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Sri Lanka Weekly Epidemiological Reports 2015

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  • Sri Lanka Weekly Epidemiological Reports 2015

    Link to 2014 thread: https://flutrackers.com/forum/forum/...y-reports-2014
    Link to Ministry of Health Epidemiology Unit Archive: http://www.epid.gov.lk/web/index.php...id=449&lang=en

    Report Number 1 contains "Flashback 2014 (Part I)".
    Report Number 2 contains "Flashback 2014 (Part II)". (corresponds to week 1 2015)
    Report Number 3 contains "Human Papillomavirus (HPV)".
    Report Number 4 contains "Carbapenem Resistant Enterobacteriaceae Infection".
    Report Number 5 contains "Antimicrobial Resistance? (Part I)".
    Report Number 6 contains "Antimicrobial Resistance? (Part II)".



    # 2 / # 3 / # 4 / # 5 / # 6 /(total)
    Dengue 970 / 587 / 976 / 1,275 / 884 / (5,823)
    Encephalitis 1 / 2 / 5 / 3 / 1 / (15)
    Leptospirosis 76 / 46 / 81 / 108 / 40 / (451)
    Rabies 0 / 0 / 0 / 1 / 0 / (1)
    Chickenpox 49 / 33 / 41 / 73 / 70 / (317)
    Meningitis 19 / 7 / 15 / 14 / 6 / (74)
    Leishmaniasis 4 / 15 / 9 / 19 / 8 / (68)
    AFP 2 / 2 / 2 / 0 / 0 / (6)
    Mumps 8 / 0 / 6 / 11 / 8 / (36)
    Measles 16 / 9 / 28 / 32 / 16 / (131)
    TB 234 / 113 / 101 / 429 / 186 / (981)


    Influenza surveillance for December 2014: (these numbers are identical to those published for November 2014 - I suspect they have not been updated - Ro)
    Human: 154 received; 94 ILI; 6 SARI; 27 Inf A; 1 Inf B
    Animal: 919 pooled samples, 315 serum samples, 0 positives
    Twitter: @RonanKelly13
    The views expressed are mine alone and do not represent the views of my employer or any other person or organization.

  • #2
    Report Number 7 contains "Dyslexia"
    Report Number 8 contains "Hyperlipidaemia (Part I)"
    Report Number 9 contains "Hyperlipidaemia (Part II)"
    Report Number 10 contains "Pneumococcal Disease"

    # 7 / # 8 / # 9 / # 10 /(total)
    Dengue 774 / 921 / 615 / 603 / (9,766)
    Encephalitis 0 / 3 / 4 / 8 / (32)
    Leptospirosis 41 / 41 / 46 / 65 / (696)
    Rabies 1 / 0 / 0 / 0 / (2)
    Chickenpox 62 / 105 / 97 / 84 / (748)
    Meningitis 5 / 12 / 10 / 10 / (126)
    Leishmaniasis 27 / 17 / 17 / 11 / (154)
    AFP 1 / 2 / 1 / 0 / (10)
    Mumps 4 / 8 / 6 / 9 / (70)
    Measles 20 / 29 / 25 / 29 / (273)
    TB 101 / 113 / 207 / 251 / (1,699)

    Influenza surveillance for January 2015:
    Human: 4,453 received; 61 ILI; 18 SARI; 8 Inf A; 13 Inf B
    Animal: 1,130 pooled samples, 873 serum samples, 0 positives
    Twitter: @RonanKelly13
    The views expressed are mine alone and do not represent the views of my employer or any other person or organization.

    Comment


    • #3
      Report Number 11 contains "Anthrax (Part I)"
      Report Number 12 contains "Anthrax (Part II)"
      Report Number 13 contains "Tuberculosis"
      Report Number 14 ​contains "Household Air Pollution and Health"
      Report Number 15 ​contains "Malaria (Part I)"
      Report Number 16 ​contains "Malaria (Part II)"
      Report Number 17 ​contains "Malaria (Part III)"
      Report Number 18 ​contains "Arsenic"
      Report Number 19 ​contains "Botulism"
      Report Number 20 ​contains "Food Safety"
      Report Number 21 ​contains "Child Maltreatment"
      Report Number 22 ​contains "Electromagnetic fields and public health: mobile phones"
      Report Number 23 ​contains "Pertussis"
      Report Number 24 ​contains "Leishmaniasis"
      The Epidemiology Unit was established in 1959 with assistance from World Health Organization (WHO) to strengthen surveillance of communicable diseases. Initially, the unit functioned with a WHO consultant and a national counterpart, who, after further training in epidemiology, was appointed in 1961, as the Epidemiologist of the Department of Health Services.


