Identification of Surveillance Procedures for Diseases and Deaths Potentially Caused by Air Pollution and Possible Solutions as a Proposal for a Binational Surveillance System: A Case Study of Mexicali B.C., México-Imperial Valley, United States
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Data Collection at the Air Monitoring Stations
2.2. Meteorological Data
2.3. Clinical Data
2.3.1. Epidemiological Surveillance System in México
2.3.2. Procedure for Collecting and Submitting Information in México
- The collection begins at the medical unit with the filling out of the “daily outpatient consultation sheet”, which provides the patient’s age and gender, whether it is a new case or a subsequent case, as well as the diagnostic impression.
- The physician in charge of the first-level unit collects the daily outpatient sheets per week, reviews the diagnostic printout for each day, and records it in the Single Information System for Epidemiological Surveillance (SUIVE-1) format, specifying age group and gender. Subsequent cases are not recorded in the weekly notification.
- The diagnoses of epidemiological interest marked with additional epidemiological surveillance activity are used by the physician responsible for the unit to make the first decision, and, among others, to notify the health jurisdiction so that the corresponding prevention and control activities can be carried out.
- The SUIVE-1 format is submitted from the unit to the immediate superior level no later than Tuesday of the following week after the information is collected.
- If for any reason the information is not sent in the corresponding week, this information is considered untimely and is included in the database of the unit of origin; it is recorded on the original calendar date.
- In the hospital, the “Daily Outpatient Report” is filled out in the Outpatient area and in the Emergency Department.
- The hospital epidemiologist or the IT staff member collects the daily outpatient reports per week, reviews the diagnostic printout for each day and records in the SUIVE-1 format in the line corresponding to the condition, age group, and gender of the new case.
- The diagnoses of epidemiological interest marked with additional epidemiological surveillance activity are used to support the first decision making; in this case, the hospital epidemiologist, in addition to filling out the form, notifies the health jurisdiction so that the necessary field activities can be carried out.
2.3.3. Epidemiological Surveillance System in Imperial Valley
2.3.4. Epidemiological Mortality Surveillance in México
2.3.5. Mortality Surveillance in the Imperial Valley
3. Results
3.1. Data Collection at Air Monitoring Stations
3.2. Clinical Data
3.2.1. Inhibitions and Solutions for the Daily Recording of Morbidity Data for Acute Respiratory Infections in Mexicali B.C. and Imperial Valley
3.2.2. Inhibitions and Solutions for the Daily Recording of Mortality Data for All but External Causes in Mexicali B.C.
3.3. Recommendations for Implementing the Proposal as a Binational Pilot Project
3.3.1. Capture and Flow of Clinical Data
- When the patient arrives at the medical unit (i.e., Mexicali General Hospital and El Centro Regional Medical Center and Pioneer’s Memorial), they must be evaluated by the doctor in charge and/or assistant in charge.
- Once an acute respiratory disease is diagnosed, a questionnaire will have to be applied and the data will have to be captured in a local database.
- At the end of the day, a trained person should obtain the information on ARIs for each unit. It will be proposed so that eventually this information can be extracted automatically.
- The data extraction center must be located in each of the pilot hospitals.
- Every morning, a technician dedicated to this project will have to obtain the extracted information and analyze it.
- The information will have to be classified by diagnosis, age, sex, etc.
- Subsequently, the information must be confirmed by an epidemiologist.
- The data and a summary of the information should be sent to the central pilot collection and coordination unit (i.e., Mexicali General Hospital and/or El Centro Regional Medical Center).
- The analyzed and validated data should be available on the Internet.
3.3.2. Deaths
- (a)
- In the city of Mexicali B.C., the suggested procedure for the registration and submission of death information is as follows:
- When the person dies in the medical unit (i.e., Mexicali General Hospital), the attending physician will write the medical note of the deceased, and it will be attached to the file.
- The hospital discharge form and the death certificate should be filled out without omissions and sent to the statistics area of the same unit within 24 h of the death; in that way, the data can be entered in the SAEH, where the causes of death will also be assigned a CIE-10 code.
- An assigned epidemiologist will extract the data from the SAEH on deaths from all causes excluding external causes, and will forward them to the pilot central collection and coordination unit (i.e., Hospital General and/or El Centro Regional Medical Center).
- The data analyzed and validated by an epidemiologist should be integrated into the universal database so that they can be accessed via the Internet.
- (b)
- In the city of Imperial Valley, the suggested procedure for death registration is as follows:
- Upon death at the medical facility (i.e., Regional Medical Center and Pioneer’s Memorial), the attending physician will complete a death certificate called a record of death; the original will be kept on record and a copy will be sent to the morgue.
- A technician will have to be trained to collect data on death cases, assign the International Classification of Diseases-10 (ICD-10) code, and send it to the central collection and coordination unit (i.e., Hospital General and/or El Centro Regional Medical Center). For all cases of death, except the external ones, the data will have to be captured digitally within 24 h after the death.
- The analyzed and validated data will be integrated into the universal database so that they can be accessed via the Internet.
