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Pidsr FWBD

This document provides an overview of food and water-borne disease surveillance in the Philippines. It discusses key learning objectives which are to enumerate notifiable diseases under the food and water-borne disease cluster, identify cases using case definitions, and detect, register and report cases using the Philippine Integrated Disease Surveillance and Response system. The document then discusses the food and water-borne disease cluster and importance of surveillance for these diseases. It provides case definitions and details for acute bloody diarrhea, cholera, and acute viral hepatitis.

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Michelle Tura
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
346 views34 pages

Pidsr FWBD

This document provides an overview of food and water-borne disease surveillance in the Philippines. It discusses key learning objectives which are to enumerate notifiable diseases under the food and water-borne disease cluster, identify cases using case definitions, and detect, register and report cases using the Philippine Integrated Disease Surveillance and Response system. The document then discusses the food and water-borne disease cluster and importance of surveillance for these diseases. It provides case definitions and details for acute bloody diarrhea, cholera, and acute viral hepatitis.

Uploaded by

Michelle Tura
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Overview of PIDSR Food

and Water-Borne
Diseases Surveillance

Republic of the Philippines


Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Epidemiology Bureau
Overview of the PIDSR Food and Water Borne Diseases

Learning Objectives

By the end of this session the participants will be able to:

• Enumerate notifiable diseases under the FWBD cluster


• Identify cases using case definitions
• Detect, register and report FWBD cases using the PIDSR core
processes.

Republic of the Philippines


Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
Philippine Integrated Disease Surveillance and Response
(Epidemic-prone Disease Case Surveillance (EDCS)

Food and
Vaccine Preventable
Water-borne Zoonotic Diseases Other Diseases
Diseases (VPD)
Diseases (FWBD)

Acute Flaccid Paralysis Acute Bloody Diarrhea Acute Meningitis


Chikungunya
Encephalitis Sydrome
Diphtheria
Acute Viral Hepatitis
Measles Dengue Influenza Like Illness
Neonatal Tetanus Cholera

Non-neonatal tetanus Leptospirosis Meningococcemia


Rotavirus
Pertussis
Severe Acute
Typhoid Fever Rabies
Rubella Respiratory Infection

Republic of the Philippines


Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
What is Food and Water Borne Disease?
FOOD PRODUCTION COMMON SYMPTOMS
PATHWAY PRODUCTION
PROCESSING

DISTRIBUTION

ABDOMINAL
PAIN NAUSEA AND/OR
RETAIL RESTAURANTS VOMITING

CONSUMERS FEVER DIARRHEA

Republic of the Philippines


Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
Philippine Integrated Disease Surveillance and Response
(Epidemic-prone Disease Case Surveillance (EDCS)

Food and Water-Borne Importance of FWBD Surveillance


Disease Cluster (FWBD)
● To detect and provide data to control
outbreaks
Acute Bloody Diarrhea
● To provide valuable insights into the agents
Acute Viral Hepatitis-A and foods that cause illness and the
settings where contamination occurs
Cholera
● To guide public health decision-making on
Rotavirus the most appropriate intervention and
control strategy by using timely and
Typhoid Fever accurate surveillance data.

Republic of the Philippines


Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
Case Detection and Reporting of Food and Water Borne Diseases

Republic of the Philippines


Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
ACUTE BLOODY DIARRHEA

Republic of the Philippines


Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
Acute Bloody Diarrhea (ABD)
▪ Acute bloody diarrhea is also called dysentery.

▪ Bloody diarrhea is usually a sign of invasive enteric


infection that carries a substantial risk of serious morbidity
and death, especially in children in developing countries.

▪ Overcrowded areas with unsafe drinking water and poor


sanitation are the most common risk factors for ABD.

▪ The disease is characterized by acute fever and bloody


diarrhea, and can also present with systemic symptoms
and signs as well as dehydration especially in young
children.

▪ Shigella dysenteriae is most frequently isolated from the


stools of affected children and is transmitted from person-
to-person through the fecal-oral route.

Republic of the Philippines


Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
CASE DEFINITIONS FOR THE FOOD AND WATER-BORNE
DISEASES (FWBD) SURVEILLANCE CLUSTER

1. ACUTE BLOODY DIARRHEA (ABD)


Case Classification:
Suspect: A person with diarrhea with visible blood in the stool.

Confirmed Case: A suspect with stool positive for bacterial and parasitic pathogens(i.e Shigella
dysenteriae type 1, Entamoeba histolytica or Escherichia coli) thru bacterial culture or any molecular
diagnostic test

Laboratory test:
Stool/rectal swab: for Bacteriology culture; Clinical microscopy
(Salmonella ssp., Shigella dysenteriae , Campylobacter jejuni. Aeromonas, Entamoeba
histolytica, E. coli)
Cases to look out for:
Increasing number of bloody diarrhea from one barangay/municipality over a short period of time

Republic of the Philippines


Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
Republic of the Philippines
Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
Republic of the Philippines
Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
CHOLERA

Republic of the Philippines


Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
CASE DEFINITIONS FOR THE FOOD AND WATER-BORNE
DISEASES (FWBD) SURVEILLANCE CLUSTER

2. CHOLERA
Case Classification
• Suspected Case:
A suspected case is any patient aged ≥ 2 years who has acute watery diarrhoea and severe
dehydration or died from acute watery diarrhoea.
(Acute watery diarrhoea is characterized by three or more loose or watery, non-bloody stools
within a 24-hour period.)
● Probable Case:
A suspected case that is cholera RDT positive.
● Confirmed Case:
A suspected case that is laboratory-confirmed.
(Isolation of Vibrio cholerae 01 or 0139 from stools in any patient with diarrhea by culture or
Any molecular diagnostic test)
Republic of the Philippines
Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
Republic of the Philippines
Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
Republic of the Philippines
Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
ACUTE VIRAL HEPATITIS

Republic of the Philippines


Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
ACUTE VIRAL HEPATITIS

∙ Viral hepatitis is an infection that causes liver


inflammation and damage. Inflammation is swelling
that occurs when tissues of the body become
injured or infected.

