Dengue Surveillance System in Brazil: A Qualitative Study in the Federal District
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Dengue, Dengue Surveillance, and Relevance in Global Public Health
1.2. Dengue Surveillance in Brazil
1.3. Aim of the Study
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. General Overview of Dengue Surveillance in the DF
3.2. Case Detection
A4: Good sensitivity, completeness, is what we perceive in practice. Since 2014, the circulation of other viruses in our country (Zika and Chikungunja) has hindered this sensitivity […]. But in terms of capturing information on what we thought dengue was, by 2014, sensitivity was good.
C: we can’t get those cases who cannot get medical attention in one moment and they end up not seeking again… Because they know all the recommendations for dengue, resting, hydration, they prefer to go back and self-treat at home.
3.3. Registration and Reporting of the Cases
A4: ...it is an easy-to-operate system, has a certain stability, so you can download databases, do analysis easily. As it’s online, allows the managers of the 3 federative entities to make quick decisions.
A1: (a part is) underreported because the professional doesn’t really notify: it makes the diagnosis, but he does not incorporate the habit of taking a form and informing the surveillance system […] The professional finds it difficult to notify as well [...]. Another issue is that the health service really doesn’t understand the importance of notifying.
A5: ...and has a lower than expected number of completeness of these important variables, […] because it is so complex, because the fields in the notification form are very large and it ends up being complex to fill. This individual is notified and then it takes time for the investigation…
3.3.1. Public Hospitals and Emergency Care Units
A1: Inside hospitals, there are Epidemiological Surveillance Units that work with an active surveillance type. [...] So, as a nurse in these centers, I will go through the pediatric emergency, the clinical emergency… […] and I go looking for cases that were suspected for dengue…
3.3.2. Basic Healthcare Units (Unidades Básicas de Saúde (UBS))
C: ...and when the case is more serious and he goes to the hospital, theoretically he has already been treated and notified in a UBS, but in reality in these places, especially in the epidemic period, there is a lot of work, so often the professionals don’t have time to fill in all those forms with so many items and the forms accumulate there... often when they go to notify […] it’s been a week or longer.
B1: In addition to technological issues, that not all units have a computer [...] we have issues related to the amount of staff that is insufficient. Depending on the volume of cases that arrive at the unit, they can’t do everything, they have to choose: either make the notification, or attend to the patient.
3.3.3. Private Healthcare Units
A1: Public and private should come closer. It should be understood as a single health. The private works a lot with a profit logic. So, for the private sector to put a nurse to do only… not only, but in addition […] she will also notify… if it’s costly for the private sector…. it is of no importance to them, because they don’t see the results either.
B1: This is a major concern for us, because the population that seeks the private sector […] has a different socioeconomic profile, and this may compromise the implementation of responses, the adoption of measures... it is in certain places that the government cannot see the problem…
3.4. Laboratory Testing and Case Confirmation
F: We have very sensitive case definitions, because it favors the entry of many patients in the system
D: The surveillance model needs to be adjusted in the epidemic and inter-epidemic phase. From a laboratory point of view, we are really compromised when we do not define it and use the same model in these two different scenarios. So, you end up overloading the laboratory at certain times [...] we have limited human resources, [...] and we often overburden the surveillance service as much as the laboratory when you do not have this very clear definition regarding the models.
3.5. Data Analysis and Feedback
B1: Although we have minimal human costs, what we see is the knowledge of each professional.
F: Piles of forms accumulate and sometimes there is one person to type hundreds... and if the notification is delayed, the vector control action later, and everything else, is also delayed.
3.6. Role of the Federal Government and Support Activities
3.7. Public Health Action
B2: Inside the SDCC, is also important to highlight all the communication work that is done. Because, as there are several undersecretaries, each secretariat has its communication core […]. Within the epidemiological surveillance only, we would not have this strength. And what is important in this context is the integration…
E: there is a high discontinuity of professionals in the field. So, you capacitate, but you have no guarantee that these professional will remain […]. When there is a management change, also a big part of the agents changes.
A6: And dengue in Brazil is very targeted, because it has much... it affects politically [...] When there was an epidemic, the population complained, complained, and the major ordered the ULV, a machine that goes in the car and fogs Ultra Low Volume. But [...] for dengue control program, the ULV is recommended only in extreme cases, and in many places we saw that ULV use was triggered by policy. To say that they were doing something.
3.8. Vector Surveillance
H2: First, I think we would need an exact number of people, a right number to cover the entire region, and to work better on environmental education.
H1: Residents always accumulate a lot of water from day to day, 80% of the breeding sites in the DF are inside the homes.
H2: I think if we worked in community, schools, I think we would cover a larger number, because we would even need fewer people to work with.
A2: We have different laboratory and entomological systems, and they don’t talk. So, we have to take, almost manually, the base of these two systems and integrate. This, I think, is a very bad factor.
