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Syndromic Surveillance

Authors :
Zygmunt F. Dembek
James W. Buehler
Dennis G. Cochrane
Ruth L. Berkelman
Julie A. Pavlin
David M. Hartley
Clarence J. Peters
Source :
Emerging Infectious Diseases, Emerging Infectious Diseases, Vol 9, Iss 10, Pp 1197-1204 (2003), Emerging Infectious Diseases, Vol 10, Iss 7, Pp 1333-1335 (2004)
Publication Year :
2003

Abstract

To facilitate rapid detection of a future bioterrorist attack, an increasing number of public health departments are investing in new surveillance systems that target the early manifestations of bioterrorism-related disease. Whether this approach is likely to detect an epidemic sooner than reporting by alert clinicians remains unknown. The detection of a bioterrorism-related epidemic will depend on population characteristics, availability and use of health services, the nature of an attack, epidemiologic features of individual diseases, surveillance methods, and the capacity of health departments to respond to alerts. Predicting how these factors will combine in a bioterrorism attack may be impossible. Nevertheless, understanding their likely effect on epidemic detection should help define the usefulness of syndromic surveillance and identify approaches to increasing the likelihood that clinicians recognize and report an epidemic.

Details

ISSN :
10806040
Volume :
9
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Emerging infectious diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....16537e820af2718f65df9889bdd1d85f