Displaying results 1 - 5 of 5
-
Administrative and syndromic surveillance data can enhance public health surveillance
Content Type: Abstract
Healthcare data, including emergency department (ED) and outpatient health visit data, are potentially useful to the public health community for multiple purposes, including programmatic and surveillance activities. These data are collected through… read more -
Update on the CDC National Syndromic Surveillance Program
Content Type: Abstract
The Public Health Security and Bioterrorism Preparedness and Response Act of 2002 mandated establishing an integrated national public health surveillance system for early detection and rapid assessment of potential bioterrorism-related illness. In… read more -
Overcoming Operational Differences to Attain a National Picture for Novel Threats
Content Type: Abstract
The May arrival of two cases of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) in the US offered CDC’s BioSense SyS Program an opportunity to give CDC’s Emergency Operations Center (EOC) and state-and-local jurisdictions an enhanced national picture of… read more -
Tractable Use Cases for Collaboration in Public Health Surveillance
Content Type: Abstract
The mission of the ISDS TCC is to bridge the gap between the analytic needs of public health practitioners and the expertise of researchers from other fields for the enhancement of disease surveillance, including situational awareness of chronic as… read more -
Use of Syndromic Data for Enhanced Surveillance: MERS Like-Syndrome
Content Type: Abstract
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) BioSense system receives near real-time health care utilization data from number of sources, including DoD and VA outpatient facilities, and nonfederal hospital EDs in the US to support all-hazards… read more