3.9. Active Surveillance
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Outline of the Semi-Structured Interviews |
---|
How does the dengue surveillance system work? What are the existing national policies on dengue surveillance? How does data collection for dengue surveillance work? |
In addition to passive surveillance, are there forms of active dengue surveillance? If so, what types of active surveillance are there and how do they work? |
How does laboratory surveillance work? |
How are data integrated at the municipal, state, and federal levels? |
How are epidemiological and environmental data integrated? Are there any systems in place to integrate other types of data (for example: socioeconomic data, urban environment, weather)? |
What is the role of the private health system in dengue surveillance? |
What are the response activities based on dengue surveillance? |
What are the strengths and weaknesses of the dengue surveillance system? |
What are the reasons for the low sensitivity of the surveillance system? |
Do you have any suggestions for improving the dengue surveillance system? |
English Translation | Original Name | Abbreviation |
---|---|---|
national health system | Sistema Único de Saúde | SUS |
Federal District | Distrito Federal | DF |
Secretary of health surveillance | Secretária de Vigilância á Saúde | SVS |
General Coordination of Arbovirosis Surveillance | Coordinação Geral de Vigilância das Arboviroses | CGARB |
General Coordination of Public Laboratories | Coordinação Geral de Laboratórios em Saúde Pública | CGLAB |
General Coordination of Public Health Emergencies | Coordinação Geral de Emergência em Saúde Pública | CGEMPS |
General Coordination of Environmental Surveillance | Coordinação Geral de Vigilância em Saúde Ambiental | CGVAM |
Central Laboratory of the State | Laboratório Central do Estado | LACEN |
Undersecretary of Health Surveillance | Subsecretaria de Vigilância á Saude | SVS |
Directory of Epidemiological Surveillance | Diretoria de Vigilância Epidemiológica | DIVEP |
Directory of Environmental Surveillance | Diretoria de Vigilância Ambiental | DIVAL |
Directory of Central Laboratory of Public Health of the DF | Diretoria de Laboratório Central de Saúde Pública do DF | LACEN-DF |
Regional Superintendencies of Health | Superintendências Regionais de Saúde | SRS |
Regional Directory of Primary Healthcare | Diretoria Regional de Atenção Primária á Saúde | DIRAPS |
Unit of Epidemiological Surveillance of the health region | Núcleo De Vigilância Epidemiológica e Imunização | NVEI |
Emergency care units | Unidades de Pronto Atendimento | UPA |
Hospital Unit for Epidemiological Surveillance | Núcleo de Vigilância Epidemiólogica | NVE |
Basic Healthcare Unit | Unidades Básicas de Saúde | UBS |
Family Health Strategy | Estratégia Saúde da Família | ESF |
Quick Index Survey for Aedes Aegypti | Levantamento de Índice Rápido para Aedes Aegypti | LIRAa |
District Committee of Coordination and Control | Sala Distrital permanente de Coordenação e Controle | SDCC |
Regional management for dengue prevention and control | Gestão do Plano de Prevenção e Controle da Dengue | Geiplan-dengue |
Unit for social mobilization activities | Núcleo de Mobilização Sociál | NMOBS |
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Department | N. of Interviewees | ID Code |
---|---|---|
General Coordination of Arbovirosis Surveillance, Ministry of Health | 6 | A1–A6 |
Directory of Epidemiological Surveillance, Federal District | 3 | B1–B2 |
Unit of Epidemiological Surveillance, health region of the DF | 1 | C |
General Coordination of Public Laboratories, Ministry of Health | 1 | D |
General Coordination of Public Health Emergencies, Ministry of Health | 1 | E |
General Coordination of Environmental Surveillance, Ministry of Health | 1 | F |
Directory of Environmental Surveillance, Federal District | 2 | G1–G2 |
Field workers for environmental (vector) surveillance, Federal District | 2 | H1–H2 |
Type of Notification Unit | % of Notified Cases |
---|---|
Public Hospitals | 56.32 |
Emergency Healthcare Units | 17.65 |
Basic Healthcare Units | 14.72 |
Private Hospitals | 4.32 |
Private Laboratories | 4.08 |
Non-Governmental Organizations | 1.34 |
Other Public Units | 0.80 |
Other Private Units | 0.73 |
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Angelo, M.; Ramalho, W.M.; Gurgel, H.; Belle, N.; Pilot, E. Dengue Surveillance System in Brazil: A Qualitative Study in the Federal District. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 2062. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17062062
Angelo M, Ramalho WM, Gurgel H, Belle N, Pilot E. Dengue Surveillance System in Brazil: A Qualitative Study in the Federal District. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17(6):2062. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17062062
Chicago/Turabian StyleAngelo, Marco, Walter Massa Ramalho, Helen Gurgel, Nayara Belle, and Eva Pilot. 2020. "Dengue Surveillance System in Brazil: A Qualitative Study in the Federal District" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 6: 2062. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17062062
APA StyleAngelo, M., Ramalho, W. M., Gurgel, H., Belle, N., & Pilot, E. (2020). Dengue Surveillance System in Brazil: A Qualitative Study in the Federal District. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(6), 2062. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17062062