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Syndromic Surveillance
- 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.
- Subjects :
- Microbiology (medical)
medicine.medical_specialty
Hemorrhagic Fevers, Viral
Letter
bioterrorism
infectious disease
Population
Surveillance Methods
lcsh:Medicine
syndromic
Disease
Rapid detection
Article
lcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseases
Disease Outbreaks
Health services
medicine
Humans
lcsh:RC109-216
education
Letters to the Editor
Tularemia
SARS
education.field_of_study
Plague
Viral Epidemiology
business.industry
Public health
lcsh:R
anthrax
Botulism
Syndrome
medicine.disease
Virology
United States
Hemorrhagic Fevers
smallpox
Infectious Diseases
Population Surveillance
Perspective
surveillance
epidemiology
Medical emergency
Seasons
business
West Nile virus
hospital emergency department
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 10806040
- Volume :
- 9
- Issue :
- 10
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Emerging infectious diseases
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....16537e820af2718f65df9889bdd1d85f