美国联邦和州公共卫生部门参与肩胛伊蚊(蜱螨:伊蚊科)和太平洋伊蚊蜱和蜱传病原体监测的观点。

Rebecca J Eisen, Erik Foster, Anne Kjemtrup, Megan E M Saunders, Jennifer Brown, Lee Green, Kim Cervantes, Melissa A Prusinski, Jennifer White, Alexis M Barbarin, Carl Williams, Natalie Kwit, Joshua Bernick, David Gaines, Elizabeth Dykstra, Hanna N Oltean, Eric Dotseth, Xia Lee, Rebecca Osborn
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引用次数: 0

摘要

为了应对美国蜱虫相关疾病的显著增加,最近的公共卫生政策鼓励采取多部门合作的方法来预防媒介传播的疾病。初级预防战略的重点是教育公众了解蜱传疾病的风险,并鼓励采取个人保护战略。准确描述人们在何时何地面临蜱传疾病风险,有助于优化预防信息。蜱和蜱传病原体数据可用于填补流行病学监测的空白。然而,考古资料的实用性受到其完整性的限制。显示具有重要医学意义的蜱虫种类及其携带的病原体分布的国家地图往往不完整或根本不存在。最近的政策鼓励加快努力,监测具有重要医学意义的蜱虫分布和数量的变化,以及它们所携带的人类病原体的存在和流行情况,并向公众、卫生保健提供者和公共卫生决策者提供可采取行动的循证信息。2018年,美国疾病控制和预防中心启动了一项全国性的蜱虫监测计划,重点关注伊蚊蜱虫。国家方案在公共卫生部门和学术机构领导的现有努力的基础上进行协调和扩展。在这里,我们描述了从事蜱虫监测的州公共卫生部门的经验,包括他们启动蜱虫监测计划的原因、规划目标和维持蜱虫监测计划的策略。我们分享在解释蜱虫监测数据或向利益攸关方传达蜱虫监测数据方面的经验和挑战,并探讨如何使用蜱虫学数据来补充流行病学数据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Perspectives from federal and state public health departments on their participation in and the utility of Ixodes scapularis (Acari: Ixodidae) and Ixodes pacificus tick and tick-borne pathogen surveillance in the United States.

In response to notable increases in tick-associated illnesses in the United States, recent public health policies encouraged multi-sector collaborative approaches to preventing vector-borne diseases. Primary prevention strategies focus on educating the public about risks for tick-borne diseases and encouraging adoption of personal protection strategies. Accurate descriptions of when and where people are at risk for tick-borne diseases aid in the optimization of prevention messaging. Tick and tick-borne pathogen data can be used to fill gaps in epidemiological surveillance. However, the utility of acarological data is limited by their completeness. National maps showing the distribution of medically important tick species and the pathogens they carry are often incomplete or non-existent. Recent policies encourage accelerated efforts to monitor changes in the distribution and abundance of medically important ticks and the presence and prevalence of human pathogens that they carry, and to provide actionable, evidence-based information to the public, health care providers and public health policy makers. In 2018, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention initiated a national tick surveillance program focused on Ixodes ticks. The national program coordinated and expanded upon existing efforts led by public health departments and academic institutions. Here, we describe experiences of state public health departments engaged in Ixodes tick surveillance, including information on why they initiated Ixodes surveillance programs, programmatic objectives, and strategies for maintaining tick surveillance programs. We share experiences and challenges in interpreting or communicating tick surveillance data to stakeholders and explore how the acarological data are used to complement epidemiological data.

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