4.3 Review

Syndromic Surveillance Systems for Mass Gatherings: A Scoping Review

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19084673

Keywords

syndromic surveillance; public health surveillance; mass gathering medicine; infectious disease surveillance; disaster management; emergency medicine

Funding

  1. CDC [U18 DP006512]
  2. NIH [UL1TR001427]
  3. Cancer Informatics Shared Resource at the University of Florida Health Cancer Center

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Syndromic surveillance involves collecting real-time data from various sources to detect disease outbreaks earlier than traditional surveillance methods. However, this review suggests that syndromic surveillance may not be a reliable method for detecting critical public health events during mass gathering scenarios.
Syndromic surveillance involves the near-real-time collection of data from a potential multitude of sources to detect outbreaks of disease or adverse health events earlier than traditional forms of public health surveillance. The purpose of the present study is to elucidate the role of syndromic surveillance during mass gathering scenarios. In the present review, the use of syndromic surveillance for mass gathering scenarios is described, including characteristics such as methodologies of data collection and analysis, degree of preparation and collaboration, and the degree to which prior surveillance infrastructure is utilized. Nineteen publications were included for data extraction. The most common data source for the included syndromic surveillance systems was emergency departments, with first aid stations and event-based clinics also present. Data were often collected using custom reporting forms. While syndromic surveillance can potentially serve as a method of informing public health policy regarding specific mass gatherings based on the profile of syndromes ascertained, the present review does not indicate that this form of surveillance is a reliable method of detecting potentially critical public health events during mass gathering scenarios.

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