Australia's notifiable diseases status, 2008: Annual report of the National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System - Notes on intreptation

The Australia’s notifiable diseases status, 2008 report provides data and an analysis of communicable disease incidence in Australia during 2008. The full report is available in 16 HTML documents. The full report is also available in PDF format from the Table of contents page.

Page last updated: 30 September 2010

This article {extract} was published in Communicable Diseases Intelligence Vol 34 No 3 September 2010 and may be downloaded as a full version PDF from the Table of contents page.

Notes on interpretation

The present report is based on 2008 'finalised' data from each state or territory agreed upon in September 2009 and represents a snapshot of the year after duplicate records and incorrect or incomplete data were removed. Therefore, totals in this report may vary slightly from the totals reported in CDI quarterly publications.

Analyses in this report were based on the date of disease diagnosis in an attempt to estimate disease activity within the reporting period. The date of diagnosis is the onset date or where the date of onset was not known, the earliest of the specimen collection date, the notification date, or the notification receive date. As considerable time may have elapsed between the onset and diagnosis dates for hepatitis B (unspecified), hepatitis C (unspecified) and tuberculosis, the earliest specimen date, health professional notification date or public health unit notification receive date was used for these conditions.

Notified cases only represent a proportion (the 'notified fraction') of the total incidence (Figure 1) and this has to be taken into account when interpreting NNDSS data. Moreover, the notified fraction varies by disease, by jurisdiction and by time.

Figure 1: Communicable diseases notifiable fraction

Figure 1:  Communicable diseases notifiable fraction

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A survey of jurisdictional public health departments was conducted in 2009 to ascertain the source of each notification (Table 2). Five jurisdictions reported notifications in their jurisdictions originating from laboratory only, of greater than or equal to 95%. South Australia and Western Australia reported notifications in their jurisdictions originating from laboratory and doctor of 77% and 66.2% respectively, whilst Victoria reported 46%. South Australia reported the greatest percentage of notifications in their jurisdictions originating from doctors only, at 9%.

Table 2: Percentage of notifications from different sources in each jurisdiction, 2008

State or territory
Source of notifications
Laboratory only Doctor only Laboratory and doctor
ACT
98.0
1.0
1.0
NSW*
95.0
1.5
1.2
NT
99.0
1.0
<1.0
Qld
97.5
0.5
2.0
SA*
8.5
9.0
77
Tas
98.0
2.0
<1.0
Vic
48.0
6.0
46.0
WA
30.5
3.3
66.2

* Not all percentages add up to 100% due to other sources of notifications and/or incomplete data for laboratory and medical notification fields.

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Whilst most jurisdictions have data on laboratory notifications, the percentage of notifications attributed to doctor only and laboratory and doctor for each state and territory are based on estimates deduced from the data that are available, noting that fields for these data may be incomplete. Western Australia is the only jurisdiction that maintains data on the source of notifications from laboratories and/or doctors.

Methods of surveillance vary between states and territories, each having different requirements for notification by medical practitioners, laboratories and hospitals. Although the National Notifiable Diseases List2 was established under the National Health Securities Act, 2007, some diseases are not yet notifiable in all 8 jurisdictions (Table 3).

Table 3: Diseases notified to the National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System, Australia 2008

