Displaying results 25 - 32 of 32
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Reverse Engineering of a Syndrome Definition for Influenza
Content Type: Abstract
We report here on the use of the North Carolina Bioterrorism and Emerging Infection Prevention System (NC BEIPS, www.ncbeips.org) to reverse engineer a syndrome definition of influenza for the purpose of influenza surveillance.… with a goal of increasing sensitivity. METHODS Patient visits from the 2003-2004 influenza season (9/28/03-3/27/04) … Ghneim, G., Sickbert-Bennett, E., Waller, A., Ising, A. & Mail- lard, J. North Carolina Bioterrorism and Emerging … -
Evolution of a Syndromic Surveillance Case Definition
Content Type: Abstract
In North Carolina, select hospital emergency departments have been submitting data since 2003 for use in syndromic surveillance. These data are collected, stored, and parsed into syndrome categories by the North Carolina… read more… zoster were not included. From the 813,536 ED visits in the database for the calendar year 2004, all visits with the ICD-9-CM code of 052.0-052.9 (CP) and all visits meeting the syndrome definition for FRI were … -
Triage Note in Emergency Department-Based Syndromic Surveillance
Content Type: Abstract
The North Carolina Bioterrorism and Emerging Infection Prevention System (NC BEIPS) receives daily emergency department (ED) data from 33 (29%) of the 114 EDs in North Carolina. These data are available via a Web-based portal and the Early… read more… syndrome queries. METHODS We selected a sample of 500 ED visits from the 2004 NC BEIPS data warehouse. Two hundred … categories based on clinical case definition. All visits were electronically processed for SS twice, once … syndrome designations generated false positives for some visits that did not meet the syndrome definitions according … -
Using NC DETECT Summary Reports to Share Syndromic Information
Content Type: Abstract
The North Carolina Disease Event Tracking and Epidemiologic Collection Tool (NC DETECT) provides early event detection and public health situational awareness to hospital-based and public health users statewide. Authorized users are currently able… read more… Word functionality was added. In July 2008, an informal email-based survey was sent to all PHEs and the NC Division … noted Of the four users who responded to the informal email survey (36%), all found the report to be useful. … -
Securing protected health information in NC DETECT
Content Type: Abstract
NC DETECT receives daily data files from emergency departments (ED), the statewide EMS data collection system, the statewide poison center, and veterinary laboratory test results. Included in these data are elements, which may contain Protected… read more… of Emergency Medicine, UNC, Chapel Hill, NC, USA E-mail: dfalls@med.unc.edu Objective This paper describes how … -
North Carolina Bioterrorism and Emerging Infection Prevention System
Content Type: Abstract
NC BEIPS is a system designed and developed by the NC Division of Public Health (DPH) for early detection of disease and bioterrorism outbreaks or events. It analyzes emergency department (ED) data on a daily basis from 33 (29%) EDs in North… read more… generated, providing a line listing of all the syndrome visits that contributed to the flag on that particular date. … -
Access to and use of syndromic surveillance information at the local health department level
Content Type: Abstract
Syndromic surveillance data have been widely shown to be useful to large health departments. Use at smaller local health departments (LHDs) has rarely been described, and the effectiveness of various methods of delivering syndromic… read more… of Epidemiology, UNC-CH, Chapel Hill, NC, USA E-mail: erika.samoff@unc.edu Objective To characterize use of … -
Improving syndromic surveillance for non-power users: NC DETECT dashboards
Content Type: Abstract
NC DETECT provides near-real-time statewide surveillance capacity to local, regional and state level users across NC with twice daily data feeds from 117 (99%) emergency departments (EDs), hourly updates from the statewide poison center, and daily… read more… J. 2011;4:s111. doi: 10.3134/ehtj.10.111. *Amy Ising E-mail: ising@ad.unc.edu (page number not for citation …

