Zahra, Graziella
Barbara, Christopher
Spiteri, Michael
Drago, Allan
Zammit, Luke
Debono, Joseph
Souness, Jorgen
Agius, Steve
Young, Sharon
Dimech, Alan
Chetcuti, Ian
Camenzuli, Mark
Borg, Ivan
Calleja, Neville
Tabone, Lorraine
Gauci, Charmaine
Vassallo, Pauline
Baruch, Joaquin
Keywords: Respiratory infections -- Malta
COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020- -- Malta
Epidemiology -- Malta
COVID-19 (Disease) -- Malta
Public health -- Malta
Issue Date: 2022
Publisher: JMIR Publications, Inc.
Citation: Cauchi, J. P., Borg, M. L., Džiugytė, A., Attard, J., Melillo, T., Zahra, G., ... & Baruch, J. (2022). Digitalizing and Upgrading Severe Acute Respiratory Infections Surveillance in Malta: System Development. JMIR Public Health and Surveillance, 8(12), e37669.
Abstract: Background: In late 2020, the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control and Epiconcept started implementing a surveillance system for severe acute respiratory infections (SARI) across Europe. Objective: We sought to describe the process of digitizing and upgrading SARI surveillance in Malta, an island country with a centralized health system, during the COVID-19 pandemic from February to November 2021. We described the characteristics of people included in the surveillance system and compared different SARI case definitions, including their advantages and disadvantages. This study also discusses the process, output, and future for SARI and other public health surveillance opportunities. Methods: Malta has one main public hospital where, on admission, patient data are entered into electronic records as free text. Symptoms and comorbidities are manually extracted from these records, whereas other data are collected from registers. Collected data are formatted to produce weekly and monthly reports to inform public health actions. From October 2020 to February 2021, we established an analogue incidence-based system for SARI surveillance. From February 2021 onward, we mapped key stakeholders and digitized most surveillance processes. Results: By November 30, 2021, 903 SARI cases were reported, with 380 (42.1%) positive for SARS-CoV-2. Of all SARI hospitalizations, 69 (7.6%) were admitted to the intensive care unit, 769 (85.2%) were discharged, 27 (3%) are still being treated, and 107 (11.8%) died. Among the 107 patients who died, 96 (89.7%) had more than one underlying condition, the most common of which were hypertension (n=57, 53.3%) and chronic heart disease (n=49, 45.8%). Conclusions: The implementation of enhanced SARI surveillance in Malta was completed by the end of May 2021, allowing the monitoring of SARI incidence and patient characteristics. A future shift to register-based surveillance should improve SARI detection through automated processes.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/115378
Appears in Collections:Scholarly Works - FacM&SPH



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