Infectious Disease Informatics

£149.50

Infectious Disease Informatics

Syndromic Surveillance for Public Health and Bio-Defense

E-commerce: business aspects Business mathematics and systems Public health and preventive medicine Epidemiology and Medical statistics Business applications Network hardware Computer applications in the social and behavioural sciences Computer applications in industry and technology

Authors: Hsinchun Chen, Daniel Zeng, Ping Yan

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Collection: Integrated Series in Information Systems

Language: English

Published by: Springer

Published on: 12th March 2010

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 49 Mb

ISBN: 9781441912787


Computer-based infectious disease surveillance systems

Computer-based infectious disease surveillance systems are capable of real-time or near real-time detection of serious illnesses and potential bioterrorism agent exposures and represent a major step forward in disease surveillance. Infectious Disease Informatics: Syndromic Surveillance for Public Health and Bio-Defense is an in-depth monograph that analyzes and evaluates the outbreak modeling and detection capabilities of existing surveillance systems under a unified framework, and presents the first book-length coverage of the subject from an informatics-driven perspective.

Individual chapters consider the state of the art, including the facilitation of data collection, sharing and transmission; a focus on various outbreak detection methods; data visualization and information dissemination issues; and system assessment and other policy issues. Eight chapters then report on several real-world case studies, summarizing and comparing eight syndromic surveillance systems, including those that have been adopted by many public health agencies (e.g., RODS and BioSense). The book concludes with a discussion of critical issues and challenges, with a look to future directions.

This book is an excellent source of current information for researchers in public health and IT. Government public health officials and private-sector practitioners in both public health and IT will find the most up-to-date information available, and students from a variety of disciplines, including public health, biostatistics, information systems, computer science, and public administration and policy will get a comprehensive look at the concepts, techniques, and practices of syndromic surveillance.

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