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22/11/2020

What is NEDSS?

What is NEDSS?

The National Electronic Disease Surveillance System (NEDSS) Base System (NBS) is a CDC-developed integrated information system that helps local, state, and territorial public health departments manage reportable disease data and send notifiable disease data to CDC.

How does Nedss work?

By encouraging the use of and helping to support standards-based public health surveillance systems, NEDSS helps public health agencies accept electronic data exchanges from healthcare systems and enables health departments to create and send standards-based case notifications to CDC for NNDSS.

What is the best definition of syndromic surveillance?

Strictly defined, syndromic surveillance gathers information about patients’ symptoms (e.g., cough, fever, or shortness of breath) during the early phases of illness.

What is meant by syndromic surveillance?

Syndromic surveillance refers to methods relying on detection of individual and population health indicators that are discernible before confirmed diagnoses are made.

What is syndromic surveillance for meaningful use?

Syndromic surveillance is defined as public health surveillance emphasizing the use of timely pre-diagnostic data and statistical tools to detect and characterize unusual activity for further public health investigation.

What is an example of syndromic surveillance?

Syndromic is used for surveillance of many diseases and conditions. Two examples that the public can see are in the Flu Snapshot on our influenza page and in the opioids dashboard on the OSMAP data website.

Which of the following is an example of syndromic surveillance?

Examples of syndromic surveillance data range from; calls from those who are ill in the community to telehealth advice phone lines [6, 7], to patients attending in person in primary care (family doctors) [8, 9], or in emergency care situations including emergency departments (ED).

What is syndromic surveillance systems?

What is syndromic surveillance reporting?

Syndromic Surveillance. Syndromic surveillance serves as an early alert for health events by tracking symptoms such as respiratory distress, fever, and vomiting—before a diagnosis is confirmed. Emergency departments and other sources [PDF – 1.3 MB] send this information as electronic messages to public health agencies.

Who uses syndromic surveillance?

The public health community uses analytic tools on the platform to analyze data received as early as 24 hours after a patient’s visit to a participating facility. Public health officials use these timely and actionable data to detect, characterize, monitor, and respond to events of public health concern.

What are the advantages of syndromic surveillance?

Theoretical benefits of syndromic surveillance include potential timeliness, increased response capacity, ability to establish baseline disease burdens, and ability to delineate the geographical reach of an outbreak.

How does NEDSS help the public health system?

By encouraging the use of and helping to support standards-based public health surveillance systems, NEDSS helps public health agencies accept electronic data exchanges from healthcare systems and enables health departments to create and send standards-based case notifications to CDC for NNDSS.

What are the requirements for a NEDSS system?

To be considered NEDSS compatible, states must have information systems meeting these requirements: disease data entry directly through an Internet browser-based system, thereby creating a database accessible by health investigators and public health professionals,

Is the national electronic disease surveillance system ( NEDSS ) compatible?

Today, all 50 states and Washington, D.C., use NEDSS-compatible integrated surveillance information systems to send case notifications to NNDSS. To be considered NEDSS compatible, states must have information systems meeting these requirements:

How to report a cancer diagnosis in Kentucky?

Any EP who diagnoses and/or treats cancer patients can submit cancer related data to the Kentucky Cancer Registry. Kentucky National Electronic Disease Surveillance System (NEDSS) Kentucky adopted legislation, 902 KAR 2:020, requiring laboratory results to be electronically reported through KHIE to the Department for Public Health.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uZWICK1jtSo