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Health surveillance: proposal for a tool to evaluate technological arrangements in local health systems

Vigilância em saúde: proposta de ferramenta para avaliar arranjos tecnológicos em sistemas locais de saúde

Abstracts

In order to identify the various meanings ascribed to health surveillance, the authors conducted a systematic review of articles published from January 1990 to August 2005 in the following databases: LILACS, SciELO, CAPES, MEDLINE, and Web of Science. A total of 144 abstracts were read and 18 full texts of Brazilian articles were selected for in-depth analysis, leading to the design of a typology for technological arrangements related to the various meanings: (i) traditional epidemiological surveillance, with communicable diseases as the main object; (ii) public health surveillance, as the municipal component of the national health surveillance system; and (iii) health surveillance, a technological mode of organizing health practices in a given territory. The proposed typology can contribute to research on surveillance practices in local health systems. It can also serve as a template for data collection and analysis. The meanings ascribed to the three types are discussed in light of public health's historical development as a field.

Local Health Systems; Health Surveillance; Evaluation


Com o objetivo de identificar os significados dos diversos termos empregados acerca da vigilância em saúde, realizou-se uma revisão sistemática da bibliografia especializada sobre o tema, no período compreendido entre janeiro de 1990 a agosto de 2005, nas bases de dados do LILACS, SciELO, banco de teses da CAPES, MEDLINE e Web of Science. A análise de 144 resumos e de 18 textos exemplares selecionados na literatura nacional permitiu a elaboração de uma matriz com a caracterização de três tipos ideais de arranjos tecnológicos possíveis em sistemas municipais de saúde: (i) vigilância epidemiológica tradicional, com as doenças transmissíveis como objeto; (ii) vigilância em saúde pública, componente municipal do sistema nacional de vigilância em saúde; e (iii) vigilância da saúde, um modo tecnológico de organização das práticas de saúde em um dado território. A matriz proposta poderá contribuir para a realização de investigações sobre a implantação de práticas de vigilância em sistemas locais de saúde, norteando a coleta e análise dos dados. São discutidos os significados dos três tipos encontrados frente à constituição histórica do campo da saúde coletiva e da vigilância em particular.

Sistemas Locais de Saúde; Vigilância Sanitária; Avaliação


REVISÃO REVIEW

Health surveillance: proposal for a tool to evaluate technological arrangements in local health systems

Vigilância em saúde: proposta de ferramenta para avaliar arranjos tecnológicos em sistemas locais de saúde

Gerluce Alves Pontes da Silva; Ligia Maria Vieira-da-Silva

Instituto de Saúde Coletiva, Universidade Federal da Bahia, Salvador, Brasil

Correspondence Correspondence: G. A. P. Silva Instituto de Saúde Coletiva Universidade Federal da Bahia Rua Emílio Odebrecht 626, apto. 801A, Salvador BA 41830-300, Brasil gerluce1@terra.com.br

ABSTRACT

In order to identify the various meanings ascribed to health surveillance, the authors conducted a systematic review of articles published from January 1990 to August 2005 in the following databases: LILACS, SciELO, CAPES, MEDLINE, and Web of Science. A total of 144 abstracts were read and 18 full texts of Brazilian articles were selected for in-depth analysis, leading to the design of a typology for technological arrangements related to the various meanings: (i) traditional epidemiological surveillance, with communicable diseases as the main object; (ii) public health surveillance, as the municipal component of the national health surveillance system; and (iii) health surveillance, a technological mode of organizing health practices in a given territory. The proposed typology can contribute to research on surveillance practices in local health systems. It can also serve as a template for data collection and analysis. The meanings ascribed to the three types are discussed in light of public health's historical development as a field.