Disease
Data received from
Bloodborne diseases
Hepatitis (NEC) All jurisdictions
Hepatitis B (newly acquired)* All jurisdictions
Hepatitis B (unspecified) All jurisdictions
Hepatitis C (newly acquired)* All jurisdictions, except Queensland
Hepatitis C (unspecified)†,‡ All jurisdictions
Hepatitis D All jurisdictions
Gastrointestinal diseases
Botulism All jurisdictions
Campylobacteriosis§ All jurisdictions, except New South Wales
Cryptosporidiosis All jurisdictions
Haemolytic uraemic syndrome All jurisdictions
Hepatitis A All jurisdictions
Hepatitis E All jurisdictions
Listeriosis All jurisdictions
Salmonellosis All jurisdictions
Shigellosis All jurisdictions
STEC,VTEC|| All jurisdictions
Typhoid All jurisdictions
Quarantinable diseases
Cholera All jurisdictions
Highly pathogenic avian influenza in humans All jurisdictions
Plague All jurisdictions
Rabies All jurisdictions
Severe acute respiratory syndrome All jurisdictions
Smallpox All jurisdictions
Viral haemorrhagic fever All jurisdictions
Yellow fever All jurisdictions
Sexually transmissible infections
Chlamydial infections All jurisdictions
Donovanosis All jurisdictions
Gonococcal infection** All jurisdictions
Syphilis – < 2 years duration All jurisdictions
Syphilis – > 2 years or unspecified duration All jurisdictions, except South Australia
Syphilis – congenital All jurisdictions
Vaccine preventable diseases
Diphtheria All jurisdictions
Haemophilus influenzae type b All jurisdictions
Influenza (laboratory confirmed)†† All jurisdictions
Measles All jurisdictions
Mumps All jurisdictions
Pertussis All jurisdictions
Pneumococcal disease (invasive) All jurisdictions
Poliomyelitis All jurisdictions
Rubella All jurisdictions
Rubella – congenital All jurisdictions
Tetanus All jurisdictions
Varicella zoster (chickenpox)‡‡ All jurisdictions, except New South Wales
Varicella zoster (shingles)‡‡ All jurisdictions, except New South Wales
Varicella zoster (unspecified)‡‡ All jurisdictions, except New South Wales
Vectorborne diseases
Arbovirus infection (NEC)§§ All jurisdictions
Barmah Forest virus infection All jurisdictions
Dengue virus infection All jurisdictions
Japanese encephalitis virus infection All jurisdictions
Kunjin virus infection|||| All jurisdictions
Malaria All jurisdictions
Murray Valley encephalitis virus infection|||| All jurisdictions
Ross River virus infection All jurisdictions
Zoonoses
Anthrax All jurisdictions
Australian bat lyssavirus All jurisdictions
Brucellosis All jurisdictions
Leptospirosis All jurisdictions
Lyssavirus (NEC) All jurisdictions
Ornithosis All jurisdictions
Q fever All jurisdictions
Tularaemia All jurisdictions
Other bacterial infections
Legionellosis All jurisdictions
Leprosy All jurisdictions
Meningococcal infection¶¶ All jurisdictions
Tuberculosis All jurisdictions

* Newly acquired hepatitis includes cases where the infection was determined to be acquired within 24 months prior to diagnosis.

† Unspecified hepatitis and syphilis includes cases where the duration of infection could not be determined.

‡ In Queensland, includes incident hepatitis C cases.

§ Notified as 'foodborne disease' or 'gastroenteritis in an institution' in New South Wales.

|| Infection with Shiga toxin/verotoxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC/VTEC).

¶ Includes Chlamydia trachomatis identified from cervical, rectal, urine, urethral, throat and eye samples, except for South Australia, which reports only genital tract specimens; the Northern Territory and Western Australia excludes ocular infections. Where data fields were complete, infections defined as non-sexually acquired (e.g. perinatal) in individuals aged less than 13 years, were excluded from the data.

** Where data fields were complete, gonococcal infections defined as non-sexually acquired (e.g. perinatal) in individuals aged less than 13 years, were excluded from the data.

†† Influenza (laboratory confirmed) became notifiable in South Australia on 1 May 2008.

‡‡ Varicella zoster became notifiable in Victoria on 21 September 2008.

§§ Arbovirus (NEC) replaced Flavivirus (NEC) in 2008.

|||| In the Australian Capital Territory, Murray Valley encephalitis virus infection and Kunjin virus infection are combined under Murray Valley encephalitis virus infection.

¶¶ Only invasive meningococcal disease is nationally notifiable. However, New South Wales, the Australian Capital Territory and South Australia also report conjunctival cases.

NEC Not elsewhere classified.

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Changes in surveillance practices have been introduced in some jurisdictions and not in others, and making the comparison of data across jurisdictions difficult. In this report, some information was obtained from states and territories, including changes in surveillance practices, screening practices, laboratory practices, and major disease control or prevention initiatives to assist in the interpretation of the 2008 data.

Postcode information usually reflects the residential location of the case, but this does not necessarily represent the place where the disease was acquired. In December 2008, the CDNA endorsed the NNDSS cross-border notification protocol, which determines that the jurisdiction of residence of a case has the responsibility of reporting the notification to NNDSS. This was implemented from 1 January 2009, and may also affect some retrospective notifications by removing duplicates and preventing the loss of notification data in NNDSS.

Data completeness was assessed for the notification's sex, age at onset, and indigenous status, and reported as the proportion of complete notifications. The completenessof data in this report is summarised in the Results.

The percentage of data completeness was defined as:

Percentage of data completeness = (total notifications – missing or unknown)/total notifications x 100

The indigenous status was defined by the following nationally accepted values:10

1=Indigenous – (Aboriginal but not Torres Strait Islander origin)

2=Indigenous – (Torres Strait Islander but not Aboriginal origin)

3=Indigenous – (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander origin)

4=Not indigenous – (not Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander origin)

9=Not stated

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Notes on cases definitions

All notifiable diseases reported to the NNDSS must meet their respective national surveillance case definitions. These case definitions were agreed by CDNA and implemented nationally from January 2004 and were used by all jurisdictions for the first time in 2005. The national surveillance case definitions and their status are available from http://www.health.gov.au/casedefinitions

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