A multi-function public health surveillance system and the lessons learned in its development: the Alberta Real Time Syndromic Surveillance Net.
Author(s) -
Shihe Fan,
Corinne Blair,
Angela Brown,
Stephan Gabos,
Lance Honish,
Trina Hughes,
Joy Jaipaul,
Marcia Johnson,
Eric Lo,
Anna Lubchenko,
Laura Mashinter,
David P Meurer,
Vanessa Nardelli,
Gerry Predy,
Liz Shewchuk,
Daniel Sosin,
Bryan Wicentowich,
James Talbot
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
canadian journal of public health = revue canadienne de sante publique
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.64
H-Index - 72
ISSN - 0008-4263
DOI - 10.17269/cjph.101.2236
We describe a centralized automated multi-function detection and reporting system for public health surveillance--the Alberta Real Time Syndromic Surveillance Net (ARTSSN). This improves upon traditional paper-based systems which are often fragmented, limited by incomplete data collection and inadequate analytical capacity, and incapable of providing timely information for public health action.ARTSSN concurrently analyzes multiple electronic data sources in real time to describe results in tables, charts and maps. Detected anomalies are immediately disseminated via alerts to decision-makers for action.ARTSSN provides richly integrated information on a variety of health conditions for early detection of and prompt action on abnormal events such as clusters, outbreaks and trends. Examples of such health conditions include chronic and communicable disease, injury and environment-mediated adverse incidents.Key advantages of ARTSSN over traditional paper-based methods are its timeliness, comprehensiveness and automation. Public health surveillance of communicable disease, injury, environmental hazard exposure and chronic disease now occurs in a single system in real time year round. Examples are given to demonstrate the public health value of this system, particularly during Pandemic (H1N1) 2009.
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