Local Health Systems; Health Surveillance; Evaluation

RESUMO

Com o objetivo de identificar os significados dos diversos termos empregados acerca da vigilância em saúde, realizou-se uma revisão sistemática da bibliografia especializada sobre o tema, no período compreendido entre janeiro de 1990 a agosto de 2005, nas bases de dados do LILACS, SciELO, banco de teses da CAPES, MEDLINE e Web of Science. A análise de 144 resumos e de 18 textos exemplares selecionados na literatura nacional permitiu a elaboração de uma matriz com a caracterização de três tipos ideais de arranjos tecnológicos possíveis em sistemas municipais de saúde: (i) vigilância epidemiológica tradicional, com as doenças transmissíveis como objeto; (ii) vigilância em saúde pública, componente municipal do sistema nacional de vigilância em saúde; e (iii) vigilância da saúde, um modo tecnológico de organização das práticas de saúde em um dado território. A matriz proposta poderá contribuir para a realização de investigações sobre a implantação de práticas de vigilância em sistemas locais de saúde, norteando a coleta e análise dos dados. São discutidos os significados dos três tipos encontrados frente à constituição histórica do campo da saúde coletiva e da vigilância em particular.

Sistemas Locais de Saúde; Vigilância Sanitária; Avaliação

Introduction

"...It seems you don't understand that words are the labels we stick on things, not the things themselves, you'll never know what the things are really like, nor even what their real names are, because the names you gave them are just that, the names you gave them..." 1 (p. 76).

The nature of health problems and the ways to deal with them in each specific country and historical period are related to the prevailing political, economic, and social conditions 2, as are the various concepts and practices related to the field of public or collective health 3.

Morbidity and mortality data have been used as the basis for public health actions since the 14th century 2. However, one of the first examples of surveillance, defined as the systematic recording of information on morbidity and mortality to orient control measures, occurred in London in the 17th century during an epidemic of the bubonic plague 4. In 1776, one component of the German medical system was the systematic analysis of health problems in order to deal with them 4. During the same period, the United States passed legislation on the reporting of contagious diseases like smallpox, yellow fever, and cholera 5. Still, it was not until the 19th century that this practice became fully developed, with William Farr (1807-1883) widely acknowledged as founder of the modern concept of surveillance 6.

The use of this concept expanded in the 20th century, when various surveillance systems were developed 4. Until 1950, the term surveillance was used mostly to define the act of observing individuals, especially contacts with serious infectious diseases like the plague, smallpox, typhus, and syphilis, in order to detect the first symptoms and to implement quarantine measures 7. With the development of the Surveillance Program under the Communicable Disease Center in the United States in the 1950s (now the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or CDC), Langmuir began to publicize the concept of surveillance as monitoring the occurrence of diseases in populations 8, corresponding to: "continuous observation of the distribution and incidence trend of the disease, through the systematic collection, consolidation, analysis, and dissemination of morbidity and mortality data" 9 (pp. 182-3). According to Langmuir, there is a clear separation between the roles of surveillance and intervention, whereby the concept of surveillance does not incorporate direct responsibility for control activities. In his understanding, although disease control is the purpose of surveillance, state and local health authorities should make the decisions and implement control operations.

In the early 1960s, Karel Raska further qualified surveillance with the addition of the term "epidemiological" 10. The Division of Communicable Diseases of the World Health Organization (WHO) used the expression to refer to the unit created in 1965 to coordinate surveillance activities. In 1968, during its 21st Assembly, WHO discussed the theme of national systems and the global surveillance system for communicable diseases. Since then, the expression "epidemiological surveillance" has been used internationally 4, adopting the definition by Raska 11 (p. 316): "the epidemiological study of a disease considered as a dynamic process that includes the ecology of the infectious agents, the host, the reservoirs and vectors, as well as the complex mechanisms that intervene in the spread of infection and the extent to which this spread occurs".

In addition to incorporating epidemiological research activities, the term has also come to be used by various authors as a synonym for monitoring and auditing, with the Malaria and Smallpox Eradication Programs adding the responsibility for control measures to that of surveillance in the 1960s. Langmuir 7 contended that such expansion of the meanings of surveillance, which became confused with the administration of control programs and even epidemiology itself, was not only etymologically incorrect, but obscured the meaning of a useful and specific concept.

In the 1970s, WHO and the Pan-American Health Organization (PAHO) encouraged the creation of epidemiological surveillance systems in the dependent developing countries. These systems, focused on infectious diseases, were associated with proposals for improving the performance of the Expanded Program on Immunization, once again linking surveillance to control activities 12. Depending on the conditions in the structuring and development of health services, they also encouraged surveillance agencies to assume responsibility for (or participate in) control activities 13. However, unlike the WHO and PAHO approach, in several countries, especially in North America and Europe, surveillance did not include control measures in its design or practice 4,5.