∙ Heavy alcohol use, toxins, some medications, and


certain medical conditions can cause hepatitis.

∙ Common in many countries, especially those


without modern sanitation.

Republic of the Philippines


Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
ACUTE VIRAL HEPATITIS A

∙ Hepatitis A is a liver disease caused by the


hepatitis A virus (HAV).
∙ The hepatitis A virus is transmitted primarily
through oral fecal route.
∙ Symptoms of hepatitis A range from mild to
severe, and can include fever, malaise, loss
of appetite, diarrhea, nausea, abdominal
discomfort, dark-coloured urine and jaundice.
∙ The incubation period of hepatitis A is usually
14–28 days.
Republic of the Philippines
Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
CASE DEFINITIONS FOR THE FOOD AND WATER-BORNE
DISEASES (FWBD) SURVEILLANCE CLUSTER

3. ACUTE VIRAL HEPATITIS A


Case Classification

Suspected case – a person with acute illness characterized by acute jaundice, dark urine, loss of
appetite, body weakness, extreme fatigue and right upper quadrant tenderness.

Confirmed case – a suspected case that is laboratory confirmed for IgM or anti-HAV.

Laboratory test -serum: for serology

Republic of the Philippines


Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
Republic of the Philippines
Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
Republic of the Philippines
Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
Rotavirus Surveillance
Case Definition and Filling out of
Forms

Republic of the Philippines


Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Epidemiology Bureau
ROTAVIRUS

• According to WHO Rotavirus is the leading cause of severe


diarrheal disease and dehydration in infants and young
children throughout the world.
• Rotavirus is common, accounting for 35–60% of acute
severe diarrhoea in children < 5 years of age in countries
without rotavirus vaccine, with the highest attributable
percentage in infants.
• Rotavirus is highly communicable; it is shed in the stool at
high concentration, and transmission is through faecal-oral
route, either person-to-person or through fomites in the
environment. Photo source: WHO website, Regional of Africa

• The incubation period is one to three days.

Republic of the Philippines


Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
CASE DEFINITIONS FOR THE FOOD AND WATER-BORNE
DISEASES (FWBD) SURVEILLANCE CLUSTER
4. ROTAVIRUS
Case Classification
• Suspected Case:
• Any child who is <5 years of age and is currently undergoing treatment for acute
diarrhea*
• Confirmed Case:
• A suspected case that has been laboratory-confirmed as Rotavirus.

Notes:
• A child <5 years of age includes children aged 0 to 4 years, 11 months and 29 days;
• ‘Undergoes treatment’ means that the child has received intravenous (IV) rehydration therapy while
undergoing observation in the Emergency Room (ER) or was admitted in the hospital ward for acute diarrhea;
• ‘Acute diarrhea’ is defined as the passage of three or more loose or watery stools within a 24-hour period for
≤14 days;
Republic of the Philippines
Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
Republic of the Philippines
Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
Rotavirus CIF

PARTS I and II (DRU INFO AND PATIENT INFO)

Republic of the Philippines


Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
Rotavirus CIF

PARTS III, IV, V and VI (CLINICAL, EPIDEMIOLOGIC, IMMUNIZATION


HISTORY and DETAILS OF INVESTIGATOR)

Republic of the Philippines


Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
Rotavirus CIF

PARTS VII, VIII (LAB DATA AND CLASSIFICATION)

Republic of the Philippines


Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
TYPHOID FEVER

Republic of the Philippines


Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
TYPHOID

• Typhoid fever and paratyphoid fever are life-threatening illnesses


caused by Salmonella serotype Typhi and Salmonella serotype
Paratyphi, respectively.

• Typhoid fever and paratyphoid fever have similar symptoms.


People usually have a sustained fever (one that doesn’t come
and go) that can be as high as 103–104°F (39–40°C)

• Other symptoms of typhoid fever include weakness, stomach


Photo source: CDC website
pain, headache, diarrhea or constipation, cough, loss of appetite.

• The disease is transmitted via oral-fecal route.

Republic of the Philippines


Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
CASE DEFINITIONS FOR THE FOOD AND WATER-BORNE
DISEASES (FWBD) SURVEILLANCE CLUSTER
5. TYPHOID
Case Classification
• Suspected Case: A person with an illness characterized by insidious onset of sustained fever,
headache, malaise, anorexia, relative bradycardia, constipation or diarrhea, and non-productive cough.
• Probable Case: A suspected case that is epidemiologically linked to a confirmed case in an outbreak.
• Confirmed Case: A suspected or probable case that is laboratory confirmed.
• Laboratory test:
- Blood – 1st week Urine / stool – 2nd-3rd week : Bacteriology culture
(Salmonella typhi, salmonella paratyphi)

Note: Serological tests for typhoid fever (e.g. Widal test and Typhidot) may be used only for
presumptive diagnosis. It should not be used as a confirmatory diagnostic tool for typhoid. Hence,
cases diagnosed using such method will remain classified as suspect cases.

Republic of the Philippines


Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
Republic of the Philippines
Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
Republic of the Philippines
Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary
Thank you for listening ! ☺

Republic of the Philippines


Boosting
Department of Health
Universal Health Coverage Office of the Secretary

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