"background": "Public health surveillance systems in low-resource settings are critical for monitoring disease burdens and clinical outcomes, yet their methodological evaluation often lacks robust statistical frameworks to account for complex, multi-level data structures and inherent uncertainties. ", "purpose and objectives": "This study aimed to develop and apply a novel Bayesian hierarchical modelling framework for the methodological evaluation of surveillance systems, specifically to measure and predict clinical outcomes from routinely collected health data. ", "methodology": "We constructed a Bayesian hierarchical model using district-level surveillance data. The core model structure is: y{it \ (nit, pit), (pit) = \ + \ Xit + ui + vt +, where ui and vt are structured spatial and temporal random effects. Model parameters were estimated using Hamiltonian Monte Carlo, with inferences based on 95% credible intervals. ", "findings": "The model identified significant spatial heterogeneity in clinical outcome reporting completeness, with a posterior probability exceeding 0. 95 that completeness varied by more than 30 percentage points between districts. The incorporation of spatial random effects improved predictive accuracy, reducing the Watanabe-Akaike information criterion by 15. 2 points compared to a non-hierarchical baseline. ", "conclusion": "The proposed Bayesian framework provides a statistically rigorous method for evaluating surveillance system performance, effectively quantifying uncertainty and revealing substantive geographical disparities in data quality. ", "recommendations": "National health authorities should adopt similar hierarchical modelling approaches for the routine methodological assessment of surveillance data to guide targeted system strengthening. Future research should integrate this framework with cost-effectiveness analyses. ", "key words": "Bayesian hierarchical model, public health surveillance, health informatics, spatial statistics, health systems research, clinical outcomes", "contribution statement": "This paper introduces a novel application of Bayesian hierarchical modelling for surveillance system evaluation, demonstrating its utility in quantifying spatial heterogeneity and uncertainty in clinical outcome data from a
Moses Kato (Sun,) studied this question.
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