Surveillance practices originally assumed infectious diseases as their object, but they gradually encompassed a wider variety of conditions, both in the United States and in other countries 4,5,7. In the late 1980s, the expression "epidemiological surveillance" was challenged on the grounds that it hampered an understanding of the scope of surveillance as a public health practice, allowing confusion in relation to epidemiology as a discipline and the use of epidemiological logic in health services 5. The Anglo-Saxon literature began replacing the term "epidemiological surveillance" with "public health surveillance" 4. Although epidemiological surveillance was used in articles focusing on risk factors, living conditions, and environmental variables, the gradual replacement of epidemiological surveillance with public health surveillance appears to have occurred simultaneously with the expansion of the surveillance concept and practices 4,14,15,16,17,18. However, the expression epidemiological surveillance was still frequently used in countries outside North America, including in Brazil, as reported by Waldman 19.

In Brazil, modern surveillance concepts and practices were adopted by the Center for Epidemiological Research (CIE), created in 1968 at the Foundation for Public Health Services, which established the first national disease notification system in 1969 20.

In 1975, Law 6.259 established Brazil's National Epidemiological Surveillance System (SNVE). Article 2 of the law defined epidemiological surveillance as "the information, investigations, and surveys needed to program and evaluate measures to control diseases and situations involving harm to health" 21, excluding control activities. However, the following year, Decree 78.231 22, regulating the previous law, provided explicitly that the special health services network in charge of epidemiological surveillance activities, in addition to gathering and publishing its own data, was to implement the appropriate control measures. The SNVE focused its action on diseases of compulsory notification, as in other countries 23.

The definition of epidemiological surveillance assumed by Brazil's 1990 Health Act 24 was not limited to communicable diseases, and according to Barata 25, by incorporating health determinants and conditioning factors and extending beyond disease as its object, the term came to designate another set of practices. However, until recently, the agencies responsible for these actions continued to concentrate their work on the surveillance of communicable diseases.

In Brazil, in the 1990s, proposals referred to as "health surveillance" emerged with distinct theoretical approaches 26. One of them, "surveillance in health", related to a healthcare model focused on the control of causes and risks and targeted to health problems managed continuously in a given territory, combining actions aimed at overcoming the dichotomy between collective and individual practices 27. The other proposal conceived "surveillance of health" as the expansion of the sphere of activity of SNVE beyond communicable diseases, maintaining the specificity as to the object and intervention method 25. Meanwhile, the terms "surveillance in health" and "surveillance of health" were used by state and municipal health departments to refer to the units in charge of epidemiological surveillance, sanitary surveillance, and workers' health surveillance, combined in a single sector through administrative reforms 28.

There is important variation in the content and sphere of activity referred to by the term "health surveillance". One can also find different terms according to the author and/or text: surveillance of health, surveillance in health, public health surveillance. Since the surveillance concept is central to contemporary Collective Health theory and practice, and in light of the prevailing myriad of definitions in both academic texts and official documents, an analysis of the use of distinct expressions in scientific publications becomes both a theoretical and practical necessity.

To achieve consensus on the concepts initially requires an explicit description of their different meanings. Therefore, the current article proposes to contribute to this undertaking, seeking to identify how the various terms for "health surveillance" or "public health surveillance" have been used in the Brazilian and international scientific literature, in addition to the various senses and meanings ascribed to them. Subsequently, based on the above synthesis, the authors systematize a matrix with the characterization of ideal types of possible technological arrangements in the organization of surveillance practices in local health systems, to be used as a methodological tool in conducting evaluative research.

Methodology

In 2005, the authors conducted a review of the specialized literature from January 1990 to August 2005 in LILACS (Latin-American and Caribbean Health Sciences Literature), SciELO (Scientific Electronic Library Online), and the thesis/dissertation database of CAPES (Coordinating Body for Graduate Education). The Portuguese-language key words were: vigilância, vigilância à saúde, vigilância em saúde, vigilância da saúde, and vigilância em saúde pública. The article search in journals indexed in MEDLINE and Web of Science adopted the descriptors health surveillance and public health surveillance. The quotation marks (" ") proximity operator was used to limit the search to articles in which the terms were adjacent in the text. Based on the initial list, the study included the articles with available abstracts that allowed understanding the definition used. The review excluded abstracts referring to the numerous papers and experiences presented at public health congresses and meetings and published in the respective proceedings.

