Last data update: Jan 13, 2025. (Total: 48570 publications since 2009)
Records 1-2 (of 2 Records) |
Query Trace: Manthey C[original query] |
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Development and implementation of a public health event management system, Nigeria, 2018-2024
Elston J , Eteng WO , Ihekweazu C , Oliver I , Aniaku E , Abubakar A , Lee CT , Benyeogor E , Roddick I , Logan S , Okereke E , Inamdar L , Aruna O , Luka-Lawal R , Manthey C , Hinkle L , Nunez G , Agogo E , Usman R , Sunday EL , Hassan M , Oladejo J , Adetifa I . Emerg Infect Dis 2025 31 (1) 4-13 Event management systems (EMS) are key tools for epidemic intelligence, integrating surveillance signals and incident response, although international standards to inform development are lacking. We describe the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (NCDC) SITAware, a software capable of operating with low internet bandwidth to generate notifications, reports, and spatiotemporal dashboards and provide event-level data for real-time accountability and postevent learning. SITAware was enabled by local institutional ownership, co-created at low cost, and integrated into existing workflows. In 2022, SITAware was used to manage ≈300 incidents, and NCDC implemented it subnationally. NCDC's experience may inform EMS development and implementation in similar settings. |
An indicator framework for the monitoring and evaluation of event-based surveillance systems
Crawley AW , Mercy K , Shivji S , Lofgren H , Trowbridge D , Manthey C , Tebeje YK , Clara AW , Landry K , Salyer SJ . Lancet Glob Health 2024 Event-based surveillance (EBS) systems have been implemented globally to support early warning surveillance across human, animal, and environmental health in diverse settings, including at the community level, within health facilities, at border points of entry, and through media monitoring of internet-based sources. EBS systems should be evaluated periodically to ensure that they meet the objectives related to the early detection of health threats and to identify areas for improvement in the quality, efficiency, and usefulness of the systems. However, to date, there has been no comprehensive framework to guide the monitoring and evaluation of EBS systems; this absence of standardisation has hindered progress in the field. The Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention and US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have collaborated to develop an EBS monitoring and evaluation indicator framework, adaptable to specific country contexts, that uses measures relating to input, activity, output, outcome, and impact to map the processes and expected results of EBS systems. Through the implementation and continued refinement of these indicators, countries can ensure the early detection of health threats and improve their ability to measure and describe the impacts of EBS systems, thus filling the current evidence gap regarding their effectiveness. |
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