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Published in: BMC Health Services Research 1/2014

Open Access 01-12-2014 | Research article

Application of WHO’s guideline for the selection of sentinel sites for hospital-based influenza surveillance in Indonesia

Authors: Ni Ketut Susilarini, Martahan Sitorus, Catharina Yekti Praptaningsih, Ondri Dwi Sampurno, Arie Bratasena, Ester Mulyadi, Roselinda Rusli, Ahmad Fandil, Amalya Mangiri, Hana Apsari, Edy Hariyanto, Gina Samaan

Published in: BMC Health Services Research | Issue 1/2014

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Abstract

Background

A sentinel hospital-based severe acute respiratory infection (SARI) surveillance system was established in Indonesia in 2013. Deciding on the number, geographic location and hospitals to be selected as sentinel sites was a challenge. Based on the recently published WHO guideline for influenza surveillance (2012), this study presents the process for hospital sentinel site selection.

Methods

From the 2,165 hospitals in Indonesia, the first step was to shortlist to hospitals that had previously participated in respiratory disease surveillance systems and had acceptable surveillance performance history. The second step involved categorizing the shortlist according to five regions in Indonesia to maximize geographic representativeness. A checklist was developed based on the WHO recommended attributes for sentinel site selection including stability, feasibility, representativeness and the availability of data to enable disease burden estimation. Eight hospitals, a maximum of two per geographic region, were visited for checklist administration. Checklist findings from the eight hospitals were analyzed and sentinel sites selected in the third step.

Results

Six hospitals could be selected based on resources available to ensure system stability over a three-year period. For feasibility, all eight hospitals visited had mechanisms for specimen shipment and the capacity to report surveillance data, but two had limited motivation for system participation. For representativeness, the eight hospitals were geographically dispersed around Indonesia, and all could capture cases in all age and socio-economic groups. All eight hospitals had prerequisite population data to enable disease burden estimation. The two hospitals with low motivation were excluded and the remaining six were selected as sentinel sites.

Conclusions

The multi-step process enabled sentinel site selection based on the WHO recommended attributes that emphasize right-sizing the surveillance system to ensure its stability and maximizing its geographic representativeness. This experience may guide other countries interested in adopting WHO’s influenza surveillance standards for sentinel site selection.
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Metadata
Title
Application of WHO’s guideline for the selection of sentinel sites for hospital-based influenza surveillance in Indonesia
Authors
Ni Ketut Susilarini
Martahan Sitorus
Catharina Yekti Praptaningsih
Ondri Dwi Sampurno
Arie Bratasena
Ester Mulyadi
Roselinda Rusli
Ahmad Fandil
Amalya Mangiri
Hana Apsari
Edy Hariyanto
Gina Samaan
Publication date
01-12-2014
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Health Services Research / Issue 1/2014
Electronic ISSN: 1472-6963
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-14-424

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