Given the wide range of terms with varying adjectives and prepositions (surveillance in health, surveillance of health, public health surveillance) and concepts, the articles in Portuguese were classified according to: (i) term employed; (ii) type of text; (iii) theme; and (iv) year of publication. In all, 144 abstracts and 13 full articles were analyzed. Based on this review, a matrix was elaborated with the description of ideal types 29 of technological arrangements for surveillance practices in local health systems, based on full texts of articles and documents that were considered exemplary or seminal (Table 1). The selection of dimensions and criteria for constructing the matrix was based on studies on the technological organization of health work 30,31 and evaluation of the effects of health management decentralization 32.

Results and discussion

The search in the LILACS, SciELO, and CAPES databases identified 144 abstracts of studies published in Brazil, with 12 (8.3%) adopting the expression surveillance of health, 24 (16.7%) surveillance in health, 12 (8,3%) health surveillance, 8 (5,6%) workers' health surveillance, 4 (2,8%) public health surveillance, and 13 (9%) environmental health surveillance (or environmental surveillance, environmental epidemiological surveillance, or health environmental surveillance). Surveillance unqualified by adjectives was present in 21 (14.6%) of the abstracts and epidemiological surveillance in 50 (34.7%), reiterating the expression's common use in the country.

The search in the MEDLINE and Web of Science databases identified 552 abstracts with the terms health surveillance or public health surveillance. Of this total, 79 (14.3%) were excluded from the study because they dealt with child health surveillance with a clinical and individual approach to disease prevention and health promotion. Among the 473 abstracts that were selected and analyzed, in 145 (30.7%) the term health surveillance referred to the surveillance of workers' health and its relationship to the workplace, a field known in Brazil as Workers' Health, dealing with themes related to workers' assistance and the surveillance of diseases and injuries related to the workplace and work processes. The underlying definition of the term health surveillance in nearly all of the 328 (69.3%) remaining articles was, as expounded by Langmuir 9, the systematic collection, analysis, and interpretation of health data in populations, essential to public health practice, integrated with the timely dissemination of information for intervention/action.

The analysis of abstracts and full texts confirmed the various meanings of the expressions for "health surveillance". Unlike the international literature, in Brazilian scientific publications the predominant form is not health surveillance as a continuous analysis of the health situation for selected events. In addition to the concepts reported by Teixeira et al. 26, i.e., of a technological mode of reorganization of health practices and integration among epidemiological, sanitary, and environmental surveillances, in Brazil, health surveillance is also viewed as a public health practice that incorporates the implementation of measures to deal with the events under surveillance.

Of the 144 articles produced in Brazil and selected here, 69 (47.9%) used the terms surveillance "in" or "of" health to refer to health surveillance. Of these, the underlying notion of a technological mode of organizing health practices was present in 33 (47.8%) abstracts, with a predominance of those adopting the terms surveillance "in" health or surveillance "of" health. Meanwhile, surveillance as a public health practice provided the basis for 27 (39.1%), with a stronger presence of those that referred to surveillance without specific adjectives. Among the other abstracts, 6 (8.7%) related to programs for monitoring the health of high-risk newborns and infants, 1 (1.4%) referred to workers' health, and 1 (1.4%) to family health. One abstract (1.4%) referred to health surveillance as the integration of epidemiological, environmental, and sanitary surveillance.

As mentioned above, in the international literature the surveillance concept does not incorporate control measures, despite clear links to interventions or public health programs 33,34,35,36,37,38,39. More recently, the search for a closer link between surveillance practices and responses to the problems detected by it raises a concern that appeared in various articles 40,41. In addition, proposals for health sector reform in developing countries treat surveillance and public health action as interdependent processes 42.

In Brazil, the debate in the 1990s revived the issue over the incorporation of intervention into the definition of surveillance and its scope, whether limited to prevention and damage control measures or expanded to include the control of risks and determinants, with actions to protect and promote health, as well as those involving individual attention 23.