3.3.3. Recommendations for the Implementation of a Binational Public Health Administration Model
Joint Steering Committee
Technical Secretariat
Technical Advisory Committee
Foundation
3.4. Impact of Air Quality on the Mexicali B.C.-Imperial Valley Atmospheric Basin’s Health and on the Mexicali’s Economy
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Inhibition: | Possible Solution: | ||
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1.—Several CO analyzers (API 300E) were installed in the network. The manufacturer reports that it has had problems with the diodes used in these analyzers. Several of these diodes fail after short periods of operation, resulting in erratic responses. | It is necessary to create an adequate communication and logistics system constituted by the SPA, SEMARNAT, Mexican Customs and CARB, in order to increase the effectiveness and efficiency in the transportation of parts, analyzers, and calibration equipment to Mexico. In addition, it is necessary to have a good financial mechanism from both governments to enhance the cost of operating the stations and the training of personnel. | ||
2.—SO2 analyzers in the network present a slow response time when subjected to calibration gas compared to analyzers used to measure other pollutants. | |||
3.—Significant data loss is caused by the particle in the Beta attenuation mass monitor (BAM), due to poor acquisition logistics in the flow controllers (the analyzers were of poor quality). | |||
Another source of data loss is temperature, which in some stations is presented for periods outside the acceptance range; this is because in some of the stations of the monitoring network, there are extreme temperatures, and thus temperature control is essential. In Mexicali B.C., during the late summer and early fall, environmental conditions cause condensation of water inside the sampling manifold, increasing the ozone and carbon dioxide readings. | Strict temperature control is required at the ITM and UABC stations. At the ITM and UABC stations, temperature control is carried out by school personnel; frequently, the electrical switches are damaged or turned off by school personnel, causing the air conditioning where the station is installed to malfunction. There is currently no access to the switch boxes at the schools and there is little or no communication between school maintenance personnel and technical personnel. |
Inhibition: | Possible Solution: | |
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1.—ARI reports are weekly because NOM-017-SSA2-1994 establishes it. | The reports could be recorded hourly and daily, having as main source the daily emergency care sheet. Since they establish the time and date of the diagnosis that motivates the consultation. As NOM-017-SSA2-1994 currently establishes that the reports must be weekly, it is proposed that a person be assigned to collect this information every day instead of waiting for NOM-017-SSA2-1994 to be modified. | |
2.—The registration procedure for new cases of diseases does not control over-reporting (i.e., the same patient is registered at the first level as a new case by the general practitioner and by the specialist when referred to the second level). In addition, if a patient is treated for the first time for a disease, it is registered as a new case; if this patient returns with the same disease, they will be registered as a new case. The opposite phenomenon called under-reporting also occurs (i.e., if a patient comes to the consultation with a mild respiratory illness, they are treated, but they are not registered as a new case because they did not require hospitalization). | Establish a weekly supervision system, in addition to the feedback from the personnel that records this data with the correct answers, errors, and interpretation of the statistics of new cases. Over-reporting could be reduced by automatically detecting if the patient returns for the same clinical picture and registering it as a new event, avoiding duplication as a new patient. Underreporting would be avoided with the mandatory registration of all patients who go to the emergency department and/or outpatient clinic, regardless of the length of stay in that area. | |
3.—The filling out of the daily sheet for external consultation and the daily sheet for emergency care by internal undergraduate medical personnel is not monitored and mistakes are often made. | Base physicians and heads of service should be trained to make them aware of the importance of correctly filling out these forms and, as far as possible, assigning a person to record complete and timely information, or that the person in charge of epidemiology carry out this activity; in any case, it must be done under the implementation of an online registration system. |
Inhibition: | Possible Solution: | |
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1.—With the exception of the two hospitals in the Imperial Valley, including their satellites, the remaining health centers lack the means and technology to report information to a central unit before midnight (every 24 h). | Provide information technology, which meets the technical requirements, to health centers that do not have it. | |
2.—Cooperation between health units is very limited. The units complain about the lack of personnel and the lack of infrastructure to facilitate the flow of information. | Train staff to deal with these claims and to understand the need to have reports every 24 h. | |
3.—The Imperial Valley Health System lacks a universal epidemiological system. Currently, only contagious diseases are monitored. | Ensure that all the health centers in the Imperial Valley have connectivity with the pilot unit in Mexicali B.C., and ensure the health centers in Mexicali B.C. have connectivity to the pilot unit in the Imperial Valley. | |
4.—The information on respiratory diseases is monitored monthly rather than daily, and only contagious respiratory diseases that are on the watch list are monitored. Furthermore, the information is not tracked to see if there are abnormal patterns or epidemics. | In both hospital systems, there are nurses in charge of recording and tracking infectious diseases. They are in charge of both documenting and tracking child mortality rates (CMRs), as well as being in communication with the local Health Department. These same nurses could also be in charge of documenting ARIs. |
