Qualitative review of digital surveillance challenges for dengue in western India
This qualitative review investigates the operational landscape of digital surveillance systems for dengue in two high-burden districts within western India. The authors conducted 57 semi-structured interviews to understand the barriers to effective data collection and reporting in this setting. The scope of the inquiry focuses on the informational challenges inherent to current surveillance mechanisms rather than testing a specific intervention or drug.
The analysis reveals that only 13% of total sanctioned Integrated Disease Surveillance Programme district public health laboratories are functional. Furthermore, four out of 30+ districts lack sentinel hospitals. The authors describe fragmented information flows and the separation of biomedical and social determinants as major hurdles. Field staff face community resistance, and there is a noted reliance on informal communication channels instead of digital tools.
Operational issues include the operation of dual and overlapping programmes, inconsistent laboratory protocols, and reporting pressures that prioritize procedural targets over data quality. The study acknowledges resource constraints as a primary limitation affecting the implementation of these systems. No adverse events or discontinuations were reported as this was not a clinical trial involving pharmacological agents.
The authors conclude that strengthening socio-technical interoperability and harmonizing outbreak criteria across programmes could enhance dengue early warning and response. Embedding socio-environmental determinants into routine surveillance is presented as a necessary step to address the identified gaps in the current infrastructure.