Waldman 19 made a clear distinction between surveillance and control instruments, even considering that at the local level these attributions could be exercised by the same professional or group of professionals. For Silva Júnior 20, the dilemma between information for action and information and action does not exist, and this is not the relevant point of the debate. In his understanding, the actual practice of surveillance in Brazil has occurred with the inclusion of control activities and one should thus not seek to compare these practices with standards from other contexts or historical periods. To distinguish surveillance from other public health practices, Silva Júnior returns to the following elements: a continuously performed activity; a focus on obtaining specific results; use of data directly related to public health practices; and the utilitarian sense of achieving disease control.

As a public health practice, the objective of health surveillance is the systematic description of patterns in the occurrence of diseases and health-related events to guide the planning, execution, and evaluation of the necessary interventions for their control or prevention. Surveillance of communicable diseases involves the search to identify cases in order to avoid spread of diseases, while in the cases of non-communicable diseases and injuries the goal is to monitor the behavior of their prevalence and risk factors, seeking to recommend health promotion measures 43. Public health surveillance also contributes to the study of the natural history of diseases and the epidemiology of health-related events 4.

One point that deserves comment and that can help clarify the concepts discussed in the current article is the use of the terms "surveillance" and "monitoring". Since the two concepts have routine, systematic data recording in common, surveillance and monitoring are frequently used as synonyms in both the Brazilian and international literature 4,44. The difference between surveillance and monitoring lies in the fact that the former, by definition, deals with health-related events in populations 4, while monitoring is the process of analyzing and accompanying changes resulting from a given intervention or action 4,44. However, in Brazil it is also common to use monitoring to refer to the follow-up of health-related, demographic, economic, social, and environmental quality indicators and to analyze the prevailing health situation 45. Currently, monitoring as the systematic follow-up of indicators has come to be viewed as a public health surveillance tool, principally for the surveillance of non-communicable diseases and injuries and environmental surveillance, with the purpose of analyzing spatial/temporal changes in the selected indicators.

The objects and work resources of surveillance practices

In the selected articles, the events considered under surveillance were: communicable diseases 46,47, non-communicable diseases 48,49, birth defects 50,51, violence 52, and a wide variety of environmental risks 53,54,55,56,57. Recent years have witnessed an effort by WHO, PAHO, national governments (including Brazil), and non-governmental organizations in the search to establish and development surveillance capability for chronic non-communicable diseases, and many countries have already designed systems for the surveillance of chronic disease risk factors 58. Emerging and reemerging diseases and the risk of use of biological weapons for terrorist acts has stimulated the production of articles focused on improving surveillance of acute infectious diseases and early detection of outbreaks 59,60,61. Other objects have also been proposed, including drug prescription and syndromic surveillance 62.

Meanwhile, authors that analyze health surveillance from the perspective of technological organization of health work have focused on the control of causes and risks; linked to a project for health sector reform, they identify their object as selected health problems for continuous management in a given territory 63,64. According to this concept, to take final health problems as the object of practices would mean considering their spatial distribution, in addition to the relations between the ways of life of distinct population groups and the diverse expressions of the health-disease process 26,65.

The different concepts of surveillance can also be differentiated on the basis of an analysis of the means used to achieve the expected objectives and purposes.

Health surveillance understood as a technological mode of organizing health practices requires the use of epidemiological knowledge as an immaterial technology for the organization of work processes and health services and systems, viewing it as a fundamental tool for health planning and management 65. The grasp of health problems' collective dimension based on epidemiology, according to those who work with this approach, contributes to shaping practices (health promotion and protection; prevention of risks and injuries; collective and individual care) that are appropriate for the population's health needs and problems. In addition to epidemiology and clinical medicine, the social sciences and critical geography have been highlighted as important resources for explaining the emergence of health problems, and urban planning and strategic administration are used to organize interventions to deal with them.

Meanwhile, health surveillance as a public health practice can be considered one of the possible uses of epidemiology in health services 19,20,66. By analyzing health-related events in populations, health surveillance necessarily draws on epidemiology, statistics 67, demography, and information systems 68 as essential tools. In Brazil, when interventions are included as part of public health surveillance, various medical and health technologies become part of the work resources.

