Department of Defense and Virginia Pilot Data Sharing

Highlights

  • The Department of Defense (DoD) and Virginia Department of Health (VDH) launched a pilot project in June 2018.
  • For the first time, DoD and civilian syndromic surveillance data were visible in the same system.
  • The pilot aimed to develop best practices that public health jurisdictions could use to share syndromic surveillance data with DoD.
  • The pilot succeeded when DoD alerted a health department of an outbreak of influenza-like illness at a military installation elementary school.
Person touching medical symbols on screen

Public health problem

The Department of Defense (DoD) and the Virginia Department of Health (VDH) participate in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Syndromic Surveillance Program (NSSP). As part of NSSP, DoD and VDH use ESSENCE1 to conduct syndromic surveillance, which improves situational awareness and enhances responsiveness to hazardous events and disease outbreaks. Although both DoD and VDH use ESSENCE to monitor the health status of their military and civilian populations, respectively, the agencies had not shared syndromic data for geographic locations where the two populations overlap. To protect the health of both populations, public health practitioners needed a better understanding of disease trends affecting military installations and civilian communities.

Actions taken

In collaboration with the NSSP team, DoD and VDH launched a pilot project in June 2018 to develop processes and procedures for data sharing, data access, and communication. Their aim was to develop best practices that public health jurisdictions, including those with military installations, could use to share syndromic surveillance data with DoD.

Outcome

The NSSP data sharing pilot project enabled DoD and civilian syndromic surveillance data to be visible in the same system for the first time. The ability to share data increased disease surveillance and awareness of public health events occurring in the community.

VDH gained understanding about how DoD operates and reinforced existing working relationships. This pilot enhanced VDH's ability to see potential reportable-condition cases that might not have been reported to local public health authorities. One key success of the pilot occurred when the DoD alerted local health department colleagues of an outbreak of influenza-like illness at an elementary school on a military installation. The data sharing allowed both to visualize and monitor the event in the context of illness levels in the local community. VDH and DoD worked together to support the school by continued monitoring for influenza-like illness in the surrounding county and providing guidance to the school via recommended control measures.

Future plans on expanding data sharing to other states will commence once DoD has transitioned fully to the latest version of ESSENCE. The ability to view both DoD and civilian health encounter data in the same system is a monumental step in responding promptly to outbreaks and emerging infectious disease that affect both populations.

Lessons learned

Pilot testing provided the opportunity to build interagency working relationships while developing best practices for sharing data. The pilot:

  • Helped district health epidemiologists understand how the DoD manages reportable conditions.
  • Helped DoD understand disease trends outside of an installation, better preparing military health personnel to respond to outbreaks and emerging infectious diseases.

Resources

Erin E. Austin
syndromic@vdh.virginia.gov
Virginia Department of Health

Lt. Col. Paul E. Lewis
Defense Health Agency, Armed Forces
Heath Surveillance Branch

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Office of Public Health Data, Surveillance, and Technology
Detect and Monitor Division
www.cdc.gov/nssp

The findings and outcomes described in this syndromic success story are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official position of the National Syndromic Surveillance Program or the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

  1. ESSENCE (Electronic Surveillance System for the Early Notification of Community-based Epidemics) is the National Syndromic Surveillance Program's secure, web-based tool to operationalize the public health surveillance workflow. ESSENCE allows analysts, epidemiologists, and others across all levels of public health to collaborate, investigate changes in trends, and to analyze, visualize and share data.