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Towards Influenza Surveillance in Military Populations Using Novel and Traditional Sources
Author(s) -
Lauren Charles,
Alexander G Rittel,
Umashanthi Pavalanathan,
Courtney D. Corley
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
online journal of public health informatics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1947-2579
DOI - 10.5210/ojphi.v8i1.6468
Subject(s) - dashboard , disease surveillance , data science , outbreak , electronic surveillance , analytics , influenza a virus subtype h5n1 , military personnel , medical diagnosis , military health , social media , disease , computer science , medicine , operations research , computer security , virology , health care , geography , world wide web , engineering , pathology , virus , economic growth , economics , archaeology
U.S. military influenza surveillance utilizes electronic reporting of clinical diagnoses to monitor health of military personnel and detect naturally occurring and bioterrorism-related epidemics. While accurate, these systems lack in timeliness. More recently, researchers have used novel data sources to detect influenza in real-time and capture non-traditional populations. With data-mining techniques, military social media users are identified and influenza-related discourse is integrated along with medical data into a comprehensive disease model. By leveraging heterogeneous data streams and developing dashboard biosurveillance analytics, the researchers hope to increase the speed at which outbreaks are detected and provide accurate disease forecasting among military personnel.

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