Assessment of infectious disease surveillance--Uganda, 2000. (57/1873)

In 1998, member states of the African region of the World Health Organization (WHO-AFRO) adopted the integrated disease surveillance (IDS) strategy to strengthen national infectious disease surveillance systems (1). The first step of the IDS strategy is to assess infectious disease surveillance systems. This report describes the results of the assessment of these systems of the Uganda Ministry of Health (UMoH) and indicates that additional efforts are needed to develop the basic elements of an effective surveillance system.  (+info)

The role of DNA amplification technology in the diagnosis of infectious diseases. (58/1873)

Nucleic acid amplification and detection methods developed in the past decade are useful for the diagnosis and management of a variety of infectious diseases. The most widely used of these methods is the polymerase chain reaction (PCR). PCR assays can detect rapidly and accurately the presence of fastidious and slow-growing microorganisms, such as Chlamydia, mycoplasmas, mycobacteria, herpesviruses and enteroviruses, directly from clinical specimens. Commercial PCR assays for the diagnosis of tuberculosis and genital C. trachomatis infection are now routinely used in many diagnostic laboratories. Assays have also been developed that can detect antimicrobial resistance and are used to identify the cause of infection by organisms that cannot be cultivated. The value of viral load measurement by nucleic acid amplification in the management of patients with HIV infection or hepatitis C has also been well established. However, evaluations of this technology for rapid microbial diagnosis have generally been limited by small samples, and the cost of these assays may be as high as Can$125 per test. As nucleic acid amplification methods continue to evolve, their role in the diagnosis and management of patients with infectious diseases and their impact on clinical outcomes will become better defined.  (+info)

Skepticism: a lost clinical art. (59/1873)

Under the contemporary avalanche of new biomedical discoveries, most physicians find themselves in a losing battle to keep up to date. An underappreciated but important consequence of this struggle has been an abdication of the traditional responsibility of clinicians to critically review novel findings. We appear as a group to prefer our data predigested. Understandably, but unfortunately, we have become too accepting of formal guidelines and trusting of expert advice. Imprecision in our thinking and misapplication of cutting edge technologies have resulted, often to the detriment of the individual patient and the society at large. This essay illustrates some specific examples that demonstrate how superficial knowledge and blind faith can promote suboptimal care and inappropriate use of resources. Reflexive approaches to problems erode the individuality of diagnostic and treatment plans. Accordingly, I challenge my colleagues to be more skeptical about the validity and utility of how they are directed to practice medicine.  (+info)

Is there epidemiology in Russia? (60/1873)

OBJECTIVE: To examine the current state of epidemiology in Russia. DESIGN: The structure of clinical research and statistical methods was used to shed light on the epidemiology in Russia. The frequencies of specific study designs were evaluated using Medline data for 1970-1997. To determine the proportion of advanced design clinical studies the frequency of cohort, prospective, follow up, or longitudinal studies, and controlled trials was evaluated. All diagnosis related studies were found to determine the usage of advanced statistical technique (ROC analysis). The adequacy of Medline information was checked by hand search of journals. All dissertations in epidemiology defended in Russia in 1995 and 1996 were evaluated for their methodology. The curriculum recommended by Ministry of Health to Medical Universities was evaluated. Available literature and library indexing of epidemiological terms examined. MAIN RESULTS: Russian medical research uses less frequently advanced study designs and methods of data analysis. Medical students are taught epidemiology as a science of spread of infectious diseases. There is no department of epidemiology in Russian universities where epidemiology is taught in the modern sense and no epidemiological and biostatistical periodicals available in Russia. CONCLUSION: Epidemiology in Russia remains in an archaic state of science of the spread of infectious diseases and it is detrimental to methodology of medical research in Russia.  (+info)

Forecasting disease risk for increased epidemic preparedness in public health. (61/1873)

