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Monitoring the Vital Signs of Community Health - The Pyramid Syndromic Surveillance Project

Description

Syndromic surveillance systems have long been an important part of the public health arena. The long standing goal of early detection of disease outbreak has gained new urgency and requires a broader spectrum in the era of potential bioterrorism. A number of programs have used syndromic surveillance to broadly monitor community health. Outpatient chief complaints as well as positive laboratory tests have been used to monitor the occurrence of natural diseases. 

Limitations of the systems currently attempted include overbroad syndromic categories, labor intensive syndrome recognition training and time intensive manual data entry. Optimal use of laboratory data has been impeded by some of the same issues as well as a too often narrow focus and significant limitations on real time reporting. Given the likelihood of blunt and/or penetrating trauma being a manifestation of terrorist activity, the continuous inclusion of common traumatic and medical emergency conditions is a valuable tool for surveillance.

 

Objective

This paper describes the use of a multiple collective community health care database to monitor the occurrence of natural and manmade illness and injuries.

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