Abstract

Objective: To set up and evaluate a new surveillance system for severe acute respiratory infection (SARI) in Scotland. Study design: Cross-sectional study and evaluation of surveillance system. Methods: The SARI case definition comprised patients aged 16 years or over with an acute respiratory illness presentation requiring testing for influenza and SARS-CoV-2 and hospital admission. Data were collected from SARI cases by research nurses in one tertiary teaching hospital using a bespoke data collection tool from November 2021 to May 2022. Descriptive analyses of SARI cases were carried out. The following attributes of the surveillance system were evaluated according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidelines: stability, data quality, timeliness, positive predictive value, representativeness, simplicity, acceptability and flexibility. Results: The final surveillance dataset comprised 1163 records, with cases peaking in ISO week 50 (week ending 19/12/2021). The system produced a stable stream of surveillance data, with the proportion of SARI records with sufficient information for effective surveillance increasing from 65.4% during the first month to 87.0% over time. Similarly, the proportion where data collection was completed promptly was low initially, but increased to 50%–65% during later periods. Conclusion: SARI surveillance was successfully established in one hospital, but for a national system, additional sentinel hospital sites across Scotland, with flexibility to ensure consistently high data completeness and timeliness are needed. Data collection should be automated where possible, and demands on clinicians minimised. SARI surveillance should be embedded and resourced as part of a national respiratory surveillance strategy.

Cite as

Evans, J., Young, J., Mutch, H., Blunsum, A., Quinn, J., Lowe, D., Ho, A., Marsh, K. & Mokogwu, D. 2024, 'Implementation and evaluation of a sari surveillance system in a tertiary hospital in Scotland in 2021/2022', Public Health, 232, pp. 114-120. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.puhe.2024.04.019

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Last updated: 05 June 2024
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