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Public Health Surveillance for the Great American Solar Eclipse in Oregon

机译:俄勒冈州美国日食的公共卫生监测

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Objective Develop a public health surveillance plan for the Oregon Public Health Division (OPHD) in anticipation of the expected influx of visitors for the 2017 Great American Solar Eclipse. Introduction The Great American Solar Eclipse of 2017 provided a rare opportunity to view a complete solar eclipse on the American mainland. Much of Oregon was in the path of totality and forecasted to have clear skies. Ahead of the event, OPHD aggregated a list of 107 known gatherings in mostly rural areas across the state, some with estimated attendance of up to 30,000 attendees. Temporary food vendors and a range of sanitation solutions (including open latrines) were planned. International travelers were expected, along with large numbers of visitors traveling by car on the day of the eclipse. The potential for multiple simultaneous mass gatherings across the state prompted OPHD to activate an incident management team (IMT) and to create a Health Intelligence Section to design a mass gathering surveillance strategy. Statewide syndromic surveillance (Oregon ESSENCE) has been used to monitor previous mass gatherings (1) and captures statewide emergency department (ED), urgent care, Oregon Poison Center, and reportable disease data. Methods The OPHD Health Intelligence Section identified five categories of public health effects associated with large outdoor gatherings based on literature review (2–5) and an internal risk assessment. These included health system status (total visit or call counts), communicable disease (fever, bloody diarrhea and reportable disease counts), injuries and substance abuse (including motor vehicle accidents), and outdoor exposure (heat-related illness, snake bites and asthma-related visits). An event-related category monitored trends in eclipse-related visits or eye-related injuries (looking directly at the sun). Where possible, syndromic trends were assessed in multiple data sources. These categories were used to create dashboards within Oregon ESSENCE and shared in a guidance document for local health departments and hospitals. Health Intelligence monitored syndromes of interest during a period of enhanced surveillance (9/18-9/22), and met daily with members of the OPHD IMT to share surveillance summaries, which were also sent to OPHD leadership and external partners. Results During the enhance surveillance period, the OPHD Health Intelligence Section did not identify statewide increases in healthcare utilization (total ED visits and calls to the Oregon Poison Center), but did observe increases in visits at select emergency departments in the state. Visits by out-of-state residents (as determined by patient zip code at time of registration) increased during the surveillance period. Fever-related visits increased as well but were not accompanied by reports of illnesses clusters. Increases were noted for motor vehicle accidents, eye-related injuries, and “eclipse”-related visits. Increases in eye-related injuries appeared to be an annual seasonal trend and not related to the eclipse. There were no increases of note in the other queries monitored. Development of new queries (West Nile Virus) was begun based upon mosquito pool surveillance findings. Surveillance highlights were posted publicly in a special edition of the biweekly Oregon ESSENCE Hazard Report (see Image 1). Conclusions Statewide public health surveillance during the 2017 Great American Solar Eclipse in Oregon did not identify clusters of infectious disease or other opportunities for real-time public health intervention. Nevertheless, surveillance identified increases in motor vehicle accidents, especially among out-of-state residents, due perhaps to increased road travel for the event. Preparations for this event increased capacity of state health department staff to conduct this type of surveillance in the future. Tools created for the eclipse have been used in several IMT activations since the eclipse.
机译:目标为俄勒冈州公共卫生部(OPHD)制定公共卫生监督计划,以期预计到来的2017年大日食游客将大量涌入。引言2017年的美国大日食提供了难得的机会来观看美国大陆上的一次完整的日食。俄勒冈州的大部分地区都处于通行道路上,预计会有晴朗的天空。在活动开始之前,OPHD汇总了全州大部分农村地区的107个已知聚会的清单,其中一些出席者估计多达30,000人。计划提供临时食品供应商和一系列卫生解决方案(包括露天厕所)。在日食期间,预计会有国际旅客以及大量驾车前来的旅客。全州可能同时进行多次群众集会,这促使OPHD激活了事件管理团队(IMT),并成立了健康情报组来设计群众集会监视策略。州范围内的症状监测(Oregon ESSENCE)已用于监视以前的群众聚会(1),并捕获州范围内的急诊科(ED),紧急护理,俄勒冈州中毒中心和可报告的疾病数据。方法OPHD健康情报组根据文献回顾(2-5)和内部风险评估,确定了与大型户外聚会相关的五种公共健康影响。这些包括健康系统状态(总拜访或呼叫次数),传染病(发烧,腹泻和可报告的疾病数),伤害和药物滥用(包括机动车事故)以及户外暴露(与热有关的疾病,蛇咬和哮喘)相关的访问)。一个与事件相关的类别监视了与蚀有关的访问或与眼睛相关的伤害(直接在阳光下)的趋势。在可能的情况下,在多个数据源中评估了症状发展趋势。这些类别用于在俄勒冈州ESSENCE中创建仪表板,并在针对当地卫生部门和医院的指导文档中共享。 Health Intelligence在加强监视期间(9 / 18-9 / 22)监视了感兴趣的综合征,并每天与OPHD IMT成员会面以共享监视摘要,这些摘要也发送给OPHD领导和外部合作伙伴。结果在加强监督期间,OPHD健康情报组未发现全州医疗保健利用率的提高(急诊总访问次数和对俄勒冈州毒物中心的呼叫次数),但观察到该州特定急诊部门的访问量有所增加。在监视期间,州外居民的访问(由患者在注册时的邮政编码确定)有所增加。与发烧相关的访视也有所增加,但没有伴随疾病簇的报道。值得注意的是,机动车事故,与眼睛相关的伤害以及与“日食”相关的探访增加了。与眼睛有关的伤害增加似乎是年度季节性趋势,与日食无关。在监视的其他查询中,注释没有增加。基于蚊子池监视的发现,开始开发新的查询(西尼罗河病毒)。监视要点已在两周一次的《俄勒冈州ESSENCE危害报告》的特别版中公开发布(见图1)。结论在俄勒冈州举行的2017年美国大食日期间进行的州公共卫生监督未发现传染病群或其他实时公共卫生干预措施。然而,监视发现机动车事故的增加,特别是在州外居民中,可能是由于该事件的公路旅行增加了。为该事件做准备,将增加州卫生部门人员将来进行此类监视的能力。自从月食以来,为日食创建的工具已用于多个IMT激活中。

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