Development of Reporting Guidelines for Animal Health Surveillance—AHSURED

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Dokumenter

  • Arianna Comin
  • John Grewar
  • Gerdien van Schaik
  • Heinzpeter Schwermer
  • Julie Paré
  • Farouk El Allaki
  • Julian A. Drewe
  • Ana Carolina Lopes Antunes
  • Leah Estberg
  • Michael Horan
  • Francisco F. Calvo-Artavia
  • Abdurrahman Hassan Jibril
  • Marta Martínez-Avilés
  • Yves Van der Stede
  • Sotiria Eleni Antoniou
  • Ann Lindberg

With the current trend in animal health surveillance toward risk-based designs and a gradual transition to output-based standards, greater flexibility in surveillance design is both required and allowed. However, the increase in flexibility requires more transparency regarding surveillance, its activities, design and implementation. Such transparency allows stakeholders, trade partners, decision-makers and risk assessors to accurately interpret the validity of the surveillance outcomes. This paper presents the first version of the Animal Health Surveillance Reporting Guidelines (AHSURED) and the process by which they have been developed. The goal of AHSURED was to produce a set of reporting guidelines that supports communication of surveillance activities in the form of narrative descriptions. Reporting guidelines come from the field of evidence-based medicine and their aim is to improve consistency and quality of information reported in scientific journals. They usually consist of a checklist of items to be reported, a description/definition of each item, and an explanation and elaboration document. Examples of well-reported items are frequently provided. Additionally, it is common to make available a website where the guidelines are documented and maintained. This first version of the AHSURED guidelines consists of a checklist of 40 items organized in 11 sections (i.e., surveillance system building blocks), which is available as a wiki at https://github.com/SVA-SE/AHSURED/wiki. The choice of a wiki format will allow for further inputs from surveillance experts who were not involved in the earlier stages of development. This will promote an up-to-date refined guideline document.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
Artikelnummer426
TidsskriftFrontiers in Veterinary Science
Vol/bind6
ISSN2297-1769
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2019

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