Analysis of hospital-based sentinel surveillance data on leptospirosis in Sri Lanka, 2005-2008

In Sri Lanka, leptospirosis is a notifiable disease. In addition to having a routine disease reporting system, Sri Lanka has implemented a hospital-based sentinel surveillance system since 2004. This report discusses the findings of a descriptive analysis of the sentinel surveillance data collected...

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Main Authors: Gamage, Chandika D., Amarasekera, Jagath, Palihawadana, Paba, Samaraweera, Sudath, Mendis, Devika, Janakan, Navaratnasingam, Lee, Romeo B., Obayashi, Yoshihide, Tamashiro, Hiko
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/3733
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-47352021-10-06T08:12:12Z Analysis of hospital-based sentinel surveillance data on leptospirosis in Sri Lanka, 2005-2008 Gamage, Chandika D. Amarasekera, Jagath Palihawadana, Paba Samaraweera, Sudath Mendis, Devika Janakan, Navaratnasingam Lee, Romeo B. Obayashi, Yoshihide Tamashiro, Hiko In Sri Lanka, leptospirosis is a notifiable disease. In addition to having a routine disease reporting system, Sri Lanka has implemented a hospital-based sentinel surveillance system since 2004. This report discusses the findings of a descriptive analysis of the sentinel surveillance data collected from 2005 to 2008. Of the 4,000 suspected leptospirosis cases, 46.9%and 26.8%were recorded from the Western and Sabaragamuwa provinces, respectively. Most of the individuals were male (83.5%), and approximately 45.6% were aged 30-49 years. Farmers accounted for 16.5%, and laborers for 16.1%; however, the occupation of nearly half (44.8%) of the study population was unknown. More than half (53.9%) of the individuals worked in paddy fields. Almost all had acute fever (98.8%), myalgia (92.9%), and headache (92.7%), but fewer had other related symptoms. Out of the 4,000 individuals, 2,496 (62.4%) underwent a laboratory test; however, the laboratory test results of only 1,445 (57.9%) and the microscopic agglutination results of only 41 (2.8%) were available at the sentinel sites. Less than 2% of the reported individuals underwent prophylactic treatment. These findings will help enhance the ongoing efforts for controlling and preventing leptospirosis in Sri Lanka. Sentinel surveillance is a useful tool, but the data quality needs to be improved by supplementing the findings with adequate laboratory diagnosis data. 2012-04-02T07:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/3733 Faculty Research Work Animo Repository Leptospirosis--Sri Lanka Public health surveillance--Sri Lanka Social and Behavioral Sciences
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic Leptospirosis--Sri Lanka
Public health surveillance--Sri Lanka
Social and Behavioral Sciences
spellingShingle Leptospirosis--Sri Lanka
Public health surveillance--Sri Lanka
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Gamage, Chandika D.
Amarasekera, Jagath
Palihawadana, Paba
Samaraweera, Sudath
Mendis, Devika
Janakan, Navaratnasingam
Lee, Romeo B.
Obayashi, Yoshihide
Tamashiro, Hiko
Analysis of hospital-based sentinel surveillance data on leptospirosis in Sri Lanka, 2005-2008
description In Sri Lanka, leptospirosis is a notifiable disease. In addition to having a routine disease reporting system, Sri Lanka has implemented a hospital-based sentinel surveillance system since 2004. This report discusses the findings of a descriptive analysis of the sentinel surveillance data collected from 2005 to 2008. Of the 4,000 suspected leptospirosis cases, 46.9%and 26.8%were recorded from the Western and Sabaragamuwa provinces, respectively. Most of the individuals were male (83.5%), and approximately 45.6% were aged 30-49 years. Farmers accounted for 16.5%, and laborers for 16.1%; however, the occupation of nearly half (44.8%) of the study population was unknown. More than half (53.9%) of the individuals worked in paddy fields. Almost all had acute fever (98.8%), myalgia (92.9%), and headache (92.7%), but fewer had other related symptoms. Out of the 4,000 individuals, 2,496 (62.4%) underwent a laboratory test; however, the laboratory test results of only 1,445 (57.9%) and the microscopic agglutination results of only 41 (2.8%) were available at the sentinel sites. Less than 2% of the reported individuals underwent prophylactic treatment. These findings will help enhance the ongoing efforts for controlling and preventing leptospirosis in Sri Lanka. Sentinel surveillance is a useful tool, but the data quality needs to be improved by supplementing the findings with adequate laboratory diagnosis data.
format text
author Gamage, Chandika D.
Amarasekera, Jagath
Palihawadana, Paba
Samaraweera, Sudath
Mendis, Devika
Janakan, Navaratnasingam
Lee, Romeo B.
Obayashi, Yoshihide
Tamashiro, Hiko
author_facet Gamage, Chandika D.
Amarasekera, Jagath
Palihawadana, Paba
Samaraweera, Sudath
Mendis, Devika
Janakan, Navaratnasingam
Lee, Romeo B.
Obayashi, Yoshihide
Tamashiro, Hiko
author_sort Gamage, Chandika D.
title Analysis of hospital-based sentinel surveillance data on leptospirosis in Sri Lanka, 2005-2008
title_short Analysis of hospital-based sentinel surveillance data on leptospirosis in Sri Lanka, 2005-2008
title_full Analysis of hospital-based sentinel surveillance data on leptospirosis in Sri Lanka, 2005-2008
title_fullStr Analysis of hospital-based sentinel surveillance data on leptospirosis in Sri Lanka, 2005-2008
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of hospital-based sentinel surveillance data on leptospirosis in Sri Lanka, 2005-2008
title_sort analysis of hospital-based sentinel surveillance data on leptospirosis in sri lanka, 2005-2008
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2012
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/3733
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