Disease Surveillance and Epidemiology Section
This page provides information about Disease Surveillance and Epidemiology Section .
Disease Surveillance and Epidemiology Section
This page provides information about Disease Surveillance and Epidemiology Section .
Disease Surveillance and Epidemiology Section
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(Formerly the Infectious Disease Prevention Section)
Overview
Disease Surveillance and Epidemiology is responsible for assisting local or regional public health officials in investigating outbreaks of acute infectious disease or any report of isolated cases or rare or unusual disease, such as plague, cholera, or botulism. The program conducts routine and special morbidity surveillance of diseases designated as reportable.
The section is composed of the Emerging & Acute Infectious Disease Unit (EAIDU), the Healthcare Safety Unit and the Zoonosis Control Branch (ZCB).
Disease Surveillance
The purpose of surveillance is to try to detect where disease organisms, such as bacteria and viruses, might be located in Texas in order to predict and prevent human illness. Two main types of surveillance activities are conducted.
Most disease surveillance in Texas is passive surveillance. This process relies on confirmed case reports from physicians, veterinarians, laboratories, and others. The Texas Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory is one of the key sources of surveillance information for animal disease.
Active surveillance is a process whereby state or local agencies actually look for evidence of disease risk. For example, when trying to find if a certain virus carried by mosquitoes is in Texas, mosquitoes are collected and sent to the lab for testing. If a mosquito is positive, it means that the virus was found during testing. If a mosquito is negative, it means that the virus was not found during testing. Similar surveillance is conducted on other insects and samples from animals for a variety of diseases.
The amount of testing in the surveillance process will vary for different counties statewide. If a report indicates that an area does not have any positive test results for a particular disease, it does not necessarily mean that the disease organisms are not in that area. It just reflects that no positive tests on collected insects or other samples have been reported from that area.
What We Do
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Learn how to reduce your risk of respiratory viruses and illnesses such as COVID-19, Influenza (Flu) and Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV), especially in the fall and winter.
We promote the appropriate use of antimicrobials (including antibiotics), improve patient outcomes, reduce microbial resistance, and decrease the spread of infections caused by multidrug-resistant organisms.
We provide information about diseases and conditions that may affect Texans. Access data, resources, and information to help keep Texans safe, healthy, and informed.
Investigation Guidance & Manuals
Health Advisories:
- Cyclospora - 2024
- Avian Influenza (from Dairy Cattle) - 2024
- Measles - 2023
- Fungal Meningitis - 2023
- Mpox - 2023
- Norovirus - 2022
- Monkeypox - 2022
- Cyclosporiasis - 2022
- Cronobacter - 2022
- Cyclospora - 2021
- Candida auris - 2021
- Cyclosporiasis - 2020
- Measles - 2019
- Mumps - 2019
- Infant Botulism - 2018
- Acute Flaccid Myelitis -2018
- Ebola - 2018
- HIV - 2017
Related Links
Get in Touch
Mailing Address
Disease Surveillance and Epidemiology Section
Mail Code: 3082
P.O. Box 149347
Austin , TX 78714-9347
United States
Physical Address
Disease Surveillance and Epidemiology Section
Moreton Building, Suite M-631
1100 West 49th Street
Austin , TX 78756-3199
United States