Active surveillance of acute paediatric hospitalisations demonstrates the impact of vaccination programmes and informs vaccine policy in Canada and Australia

Author:

Top Karina A123ORCID,Macartney Kristine451,Bettinger Julie A6,Tan Ben7,Blyth Christopher C8,Marshall Helen S9,Vaudry Wendy10,Halperin Scott A23,McIntyre Peter45,

Affiliation:

1. These authors contributed equally

2. Canadian Center for Vaccinology, IWK Health Centre, Halifax, Canada

3. Department of Pediatrics, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Canada

4. Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia

5. National Centre for Immunisation Research and Surveillance and The Children’s Hospital Westmead, Sydney, Australia

6. University of British Columbia and Vaccine Evaluation Center, British Columbia Children’s Hospital, Vancouver, Canada

7. University of Saskatchewan, Royal University Hospital, Saskatoon, Canada

8. Telethon Kids Institute and School of Medicine, University of Western Australia and Perth Children’s Hospital, Perth, Australia

9. Robinson Research Institute and Adelaide Medical School, The University of Adelaide and VIRTU Women’s and Children’s Health Network, Adelaide, Australia

10. University of Alberta, Stollery Children’s Hospital, Edmonton, Canada

Abstract

Sentinel surveillance of acute hospitalisations in response to infectious disease emergencies such as the 2009 influenza A(H1N1)pdm09 pandemic is well described, but recognition of its potential to supplement routine public health surveillance and provide scalability for emergency responses has been limited. We summarise the achievements of two national paediatric hospital surveillance networks relevant to vaccine programmes and emerging infectious diseases in Canada (Canadian Immunization Monitoring Program Active; IMPACT from 1991) and Australia (Paediatric Active Enhanced Disease Surveillance; PAEDS from 2007) and discuss opportunities and challenges in applying their model to other contexts. Both networks were established to enhance capacity to measure vaccine preventable disease burden, vaccine programme impact, and safety, with their scope occasionally being increased with emerging infectious diseases’ surveillance. Their active surveillance has increased data accuracy and utility for syndromic conditions (e.g. encephalitis), pathogen-specific diseases (e.g. pertussis, rotavirus, influenza), and adverse events following immunisation (e.g. febrile seizure), enabled correlation of biological specimens with clinical context and supported responses to emerging infections (e.g. pandemic influenza, parechovirus, COVID-19). The demonstrated long-term value of continuous, rather than incident-related, operation of these networks in strengthening routine surveillance, bridging research gaps, and providing scalable public health response, supports their applicability to other countries.

Publisher

European Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (ECDC)

Subject

Virology,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Epidemiology

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