      Selected diseases (totals to June 12th):
      Dengue (15,171)
      Encephalitis (76)
      Leptospirosis (1,809)
      Rabies (17)
      Chickenpox 2,273)
      Meningitis (360)
      Leishmaniasis (480)
      AFP (30)
      Mumps (183)
      Measles (1,112)
      TB (4,156)

      Influenza surveillance for March 2015:
      Human: 3,935 received; 111 ILI; 19 SARI; 7 Inf A; 11 Inf B
      Animal: 1,023 pooled samples, 352 serum samples, 0 positives


      Influenza surveillance for April 2015:
      Human: 4,128 received; 711 ILI; 20 SARI; 7 Inf A; 3 Inf B
      Animal: 1,390 pooled samples, 572 serum samples, 0 positives



      Twitter: @RonanKelly13
      The views expressed are mine alone and do not represent the views of my employer or any other person or organization.

      Comment


      • #4
        Report Number 25 contains "Seasonal Influenza (Part I)"
        Report Number 26 contains "Seasonal Influenza (Part II)"

        // Week 25 // Week 26 // (Total)
        Dengue // 335 // 317 // (15,949)
        Encephalitis // 3 // 2 // (81)
        Leptospirosis // 62 // 34 // (1,954)
        Rabies // 0 // 0 // (18)
        Chickenpox // 74 // 78 // 2,461)
        Meningitis // 11 // 8 // (387)
        Leishmaniasis // 34 // 14 // (529)
        AFP // 3 // 5 // (38)
        Mumps // 4 // 7 // (197)
        Measles // 47 // 39 // (1,222)
        TB // 111 // 208 // (4475)

        Influenza surveillance for May 2015:
        Human: 2,488 received; 71 ILI; 35 SARI; 23 Inf A; 3 Inf B
        Animal: 845 pooled samples, 275 serum samples, 0 positives
        Twitter: @RonanKelly13
        The views expressed are mine alone and do not represent the views of my employer or any other person or organization.

        Comment


        • #5
          Report Number 27 contains "Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (Part I)"
          Report Number 28 contains "Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (Part II)"

          // Week 27 // Week 28 // (Total)
          Dengue // 273 // 240 // (16,649)
          Encephalitis // 2 // 1 // (85)
          Leptospirosis // 21 // 51 // (2,045)
          Rabies // 1 // 0 // (20)
          Chickenpox // 54 // 48 // 2,594)
          Meningitis // 8 // 7 // (418)
          Leishmaniasis // 13 // 30 // (582)
          AFP // 0 // 1 // (39)
          Mumps // 4 // 4 // (209)
          Measles // 41 // 40 // (1,334)
          TB // 236 // 346 // (5,057)
          Twitter: @RonanKelly13
          The views expressed are mine alone and do not represent the views of my employer or any other person or organization.

          Comment


          • #6
            Final Roundup for 2015;

            Flashback 2015 (Part 1) http://www.epid.gov.lk/web/images/pd...01-english.pdf
            Flashback 2015 (Part II) http://www.epid.gov.lk/web/images/pd...02-english.pdf

            This is the second in the series of two articles on
            the activities carried out by the Epidemiology
            Unit during the preceding year
            Year 2015 is a significant year as far as seasonal
            influenza was concerned. The country
            experienced a massive outbreak during the
            months of June, July and August resulting in 75
            influenza associated deaths and 14 maternal
            deaths.
            A health education campaign including
            TV spots, posters, road shows, lectures for
            health staff, publishing fact sheets on the Epidemiology
            Unit Website and distributing leaflets
            among general public on influenza prevention
            and control was launched. The circular on influenza
            prevention and control was revised to include
            latest facts on the disease. The high demand
            for antiviral (Oseltamivir) and personal
            protective equipment ( 95 N masks) was met
            without stock outs, while regulating it?s distribution
            by the Epidemiology Unit.
            Influenza surveillance system (ILI and SARI)
            was strengthened through continued services of
            surveillance officers (pre intern medical officers
            at SARI sites and the National Influenza CenterMRI),
            training staff at sentinel hospitals and
            maintaining adequate supplies of reagents for
            RTPCR at the MRI and visits to the sentinel hospitals
            by the Epidemiology Unit staff. The influenza
            surveillance system was critically reviewed
            by a team of members from the CDC Atlanta,
            USA.
            ...
            Twitter: @RonanKelly13
            The views expressed are mine alone and do not represent the views of my employer or any other person or organization.

            Comment

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