POSITIVE BALANCE OF USERS OF THE NEW NATIONAL SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM EPIDEMIOLOGICAL HEALTH
90% of users of SNVS2.0 rated as very satisfactory experience with the new
platform. The integrated system was inaugurated in 2018 with the aim of
unifying disease reporting and improve the effectiveness of surveillance.
Friday 03 May 2019. One year after the launch of the new National Health
Surveillance System (SNVS) 2.0 Government Department of Health to simplify
the task of disease reporting and improve and enhance the effectiveness of
epidemiological surveillance, 90% of users rated as very satisfactory
experience with the new platform. In addition 98% of users -Personal
provincial clinical surveillance equipment and laboratories 24
jurisdicciones- who were trained in the new system considered that will
improve the availability of information for prevention and control. "This
system allows us to ensure data security and monitoring of cases over time,
improving alertness levels for better health care," said the undersecretary
of Prevention and Control of Communicable Diseases and vaccine Miriam
Burgos, referring to this tool that provides relevant information for
decision-making. The SNVS2.0 is a system that unifies and articulates the
previous -SNVS-C2 modules, SIVILA and sentry units, on a single platform
gathering epidemiological data collaboratively provide various health
actors local, provincial and national levels both public sector, and
private and social security. To access the loading and data query, all
users must perform one of three training courses that the Government
Department of Health ordered through the virtual campus of the Pan American
Health Organization (PAHO) https: / / cursospaises.campusvirtualsp.org/.
When they studied and approved the 4288 training enabling users and more
than 2000 are completing the course. Since the implementation of this
platform nominal 136,029 cases, which allowed research, control or
monitoring, 4,755,014 and 6,236,005 notifications clinical laboratory
determinations, information provided by more than 5,000 health facilities
enabled so far recorded. The health surveillance is an essential function
of public health which involves the collection, analysis and systematic
interpretation of information about the process health-disease-care and
serves both for early warning of events requiring public health
interventions to recognize the trend of diseases or events in the
population. This task is part of Law No. 15,465, which regulates Notifiable
Events (eNOS). SNVS2.0 update priority was to strengthen epidemiological
surveillance and contribute to improved quality of care, uniting in a
single instrument technology and accessible from any effector health
system, clinical, epidemiological and laboratory backgrounds cases of
notifiable events. The SNVS 2.0 was launched in 24 jurisdictions in order
to meet the objectives of surveillance and establish itself as a key tool
for the health system in order to improve the health conditions of the
population living or transiting through Argentine territory. More
information: https: / / www.argentina.gob.ar/ health / epidemiology
platform. The integrated system was inaugurated in 2018 with the aim of
unifying disease reporting and improve the effectiveness of surveillance.
Friday 03 May 2019. One year after the launch of the new National Health
Surveillance System (SNVS) 2.0 Government Department of Health to simplify
the task of disease reporting and improve and enhance the effectiveness of
epidemiological surveillance, 90% of users rated as very satisfactory
experience with the new platform. In addition 98% of users -Personal
provincial clinical surveillance equipment and laboratories 24
jurisdicciones- who were trained in the new system considered that will
improve the availability of information for prevention and control. "This
system allows us to ensure data security and monitoring of cases over time,
improving alertness levels for better health care," said the undersecretary
of Prevention and Control of Communicable Diseases and vaccine Miriam
Burgos, referring to this tool that provides relevant information for
decision-making. The SNVS2.0 is a system that unifies and articulates the
previous -SNVS-C2 modules, SIVILA and sentry units, on a single platform
gathering epidemiological data collaboratively provide various health
actors local, provincial and national levels both public sector, and
private and social security. To access the loading and data query, all
users must perform one of three training courses that the Government
Department of Health ordered through the virtual campus of the Pan American
Health Organization (PAHO) https: / / cursospaises.campusvirtualsp.org/.
When they studied and approved the 4288 training enabling users and more
than 2000 are completing the course. Since the implementation of this
platform nominal 136,029 cases, which allowed research, control or
monitoring, 4,755,014 and 6,236,005 notifications clinical laboratory
determinations, information provided by more than 5,000 health facilities
enabled so far recorded. The health surveillance is an essential function
of public health which involves the collection, analysis and systematic
interpretation of information about the process health-disease-care and
serves both for early warning of events requiring public health
interventions to recognize the trend of diseases or events in the
population. This task is part of Law No. 15,465, which regulates Notifiable
Events (eNOS). SNVS2.0 update priority was to strengthen epidemiological
surveillance and contribute to improved quality of care, uniting in a
single instrument technology and accessible from any effector health
system, clinical, epidemiological and laboratory backgrounds cases of
notifiable events. The SNVS 2.0 was launched in 24 jurisdictions in order
to meet the objectives of surveillance and establish itself as a key tool
for the health system in order to improve the health conditions of the
population living or transiting through Argentine territory. More
information: https: / / www.argentina.gob.ar/ health / epidemiology