< %=imgalt%>
Lung Cancer ~ Lung Cancer ~ Breast Cancer ~ Heart attack
Home / Health News / 2008 / July 2008 / July 8, 2008
Internet may help track infectious disease outbreaks
Harvard Medical School

No link between newborn thyroid function, cognitive development

Spermicide Coke, fertile strippers scoop Ig Nobel Awards!

Media fail to report potential sources of bias in medical stories

Daily use of talcum powder raises cancer risk in women

More on Harvard Medical School

Top News

Praja Rajyam Party tour programme announced

BSF-Pakistan rangers meet in Lahore to combat rise in militant activities

McCain saw White House from a cell in Hanoi

Everything you ever wanted to know about sex but were afraid to ask

Sify Technologies wins brandon hall excellence in learning award for third consecutive year

Tendulkar, Team India to bat for children health and safety on Oct. 15

Worlds tiniest walking robot unveiled in Japan

Momail and JAJAH Introduce Innovative Calling Option

Internet may help track infectious disease outbreaks

Internet discussion forums, listservs, and online news outlets could be an informative source of information on disease outbreaks, according to researchers from Childrens Hospital Boston and Harvard Medical School.

Washington, July 8 : Internet discussion forums, listservs, and online news outlets could be an informative source of information on disease outbreaks, according to researchers from Children's Hospital Boston and Harvard Medical School.

And they have even launched a real-time, automated data-gathering system called HealthMap to gather, organize and disseminate this online intelligence.

"Web-based electronic information sources can play an important role in early event detection and support situational awareness by providing current, highly local information about outbreaks, even from areas relatively invisible to traditional global public health efforts," said John Brownstein and colleagues from the HealthMap project.

However, information overload and difficulties in distinguishing "signal from noise" pose substantial barriers to fully using this information.

To overcome these problems, the researchers have created the freely accessible HealthMap Project, which they describe as a 'multistream real-time surveillance platform that continually aggregates reports on new and ongoing infectious disease outbreaks.'

These reports are organized and disseminated in a variety of ways, including creating disease maps and 'situational awareness windows.'

Brownstein and colleagues said that ultimately, the use of news media and other non-traditional sources of surveillance data can 'facilitate early outbreak detection, increase public awareness of disease outbreaks prior to their formal recognition, and provide an integrated and contextualized view of global health information.

The study is published in this week's PLoS Medicine.

ANI

October 13, 2008

October 12, 2008

October 11, 2008

October 10, 2008

October 9, 2008

October 8, 2008