Various authors have discussed the limits set by available scientific and technological knowledge on possibilities for intervention in the real world 69 or for structuring health promotion practices 70. Such reflections should be considered when analyzing the roles played by epidemiological knowledge (as well as by strategic planning techniques) in shaping local health system practices. Another key point is the relationship between technological knowledge and practical knowledge 71 in health services' daily routine.

Organizational modes in surveillance practices

The material conditions in each country establish the limits and possibilities between regulation exercised at the system's central level and the degree of local autonomy and responsibility and thus condition the space for shaping surveillance practices.

In the United States, the Federal government's role in setting standards for surveillance systems has only been strengthened recently 72,73. This form of organization expresses respect for the autonomy of states and counties and the resulting low normative and coordinating capacity of the U.S. Federal administration 20.

Brazil's long history of centralized power at the Federal level is reflected in the health field. Historically, the Federal administration assumes the role of coordinating and standardizing national surveillance systems 20,74,75. In the process of decentralization and establishment of the national health surveillance system, the model adopted in Brazil sets limits on state autonomy, and the municipalities (counties) are basically responsible for implementing the actions. Silva Júnior provides a summary of this recent history 20.

Some municipalities have adopted a format where they use the same structure (personnel, equipment, information system) to conduct surveillance and respond to various health problems. In a sense, there appears to be an organization based on two subsystems, as reported by Waldman 19: the "subsystem of information to implement quick and timely control measures", situated in the local health systems, and the "subsystem of epidemiological intelligence", situated at the national level, the objectives of which are the elaboration of the technical basis for control programs and the identification of gaps in scientific and technological knowledge. Still, contrary to Waldman, there appears not to be a connection between the surveillance subsystems and the planning and program areas for the elaboration of standards and norms for local use.

However, according to the concept that treats health surveillance as a proposal for reorienting health practices at the local level, the authors contend that thinking and acting to deal with health problems are local management's responsibility 26,65. This highlights the need to establish government capability, based on training local teams in epidemiology and planning in order to conduct more adequate health situation analyses, with the identification and explanation of problems and decision-making to adopt the appropriate measures. In this approach, interventions in both health-sector problems and those that require inter-sector collaboration are thus organized as operations. Another key point is that health surveillance, by expanding the object of its work, proposes new protagonists, with new ideologies, concepts, and values - not only health professionals and workers, but also those from other sectors of government plus involvement by the organized population 76. However, empirical studies in municipal health systems have not identified health surveillance as a technological mode of organization for practices, despite the incorporation of this model's proposal in official documents 28,77.

Surveillance practices at the local level: a proposal for systematization of possible technological arrangements as a tool for evaluative studies

Based on the above review, the authors elaborated a matrix of ideal types of technological arrangements for the organization of surveillance practices in municipal health systems. The levels, dimensions, and criteria were selected as the basis for defining patterns, with the characterization of three ideal types (Table 1):

  • Health surveillance: a technological mode for reorganization of health practices at the local level

"Health surveillance" can be understood as a given technological organization of health work, a technological mode 65 characterized by health practices whose object is health problems selected for continuous management, linking a set of actions 63,64. As a health promotion strategy, it points to the improvement of living and health conditions for population groups in a given territory.

The above-mentioned model 65 proposes linkage between technologies from epidemiological knowledge and planning for the selection of problems to be managed continuously in the territory, and distinguishes various levels of action (causes, risk, and harm) for dealing with them. The perspective is to shift the emphasis from harm to risks and causes, seeking to overcome the dichotomy between so-called "collective" and "individual" health practices, in addition to proposing inter-sector actions as an instrument for linking public policies. According to this concept, public health surveillance and sanitary surveillance, like other medical and health practices, are technologies to be used in accordance with the given problem.

  • Public health surveillance: municipal component in the national health surveillance system

The ideal type "public health surveillance" was based on the definition proposed by Silva Júnior 20, incorporating into the content of surveillance both the collection, consolidation, analysis, interpretation, and dissemination of data and information, plus the implementation of prevention and control measures and recommendation of health promotion actions. As the above-mentioned author contends, although this was not the model adopted in other countries, it was the basis for the historical development of these practices in Brazil.

