Recruiting primary care clinicians for public health and bioterrorism surveillance.
نویسندگان
چکیده
CONTEXT This study assessed differences in the effort and resources needed to recruit clinicians for a shortterm infectious disease sentinel surveillance project. OBJECTIVE Measure differences in recruitment efficiency, time to obtain informed consent, and compliance to a Web-based demographic survey between 3 physician groups. DESIGN We recruited Wisconsin clinicians by e-mail, phone, or fax from a primary care practice-based research network (PBRN), an influenza sentinel clinician program, and a state academy of family physicians to participate in a demographic survey prior to a surveillance project. RESULTS Successful recruitment of a sentinel clinician required 2-3 hours of staff time. Clinicians affiliated with the PBRN had the highest recruitment efficiencies (1 recruit for every 1.67 contacts; P < 0.0001). Participants already involved in ongoing influenza surveillance returned consent forms faster than other clinicians (P = 0.044). We did not identify differences in questionnaire response time between the 3 groups (P = 0.718). CONCLUSIONS We observed large and significant differences among 3 primary care groups in the efficiency of recruiting for participation in public health sentinel surveillance. Members of established networks were more approachable and rapidly recruited. Following recruitment, only minimal differences in performance were noted among the groups. Therefore, recruitment for sentinel surveillance is enhanced through the use of established clinic networks.
منابع مشابه
Syndromic Surveillance and Bioterrorism-related Epidemics
facilitate rapid detection of a future bioterrorist attack, an increasing number of public health departments are investing in new surveillance systems that target the early manifestations of bioterrorism-related disease. Whether this approach is likely to detect an epidemic sooner than reporting by alert clinicians remains unknown. The detection of a bioterrorism-related epidemic will depend o...
متن کاملReview Paper: Roundtable on Bioterrorism Detection: Information System-based Surveillance
During the 2001 AMIA Annual Symposium, the Anesthesia, Critical Care, and Emergency Medicine Working Group hosted the Roundtable on Bioterrorism Detection. Sixty-four people attended the roundtable discussion, during which several researchers discussed public health surveillance systems designed to enhance early detection of bioterrorism events. These systems make secondary use of existing clin...
متن کاملDefining Public Health Situation Awareness – Outcomes and Metrics for Evaluation
Introduction A decade ago, the primary objective of syndromic surveillance was bioterrorism and outbreak early event detection (EED) [3]. Syndromic systems for EED focused on rapid, automated data collection, processing and statistical anomaly detection of indicators of potential bioterrorism or outbreak events. The paradigm presented a clear and testable surveillance objective: the early detec...
متن کاملAn assessment of bioterrorism competencies among health practitioners in Australia
Public health and medical professionals are expected to be well prepared for emergencies, as they assume an integral role in any response. They need to be aware of planning issues, be able to identify their roles in emergency situations, and show functional competence. However, media perceptions and non-empirical publications often lack an evidence base when addressing this topic. This study at...
متن کاملDistributed data processing for public health surveillance
BACKGROUND Many systems for routine public health surveillance rely on centralized collection of potentially identifiable, individual, identifiable personal health information (PHI) records. Although individual, identifiable patient records are essential for conditions for which there is mandated reporting, such as tuberculosis or sexually transmitted diseases, they are not routinely required f...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
- WMJ : official publication of the State Medical Society of Wisconsin
دوره 108 2 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2009