Innovative technology and established partnerships—a recipe for rapid adaptability under emerging pandemic conditions
Shamir Mukhi, Melanie Laffin-Thibodeau, Tim Beattie

TL;DR
A Canadian public health partnership quickly adapted data tools to track how COVID-19 affects children and youth.
Contribution
Demonstrates how existing partnerships and agile technology can rapidly enhance pandemic surveillance capabilities.
Findings
CPSP began collecting weekly detailed case data on children and youth within a month of the pandemic declaration.
Enhanced data collection tools captured demographic, epidemiological, and clinical data for comprehensive surveillance.
The collaboration enabled a detailed study on risk factors for severe illness in children by May 2020.
Abstract
Aided by a collaborative partnership dating back to 2011, the Canadian Network for Public Health Intelligence (CNPHI) and the Canadian Paediatric Surveillance Program (CPSP) quickly undertook substantial enhancements to the CPSP’s data collection instruments on the CNPHI platform to characterize the impacts of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) on children and youth in Canada. Faced with an emerging public health threat with impacts yet unknown, the objective of the intervention was to rapidly complete enhancements to existing data collection and analytical tools to enable the CPSP’s ability to characterize the impacts of COVID-19 in Canadian children and youth. Reporting frequency from CPSP’s network of paediatric practitioners was increased from monthly to weekly, and the flexibility of detailed case data collection was substantially enhanced using complex survey instruments,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsData-Driven Disease Surveillance · Child and Adolescent Health · Public Health Policies and Education