Inhibition: | Possible Solution: | |
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1.—Cases of death are reported monthly to the jurisdictional SEED because that is what NOM-017-SSA2-1994 establishes. When a person dies at the Mexicali General Hospital, the medical staff that attended the patient fills out a death note that remains in the file, then the hospital discharge form that is sent to statistics, and finally the death certificate. In the case of a violent or medico-legal death, the death certificate is issued by the Forensic Medical Service (SEMEFO), which is issued by the medical examiner. | In order to have reports of cases of death from all causes except external causes every 24 h, it is necessary: (1) Given that the personnel of the Mexicali General Hospital who fill out the death certificates are interns who are renewed every six months, it is necessary that, upon their entry, they are trained in the procedure for filling out the certificate correctly, and receive periodic feedback after two months. (2) The hospital discharge form and a copy of the death certificate should be filled out completely and delivered to the statistics area no later than 24 h after the death, and should be entered into the Automated Subsystem of Hospital Discharges (SAEH), from which the information can be obtained digitally and can also be obtained every 24 h. | |
2.—95% of the completed death certificates are not annotated with the approximate interval between the onset of the disease and death, which makes it difficult to study the time variable as a health risk. | The heads of service must ensure their subordinates who fill out death certificates do so without omissions on a daily basis. | |
3.—Frequently, the certifier is unaware of the importance of writing the diagnosis on the death certificate for public health; an error on the part of the certifier can generate erroneous information in the records. | In the semester training, include the medical personnel in charge of filling out the medical certificates and the discharge sheet. | |
4.—The aforementioned causes the epidemiologist to be forced to ratify or rectify the causes of death after investigating the clinical record, but only those that are subject to epidemiological surveillance according to NOM-017-SSA2-1994. | A doctor should be assigned to review all the causes of death for their ratification or rectification on a daily basis. | |
5.—Intra-hospital deaths that occur daily are reported monthly to the jurisdiction, even when the SEED allows the daily capture of deaths. | It would be an advantage to carry out the capture via the internet every 24 h at all levels, although the process of verification and validation of the information is followed annually. | |
6.—The SEED does not automatically classify and/or separate deaths from all causes except external ones. | Build a system that automatically classifies and/or separates deaths from all causes except external ones. |
Inhibition: | Possible Solution: | |
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1.—The system used in the Imperial Valley to conduct epidemiological surveillance of deaths lacks coordination. That is, there are no statistics on deaths at the local level, doctors do not follow up to report promptly, and there is no technology to systematize the information. | Inform the medical personnel involved of the need and importance of correctly and promptly reporting the data on death cases. | |
2.—It is optional that the doctors sign the death certificates. This sometimes takes up to 3 or 4 months. | Make the report and signatures of the death certificate obligatory in a time no greater than 24 h after the event occurred. | |
3.—The system to record deaths is not automated. | Automation of information capture; in this case: death, causes, age, sex, date, time, and place of death. | |
4.—The information is not analyzed at the local level. Lack of personnel and political will to follow up on the causes of death locally. | Educate the entities involved about the importance of knowing the causes of death that occur in the local population. | |
5.—Lack of support personnel to carry out these surveillance activities. | Hire personnel dedicated to surveillance. | |
6.—Lack of collaboration between health units. | Inform the local health units about the purpose and the need to fulfill this project in order to stimulate and sensitize the local medical community about the importance of their collaboration. |
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Reyna, M.A.; Cuevas-González, D.; Avitia, R.L.; Nieblas, E.C.; Mérida, J.V.; Nava, M.L. Identification of Surveillance Procedures for Diseases and Deaths Potentially Caused by Air Pollution and Possible Solutions as a Proposal for a Binational Surveillance System: A Case Study of Mexicali B.C., México-Imperial Valley, United States. Atmosphere 2023, 14, 515. https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos14030515
Reyna MA, Cuevas-González D, Avitia RL, Nieblas EC, Mérida JV, Nava ML. Identification of Surveillance Procedures for Diseases and Deaths Potentially Caused by Air Pollution and Possible Solutions as a Proposal for a Binational Surveillance System: A Case Study of Mexicali B.C., México-Imperial Valley, United States. Atmosphere. 2023; 14(3):515. https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos14030515
Chicago/Turabian StyleReyna, Marco A., Daniel Cuevas-González, Roberto L. Avitia, Efrain C. Nieblas, Juan V. Mérida, and Martha L. Nava. 2023. "Identification of Surveillance Procedures for Diseases and Deaths Potentially Caused by Air Pollution and Possible Solutions as a Proposal for a Binational Surveillance System: A Case Study of Mexicali B.C., México-Imperial Valley, United States" Atmosphere 14, no. 3: 515. https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos14030515
APA StyleReyna, M. A., Cuevas-González, D., Avitia, R. L., Nieblas, E. C., Mérida, J. V., & Nava, M. L. (2023). Identification of Surveillance Procedures for Diseases and Deaths Potentially Caused by Air Pollution and Possible Solutions as a Proposal for a Binational Surveillance System: A Case Study of Mexicali B.C., México-Imperial Valley, United States. Atmosphere, 14(3), 515. https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos14030515