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Clinical Tools

Description

Medically unexplained syndromes (MUS) are conditions that are diagnosed on the basis of symptom constellations and are characterized by a lack of well-defined pathogenic pathways. The three most common MUS are chronic fatigue syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, and fibromyalgia. Different types of persistent symptoms, originating from different organ systems, characterize these syndromes. Patients often meet the criteria for more than one MUS.

 

Objectives

We sought to develop a guideline and annotation schema that can be consistently applied to identify MUS found in VA clinical documents. These efforts will support building a reference standard used for training and evaluation of a Natural Language Processing system developed for automated symptom extraction. Our overarching goal is to characterize the occurrence of MUS in Operation Enduring Freedom/Operation Iraqi Freedom veterans.

Submitted by hparton on
Description

Little was known about the maternal and fetal/infant effects of Zika infection before the 2015 outbreak in the Americas, which made it challenging for public health practitioners and clinicians to care for pregnant women and infants exposed to Zika. In 2016, CDC implemented a rapid surveillance system, the US Zika Pregnancy and Infant Registry, to collect information about the impact of Zika infection during pregnancy and inform the CDC response and clinical guidance. In partnership with state, tribal, local, and territorial health departments, CDC disseminated information from this surveillance system, which served as the foundation for educational materials and clinical tools for healthcare providers.

Objective: To describe how Zika virus (Zika) surveillance data informs and improves testing guidance, clinical evaluation and management of pregnant women and infants with possible Zika infection

Submitted by elamb on