| Michael F. Easley Governor |
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Carmen Hooker Odom Secretary |
North Carolina
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| For Release: IMMEDIATE |
Contact: Debbie Crane | |
State Health Department Unveils New Public Health Surveillance SystemNorth Carolina is First State in Nation With New System to Save LivesRALEIGH – State Health Director Dr. Leah Devlin today unveiled the North Carolina Hospital Emergency Surveillance System (NCHESS). The initiative makes North Carolina the first state in the nation to have a fully automated statewide hospital emergency department surveillance system. NCHESS will provide real-time surveillance of hospital emergency department visits across North Carolina. “Past experience has shown us that health problems often begin as a cluster of events that could be an early sign of a major epidemic or an act of bioterrorism that could go unnoticed until it became completely out of control,” Devlin said. “NCHESS will allow us to catch problems while they are still small and to take appropriate public health measures to ensure that they remain as small as possible.” With NCHESS, statewide hospital emergency department data is electronically submitted to the Division of Public Health. Public health experts will be able to see quickly any unusual clinical information or trends that could point to a disease outbreak and take the appropriate response. More than 100 hospitals across the state are participating in the highly automated NCHESS. The new program augments a manual, paper-driven system that can take weeks to analyze trends and investigate hospital records. "Hospital emergency departments are always on the front line in efforts to protect patients," said William Pully, president of the North Carolina Hospital Association. "We are very proud to be working with the state in an effort that makes a tremendous stride forward in both public and patient safety. Our hospitals will benefit greatly from this effort. A positive working relationship between the state and hospitals has produced something unique and special for North Carolina citizens." The system was developed in a partnership between the N.C. Division
of Public Health; the N.C. Hospital Association; the University of
North Carolina School of Medicine, Department of Emergency Medicine;
and all North Carolina hospitals with emergency departments. It was
funded with a federal bioterrorism grant that became available after
9/11. It will detect incidents of bioterrorism like anthrax, but it
will also track other public health threats such as SARS or influenza.
It will also be used in the wake of natural disasters like hurricanes
to track health problems and ensure that they are addressed quickly. ###
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| Public Affairs Office 101 Blair Drive, Raleigh, NC 27603 (919)733-9190 FAX (919)733-7447 |
Debbie Crane Director |
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