Surveillance

At a glance

To effectively contain current and emerging health threats, countries must have strong surveillance systems capable of monitoring infectious disease cases, strains, and outbreaks.

A woman in an African village smiling looking down at a phone.

What We Do

epidemiologists conducting a field investigation in a remote village, walking through narrow alleyways holding notepads
Epidemiologists conducting a field investigation in a remote village

At the Division of Global Health Protection, we collaborate with our partners to enhance and expand surveillance systems, using innovative approaches and technologies to detect emerging health threats before they begin, respond to disease outbreaks, and monitor them more effectively.

For example:

  • In Tanzania, our work to strengthen surveillance provided critical training for Community Health Workers stationed in Kagera who ultimately played a pivotal role in containing Tanzania's first outbreak of Marburg virus disease in March 2023.
  • In Vietnam, our experts are equipping local lab experts with skills and resources to harness genetic sequencing for surveillance, thus strengthening Vietnam's efforts to anticipate threats, take preemptive action, and prevent illness, hospitalizations, and deaths.
  • In Sierra Leone, our efforts to bolster surveillance systems after the 2014 Ebola outbreak increased the reach and effectiveness of the country's responses, leaving Sierra Leone better protected from not just Ebola, but any public health threat that can move across borders.

Impact

  • Since 1980, DGHP has actively trained disease detectives in surveillance methods across more than 80 countries.
  • Since 2007, CDC has tracked more than 200 unique diseases globally.

Resources

Learn more about CDC's surveillance efforts worldwide: