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Review
. 2016 Nov 15:7:157-170.
doi: 10.2147/VMRR.S90182. eCollection 2016.

Animal health syndromic surveillance: a systematic literature review of the progress in the last 5 years (2011-2016)

Affiliations
Review

Animal health syndromic surveillance: a systematic literature review of the progress in the last 5 years (2011-2016)

Fernanda C Dórea et al. Vet Med (Auckl). .

Abstract

This review presents the current initiatives and potential for development in the field of animal health surveillance (AHSyS), 5 years on from its advent to the front of the veterinary public health scene. A systematic review approach was used to document the ongoing AHSyS initiatives (active systems and those in pilot phase) and recent methodological developments. Clinical data from practitioners and laboratory data remain the main data sources for AHSyS. However, although not currently integrated into prospectively running initiatives, production data, mortality data, abattoir data, and new media sources (such as Internet searches) have been the objective of an increasing number of publications seeking to develop and validate new AHSyS indicators. Some limitations inherent to AHSyS such as reporting sustainability and the lack of classification standards continue to hinder the development of automated syndromic analysis and interpretation. In an era of ubiquitous electronic collection of animal health data, surveillance experts are increasingly interested in running multivariate systems (which concurrently monitor several data streams) as they are inferentially more accurate than univariate systems. Thus, Bayesian methodologies, which are much more apt to discover the interplay among multiple syndromic data sources, are foreseen to play a big part in the future of AHSyS. It has become clear that early detection of outbreaks may not be the principal expected benefit of AHSyS. As more systems will enter an active prospective phase, following the intensive development stage of the last 5 years, the study envisions AHSyS, in particular for livestock, to significantly contribute to future international-, national-, and local-level animal health intelligence, going beyond the detection and monitoring of disease events by contributing solid situation awareness of animal welfare and health at various stages along the food-producing chain, and an understanding of the risk management involving actors in this value chain.

Keywords: aberration detection; animal health intelligence; biosurveillance; cluster detection; outbreak signal; temporal monitoring.

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Conflict of interest statement

Disclosure The authors have no affiliations with or involvement in any organization or entity with any financial or nonfinancial interest in the subject matter discussed in this manuscript, other than being active researchers in the field of AHSyS. The authors report no other conflicts of interest in this work.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Illustration of the reviewing process for this systematic review Notes: *Abstracts taken from conference proceedings which referred to works later published as full peer-reviewed articles were excluded. #Full texts were split between authors. Abbreviation: ICAHS, International Conferences on Animal Health Surveillance.

References

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