Successful implementation of a multicountry clinical surveillance and data collection system for Ebola virus disease in West Africa: Findings and lessons learned

Author(s)
Roshania, R., Mallow, M., Dunbar, N., Mansary, D., Shetty, P., Lyon, T., Pham, K., Abad, M., Shedd, E., Tran, A. M., Cundy, S. and Levine, A. C.
Pages
15pp
Date published
01 Sep 2016
Publisher
Global Health, Science and Practice
Type
Articles
Keywords
Assessment & Analysis, Epidemics & pandemics, Health

BACKGROUND:

The 2014 outbreak of Ebola virus disease (EVD) in West Africa was the largest ever recorded. Starting in September 2014, International Medical Corps (IMC) managed 5 Ebola treatment units (ETUs) in Liberia and Sierra Leone, which cumulatively cared for about 2,500 patients. We conducted a retrospective cohort study of patient data collected at the 5 ETUs over 1 year of operations.

METHODS:

To collect clinical and epidemiological data from the patient care areas, each chart was either manually copied across the fence between the high-risk zone and low-risk zone, imaged across the fence, or imaged in the high-risk zone. Each ETU's data were entered into a separate electronic database, and these were later combined into a single relational database. Lot quality assurance sampling was used to ensure data quality, with reentry of data with high error rates from imaged records.