Communicable Diseases Surveillance - Highlights

This report published in Communicable Diseases Intelligence Volume 23, No 3, 18 March 1999 contains an analysis of notifiable diseases of interest.

Page last updated: 21 April 1999

A print friendly PDF version is available from this Communicable Diseases Intelligence issue's table of contents.


Communicable Diseases Surveillance consists of data from various sources. The National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System (NNDSS) is conducted under the auspices of the Communicable Diseases Network Australia New Zealand. The Virology and Serology Laboratory Reporting Scheme (LabVISE) is a sentinel surveillance scheme. The Australian Sentinel Practice Research Network (ASPREN) is a general practitioner-based sentinel surveillance scheme. In this report, data from the NNDSS are referred to as 'notifications' or 'cases', whereas those from ASPREN are referred to as 'consultations' or 'encounters' while data from the LabVISE scheme are referred to as 'laboratory reports'.

Vaccine preventable diseases

Pertussis notifications remain low when compared with the peak in late 1997 and early 1998. The disease however has not disappeared and continues to be reported at a magnitude which is approximately that of the endemic years of 1995 and 1996 (Figure 1).

Figure 1. Notifications of pertussis, Australia, 1992 to 1999, by month of onset

Figure 1. Notifications of pertussis, Australia, 1992 to 1999, by month of onset

Although measles notifications for the country as a whole remain at a low level, an outbreak in Victoria in young adults is causing concern and is described elsewhere in this issue of CDI. Top of page

Arboviruses

A higher number of notifications has been received for Ross River Virus infection for this reporting period than for the same period of last year. The relative number of notifications appears lower than historical data (Figure 2) because of the very high numbers reported for this period of 1996 and 1997.

Figure 2. Selected National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System reports, and historical data1

Figure 2. Selected National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System reports, and historical data

1. The historical data are the averages of the number of notifications in the corresponding 4 week periods of the last 3 years and the 2 week periods immediately preceding and following those.


Gastrointestinal diseases

Numbers of infections from Salmonella and Campylobacter continue at a high level. Campylobacteriosis regularly has the highest number of incident cases reported across Australia for any communicable disease, and that is without any reports from the most populous state, New South Wales.

Salmonellosis notifications show a marked seasonal pattern, with a peak in the warmer months of each year (Figure 3). A similar seasonal pattern is present, although less marked, for campylobacteriosis (Figure 4). Even in the low season, a large number of notifications is received for each condition.

Figure 3. Notifications of salmonella, Australia, 1991 to 1999, by month of onset

Figure 3. Notifications of salmonella, Australia, 1991 to 1999, by month of onset

Figure 4. Notifications of campylobacter, Australia, 1991 to 1999, month of onset

Figure 4. Notifications of campylobacter, Australia, 1991 to 1999, month of onset


This article was published in Communicable Diseases Intelligence Volume 23, No 3, 18 March 1999.

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This issue - Vol 23, No 3, 18 March 1999