Displaying results 9 - 12 of 12
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Using NC DETECT for Comprehensive Morbidity Surveillance on Poisoning and Overdose
Content Type: Abstract
A retrospective analysis of emergency department data in NC for drug and opioid overdoses has been explained previously [1]. We built on this initial work to develop new poisoning and surveillance reports to facilitate near real time surveillance by… read more… NC DETECT data are near real time and over 75% of ED visits receive at least one ICD-9-CM final diagnosis code … NC DETECT data are near real time and over 75% of ED visits receive at least one ICD-9-CM final diagnosis code … -
Identifying Emerging Novel Outbreaks In Textual Emergency Department Data
Content Type: Abstract
Typical approaches to monitoring ED data classify cases into pre-defined syndromes and then monitor syndrome counts for anomalies. However, syndromes cannot be created to identify every possible cluster of cases of relevance to public health. To… read more… The NC DPH dataset describes 198,511 de-identified ED visits over one year at 3 North Carolina hospitals. The data … The NC DPH dataset describes 198,511 de-identified ED visits over one year at 3 North Carolina hospitals. The data … -
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. … -
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 *Amy Ising E-mail: ising@ad.unc.edu (page number not for citation …

