The Medical journal of Australia
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To ascertain whether changing from enhanced to routine surveillance had any deleterious impact on notification rates of acute rheumatic fever (ARF) among Indigenous people in north Queensland; and to determine whether initiatives to raise awareness about ARF among medical practitioners during the routine surveillance period were associated with any changes in the numbers of recurrences of the disease among Indigenous people in the region. ⋯ Changing from enhanced to routine surveillance in 2004 did not have a negative impact on notifications of ARF. The initiatives to raise awareness about ARF probably contributed to fewer missed cases and therefore to the considerable increase in the number of notifications, and ultimately to fewer recurrences.