Syndromic surveillance by veterinary practitioners: a pilot study in the pig sector.
Carla Correia-GomesMadeleine Kate HenrySusanna WilliamsonRichard M IrvineGeorge J GunnNigel WoolfendenMark E C WhiteSue C TonguePublished in: The Veterinary record (2019)
Traditional indicator-based livestock surveillance has been focused on case definitions, definitive diagnoses and laboratory confirmation. The use of syndromic disease surveillance would increase the population base from which animal health data are captured and facilitate earlier detection of new and re-emerging threats to animal health. Veterinary practitioners could potentially play a vital role in such activities. In a pilot study, specialist private veterinary practitioners (PVP) working in the English pig industry were asked to collect and transfer background data and disease incident reports for pig farms visited during the study period. Baseline data from 110 pig farms were received, along with 68 disease incident reports. Reports took an average of approximately 25 minutes to complete. Feedback from the PVPs indicated that they saw value in syndromic surveillance. Maintenance of anonymity in the outputs would be essential, as would timely access for the PVPs to relevant information on syndromic trends. Further guidance and standardisation would also be required. Syndromic surveillance by PVPs is possible for the pig industry. It has potential to fill current gaps in the collection of animal health data, as long as the engagement and participation of data providers can be obtained and maintained.
Keyphrases
- public health
- intellectual disability
- electronic health record
- healthcare
- big data
- primary care
- mental health
- health information
- cardiovascular disease
- physical activity
- emergency department
- data analysis
- artificial intelligence
- adverse drug
- squamous cell carcinoma
- social media
- deep learning
- risk assessment
- palliative care
- human health
- autism spectrum disorder
- general practice
- health promotion
- health insurance
- rectal cancer
- sensitive detection