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Creating a fast and flexible syndromic surveillance reporting system

Description

Syndromic surveillance systems significantly enhance the ability of Public Health Units to identify, quantify, and respond to disease outbreaks. Existing systems provide excellent classification, identification, and alerting functions, but are limited in the range of statistical and mapping analyses that can be done. Currently available commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) statistical and GIS packages provide a much broader range of analytical and visualization tools, as well as the capacity for automation through user-friendly scripting languages. This study retrospectively evaluates the use of these packages for surveillance using syndromic data collected in Ottawa during the 2009 pH1NI outbreak.

 

Objective

The objective of this study was to create and evaluate a system that uses customized scripts developed for COTS statistical and GIS software to (1) analyze syndromic data and produce regular reports to public health epidemiologists, containing the information they would need to detect and manage an ILI outbreak, and (2) facilitate the generation more detailed analyses relevant to specific situations using these data.

Submitted by hparton on