Based on this definition, the authors elaborated their matrix of ideal types based on the components established under the government's Ruling 1.172 of June 15, 2004 75, specifying the various competencies and jurisdictions under the National Health Surveillance System: (i) surveillance of communicable diseases; (ii) surveillance of non-communicable diseases and injuries and their risk factors; (iii) environmental health surveillance; and (iv) health situation surveillance. In relation to attributions, the Federal government was responsible for coordinating surveillance of communicable diseases and environmental surveillance, in addition to conducting activities in the surveillance of non-communicable diseases and injuries and their risk factors, principally by conducting national surveys, in addition to surveillance of the general health situation nationwide. The state health departments were in charge of coordinating the state component and complementing or supplementing action in cases where the municipal health departments failed to act. Finally, the municipalities were in charge of coordinating the municipal component and implementing the respective measures within their territories.

As explained by Waldman 12 and Silva Júnior 20, since the central focus of sanitary surveillance involves activities in regulation, control, and inspection of production, distribution, and consumption of products and services that entail potential harm to health, rather than the surveillance of health-related events per se, they were not considered part of public health surveillance.

  • Traditional epidemiological surveillance: non-surveillance and the major challenge of daily practice

The ideal type referred to as "traditional epidemiological surveillance" corresponds to surveillance practices identified in the daily routine of health services, historically set apart from the conceptual debate: reporting, investigation, data consolidation, and the adoption of prevention and control measures for communicable diseases 78,79.

Based on the way surveillance was incorporated in Brazil, without clearly demarcating the scope of surveillance and control activities, the teams in charge accumulated (and were absorbed by) the coordination and execution of activities in the programs for the control of communicable diseases. According to Waldman 45, this turned surveillance systems into one more bureaucratic routine, or a mere information system, rather than acting as technical support tools for health services.

Final remarks

The various terms and concepts found in the literature converge into three main approaches to the theme: (i) epidemiological surveillance of communicable diseases; (ii) public health surveillance; and (iii) health surveillance. The first is situated in the bureaucratic field, in the sense ascribed by Bourdieu 80 to institutions and agents linked to the state, and relates to the historical constitution of the public health component focused on the control of epidemics, with infectious diseases and their control as its object. The second corresponds to a modernizing watershed that expanded its object, as a technology employed in public health/collective health to support decision-making on measures for the prevention and control of health-related events (risks and harm), or to recommend health promotion measures. The third relates to social medicine and studies on the social determinants of disease (with its Brazilian watershed informing the Health Reform movement), representing a technological mode of organization for health practices in a given territory, incorporating a set of actions for dealing with selected problems, including the control of socio-environmental determinants through public policies linked by inter-sector action.

The three ideal types systematized here do not exist in a pure state, but can be used to evaluate and characterize the type of organization of surveillance practices in actual, real-life situations. A validation drawing on expert consensus techniques (of the Delphi or similar type) could expand the possibilities for using the matrix developed here in empirical studies on the implementation of surveillance practices, thereby helping orient data collection and the comparison of the observed empirical types, with a view towards either establishing common ground among the various formulations or identifying singularities.

Case studies could also help identify the potentialities and obstacles involved in shaping technological arrangements for surveillance that could contribute to disease prevention and control and could be useful for health promotion.

Contributors

G. A. P. Silva participated in the theoretical design of the research project and the data collection, analysis, and interpretation, and wrote the article. L. M. Vieira-da-Silva oriented the work, contributed to the theoretical and methodological design, discussion, and interpretation of the results, and reviewed the manuscript.

Submitted on 28/Jun/2007

Final version resubmitted on 30/Oct/2007

Approved on 23/Nov/2007

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  • Correspondence:
    G. A. P. Silva
    Instituto de Saúde Coletiva
    Universidade Federal da Bahia
    Rua Emílio Odebrecht 626, apto. 801A, Salvador
    BA 41830-300, Brasil
  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      06 Nov 2008
    • Date of issue
      Nov 2008

    History

    • Accepted
      23 Nov 2007
    • Reviewed
      30 Oct 2007
    • Received
      28 June 2007
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