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Journal Article

Citation

Bartolomeos KK. Afr. J. Emerg. Med. 2018; 8(4): 127-128.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, African Federation for Emergency Medicine, Publisher Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.afjem.2018.07.005

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Surveillance is central to public health. In the absence of comparable data from most low-income and middle-income countries, national and international agencies use estimates to monitor health targets. Although morbidity and mortality estimations generated by statistical modelling can fulfill national and global reporting requirements, locally generated data are needed to guide evidence-based local action. The focus on measurement around the sustainable development goals provides an opportunity for WHO and the global health community to make a case for increased investment by governments to strengthen local surveillance systems.

In September 2016, all member countries of the United Nations (UN) committed to The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and its accompanying goals. The global community agreed that the sustainable development goals (SDGs) can't be achieved without addressing the inequalities and exclusions that exist between and within countries. In regard to public health, countries committed to monitor 13 targets linked to the health goal (SDG 3: To ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages) and other health-related targets that are incorporated into the other goals[6]. Monitoring these targets to track progress will require quality data at the subnational and national levels. Given the cross-cutting nature of the SDG indicators, official statistical data sources from the health sector as well as other sectors, such as environment, transport, and agriculture, will need to be used to fulfil countries' SDG reporting requirements. However, according to the SDG Indicator Working Group, the limitations with national surveillance and statistical systems make them unsuitable to be used as the sole data sources[8]. The implementation of the sustainable development agenda also requires determining who is left behind. The Working Group and other researchers have identified lack of accurate and timely information as the main reason why numerous groups and individuals are left behind and remain "invisible" and why many development challenges are still poorly understood. For example, according to the 2017 WHO World Health Statistics report, of the 194 World Health Organization (WHO) Member States, 42% (81 countries) have very low quality or no data to report on how many of their citizens died in a given year, and what they died from[7]. The universal health coverage target of SDG 3 (Target 3.8) states that everyone should have access to affordable and quality health services. Lack of reliable patient outcome data has been reported as one reason for the lack of progress in improving quality of care in many countries. Routine information systems in low- and middle-income countries are inadequate to be used for measuring quality of care. For example, measuring care-sensitive patient outcomes requires patient-specific input data, but existing systems in low- and middle-income countries often collect and report aggregate data....

...The SDG Goal 3 (Target 3.6) requires halving the number of global deaths and injuries from road traffic accidents. WHO sets out minimum data requirements that countries need to collect to address the risk factors that lead to severe injuries and death. The recommendations are meant to provide guidance to countries on the necessary data needed to prioritise or to implement proven interventions. However, in the absence of a surveillance system to collect and analyse these key data elements, the agencies responsible for the implementation of the interventions will be making programmatic and policy decisions without or with incomplete information. For example, in a country where the main cause of road traffic death is motorcycle-related crashes, the most effective proven intervention is to implement a comprehensive helmet law. WHO's recommendation for monitoring progress and evaluating impact of the helmet law is to do a population-based observational survey on helmet wearing to measure compliance to the law and to get data on motorcycle-related injuries and deaths to assess whether it is having impact on morbidity and mortality. Without a surveillance system to collect the data on all three indicators - helmet wearing rate, motorcycle-related injuries, and deaths - the impact evaluation of the law will be impossible. The same argument can be made in terms of monitoring outcomes related to healthcare provision. For example, the type of emergency care needed for a ten-year-old child who has fallen from a motorcycle and had a head injury and another child who has been hit by a car and has a broken leg is different. In the majority of low- and middle-income countries, both of these cases will be reported in their hospital statistics as road traffic accident. Without a health facility-based surveillance system to document basic epidemiologic and clinical information such as: who is presenting for care, the age, the reason for the emergency visit, and the type of care provided for each patient, hospital managers will be forced to make resource utilisation decisions with insufficient and inaccurate information. In the absence of data, national institutions and non-governmental organisations working on road safety often use estimates generated by WHO or other research institutions as the basis to inform intervention or promotion programmes. However, estimations generated from these sources are inadequate for programmatic and policy decision making at the country level....


Language: en

Keywords

Surveillance in the Article Info Section

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