Emerging infectious diseases pose a growing threat to human populations. Many of the world's epidemic diseases (particularly those transmitted by intermediate hosts) are known to be highly sensitive to long-term changes in climate and short-term fluctuations in the weather. The application of environmental data to the study of disease offers the capability to demonstrate vector-environment relationships and potentially forecast the risk of disease outbreaks or epidemics. Accurate disease forecasting models would markedly improve epidemic prevention and control capabilities. This chapter examines the potential for epidemic forecasting and discusses the issues associated with the development of global networks for surveillance and prediction. Existing global systems for epidemic preparedness focus on disease surveillance using either expert knowledge or statistical modelling of disease activity and thresholds to identify times and areas of risk. Predictive health information systems would use monitored environmental variables, linked to a disease system, to be observed and provide prior information of outbreaks. The components and varieties of forecasting systems are discussed with selected examples, along with issues relating to further development.  (+info)

Infectious disease morbidity in the US region bordering Mexico, 1990-1998. (62/1873)

The United States and Mexico share an international boundary approximately 3000 km long. This border separates 2 nations with great differences in health status. The objective of this study was to assess morbidity due to infectious diseases in the US region bordering Mexico. The incidence between 1990 and 1998 of 22 nationally notifiable infectious diseases was compared between border and nonborder regions. Disease rates, reflected as rate ratios, were higher in the border region for botulism, brucellosis, diphtheria, hepatitis A, measles, mumps, rabies, rubella, salmonellosis, and shigellosis than in either of 2 nonborder comparison regions. These data indicate that incidence rates for a variety of infectious diseases of public health importance are significantly higher in the United States along the Mexican border than in nonborder regions. These results suggest that an inadequate public health infrastructure may contribute to excess morbidity due to infectious diseases in the border region.  (+info)

Population mobility and infectious diseases: the diminishing impact of classical infectious diseases and new approaches for the 21st century. (63/1873)

In an increasingly globalized world, rapid population mobility and migration is reducing the differences in infectious disease epidemiology between regions of the world. The movement and relocation of populations between locations where the prevalence and incidence of infections are markedly different poses current and future challenges to those involved in clinical infectious diseases and public health program management. Historically, international attention has focused on the screening and treatment of acute infections of epidemic potential, but, as immigration significantly changes the demography of many nations, chronic infections will require increased attention. In countries with large mobile populations, the population-based burden of infections with long latency periods or significant noninfectious sequelae will make up an increasing amount of the infectious disease caseload and will require more-modern approaches than the traditional screening of arrivals. The globalization of chronic infectious disease epidemiology will require corresponding development of integrated programs to anticipate and manage these diseases in response to an increasingly mobile patient population.  (+info)

The health of the Roma people: a review of the published literature. (64/1873)

BACKGROUND: The Roma people originated in northern India and have been known in Europe for nearly a thousand years. For much of that time they have been the subjects of discrimination and oppression, culminating in the extermination of half a million Roma in the Nazi death camps. While it is widely believed that the health of Roma people is often poorer than the majority population, these inequalities remain largely unresearched. METHODS: Published literature on the health of the Roma people was identified using Medline. Opinion pieces were excluded, as were papers relating to anthropometry and to genetic markers. The resultant papers were analysed by country of study and by disease type or care group. RESULTS: Some 70% of papers identified related to just three countries; Spain and the Czech and Slovak Republics. Much literature concentrates upon communicable disease or reproductive health. The limited evidence suggests increased morbidity from non-communicable disease, but there is little published on this topic. Evidence on health care, though fragmentary, suggests poorer access to health services and uptake of preventative care. DISCUSSION: Published research on the health needs of the Roma population is sparse. The topics that have received attention suggest a focus on concepts of contagion or social Darwinism, indicating a greater concern with the health needs of the majority populations with which they live. There is a need for both further research into the health of Roma people; with particular emphasis on non-communicable disease; and also for interventions that improve Roma health. Such research must, however, be handled with sensitivity, recognising the social and political context of the society concerned.  (+info)