Influenza Surveillance at IRID

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Influenza Surveillance at IRID Immunization and Respiratory Infections Division Centre for Infectious Disease Prevention & Control Public Health Agency of Canada

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Influenza Surveillance at IRID. Immunization and Respiratory Infections Division Centre for Infectious Disease Prevention & Control Public Health Agency of Canada. Impact of Influenza. In Canada: 10-25% of population affected yearly (higher infection rates in children and elderly) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Influenza Surveillance at IRID

Page 1: Influenza Surveillance at IRID

Influenza Surveillanceat IRID

Immunization and Respiratory Infections DivisionCentre for Infectious Disease Prevention & Control

Public Health Agency of Canada

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Impact of InfluenzaIn Canada: • 10-25% of population affected yearly (higher

infection rates in children and elderly)• 70-75,000 hospitalizations• 6-7,000 deaths due to pneumonia and influenza• 500-1,500 deaths due to influenza

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P&I Morbidity

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Canada’s National Influenza Surveillance Program

Primary Objectives : 1) Early detection and monitoring of influenza outbreaks

2) Provide timely and up-to-date reporting of influenza activity in Canada and abroad to professionals & public

3) Monitor circulating strains of influenza virus, including new sub-types

4) Contribute to the information for vaccine composition for following season

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Influenza Surveillance

ILI ConsultationsSentinel Physicians

Laboratories Number of Influenza tests and positives

National Microbiology Laboratory

Strain Characterization

Provincial/Territorial Epidemiologists

Influenza activity levels (outbreaks etc)

Data Provider Indicator

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Uses of Surveillance Data

• estimating disease impact – influenza-like illness clinic visits– influenza and pneumonia

hospitalizations and deaths– all cause mortality– other health and economic impacts

• monitoring viral evolution – identification of predominant strains– detection of new strains/subtypes

Influenza prevention and control policies

Vaccine composition program development and timing

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Number of Influenza regions reporting widespread or localized activity

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2003 Report week ending 2004

Number of regions

Localized activity Widespread activity

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35 41 47 53 6 12 18 43 49 3 9 15 21 37 43 49 3 9 15 21 27 35 41 47 1 7 13 19 25 39 45 51 5 11 17 23 29 35 36 42 48 2 8 14 20 26 32 39 45 51 5 11 17 23 29 35

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Week Influenza Season 1997/98 1998/99 1999-2000 2000/01 2001/02 2002/03 2003/04

Predominant strain(s)/ viruses similar to/ viruses similar to/ viruses similar to/ viruses similar to/ viruses similar to/ viruses similar to/ viruses similar to/

Souche(s) Analogues à : Analogues à : Analogues à : Analogues à : Analogues à : Analogues à : Analogues à :prédominante(s) A/Sydney/5/97(H3N2) A/Sydney/5/97(H3N2) A/Sydney/5/97(H3N2) A/NewCaledonia/20/99- A/Panama/2007/99 (H3N2) A/(H1N2) A/Fujian/411/02 (H3N2) B/Beijing/184/93 B/Beijing/184/93 (H1N1) A/H1N2 B/Hong Kong/330/01

Seasonal Distributuion of Laboratory Confirmed Influenza Infections by influenza type, Canada 1997-2004

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Influenza Tests, % positive, & ILI rates, Canada, by report week, 2003-2004

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Proportion of lab-confirmed influenza by age-group, Canada, 2003-2004

Age unknown1%

<5 years33%

5-9 years5%

10-14 years5%

15-24 years11%

25-44 years11%

45-64 years9%

65 years25%

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Influenza Strain Identification

B/ Sichuan/ 379/ 99-like [33]

H1N2[1]

A/ Panama/ 2007/ 99 (H3N2)-like

[25]

A/ Fujian/ 411/ 02-like (H3N2) [776]

A/ New Caledonia/ 20/ 99-

like (H1N1) [3]

B/ Hong Kong/ 330/ 01-like

[7]

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Influenza Activity Level by Provincial and Territorial Influenza Surveillance Regions, Canada,

Week 03 2004

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FluWatch on the Webhttp://www.phac-aspc.gc.ca/fluwatch/index.html

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New Initiatives….• Impact of influenza in children -

hospitalizations • Sentinel hospital-based surveillance• Trained nurse monitor at each centre

identifies eligible cases and completes detailed case report forms Admissions by Age-group

2004-05

29%

30%

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0-5 months

6-23 months

2-4 years

5-9 years

10-16 years

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New Initiatives..

Canadian Network for Public Health Intelligence (CNPHI)

• CNPHI is a secure internet-based suite of applications and resources.

• It is primarily directed towards strategic public health information and intelligence sharing.

• Included applications: – Atlantic Canada FluWatch Application – Canadian Integrated Outbreak Surveillance Centre

(CIOSC).

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New Initiatives: CNPHI

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Canadian Integrated Outbreak Surveillance Centre (CIOSC)

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Canadian Integrated Outbreak Surveillance Centre (CIOSC)

• Goal: To enhance public health’s capacity to anticipate and detect health risks associated with communicable disease threats.

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SRI Alerts: An SRI alert is an operational definition used to ensure that individuals meeting specific criteria are identified in a systematic way to allow for implementation of appropriate infection control and public health measures until SARS or other emerging respiratory pathogen has been ruled out as a cause of the illness

Severe Respiratory Illness (SRI) Surveillance

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SRI Alerts

An SRI alert is sent under the following situations:

• An individual is hospitalized with an SRI and has a potential epidemiologic link to a source of emerging respiratory pathogen

• Clusters of SRI are identified within a health care unit

• An individual has been identified with laboratory evidence of a SARS-CoV infection (or other emerging respiratory infection)

• An individual has been identified with a laboratory confirmed influenza A/ H5N1 or other novel influenza virus infection

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