Abstract
Background: During the 2019 Hajj, the Ministry of Health in Saudi Arabia implemented for the first time a health early warning system for rapid detection and response to health threats. Aims: This study aimed to describe the early warning findings at the Hajj to highlight the pattern of health risks and the potential benefits of the disease surveillance system. Methods: Using syndromic surveillance and event-based surveillance data, the health early warning system generated automated alarms for public health events, triggered alerts for rapid epidemiological investigations and facilitated the monitoring of health events. Results: During the deployment period (4 July–31 August 2019), a total of 121 automated alarms were generated, of which 2 events (heat-related illnesses and injuries/trauma) were confirmed by the response teams. Conclusion: The surveillance system potentially improved the timeliness and situational awareness for health events, including non-infectious threats. In the context of the current COVID-19 pandemic, a health early warning system could enhance case detection and facilitate monitoring of the disease geographical spread and the effectiveness of control meas-ures.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Bieh, K. L., Khan, A., Yezli, S., El-Ganainy, A., Asiri, S., Alotaibi, B., … Jokhdar, H. (2020). Implementing the health early warning system based on syndromic and event-based surveillance at the 2019 Hajj. Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal, 26(12), 1570–1575. https://doi.org/10.26719/emhj.20.129
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.