E-health data collection key to tracking swine flu spread November 6, 2009
Posted by gonzalezloumiet in Pandemic Flu.Tags: CDC, H1N1, Orion, Texas, Biosense, NEDSS, Rhapsody
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As health agencies rush to analyze data, some companies prep for a pandemic
Lucas Mearian
April 29, 2009 (Computerworld) As the prospect of a flu pandemic grew more likely Wednesday — the World Health Organization raised its threat alert to Level 5 — data is pouring into federal health care agencies using systems that a decade ago did not even exist.
As of Wednesday afternoon, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) had reported 91 cases of swine flu in 10 states. One death in Texas — a 23-month-old child from Mexico — has been attributed to the flu, and health officials expect more deaths to follow.
The swiftness with which the influenza strain has spread — and the speed with which new electronic health surveillance systems have tracked its emergence — is prompting companies to quickly dust off business continuity plans and warn workers to guard their health.
"Businesses need to take this seriously and put plans in place for personnel," said Michael Croy, director of business continuity solutions at Forsythe Solutions Group Inc., an IT consulting firm in Skokie, Ill. "They need to make sure employees can work from home. They need to tell them about how to take care of their health and be overly cautious by telling workers to stay home if they feel sick. But they also need to do it in way so as not to create panic."
The best antidote for panic is information, and disease-surveillance systems rolled out in recent years are allowing health agencies to track, report and confirm swine flu cases faster than ever. But gaps in the system remain, health care experts said.
While today’s electronic reporting systems are vastly more sophisticated than the paper-based methods used as recently as 10 years ago, many community hospitals and private physicians are still not equipped to correlate all the data coming from health providers, insurance companies and laboratories.
"We’ve gone beyond the early detection," said Doug Hamaker, who manages the data collection for infectious reportable conditions at the Texas Department of State Health Services. "I don’t think there’s a local health department around that’s not aware of the swine flu and is not aware that it either is or could easily be occurring in their local area. What we’re transitioning over to now is the use of a case-surveillance system that says for those who have an influenza-like illness … is that the swine flu variant?"
For at least 100 years, the U.S. government has required states to report potential epidemics. That system was traditionally paper-based, and it could take days, if not weeks, for information to trickle up to the CDC in Atlanta and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), which coordinate health care and epidemic response on a national basis.
Accuracy in reporting remains a problem, because it depends on the sophistication of electronic systems used by local and state health agencies to quickly gather data for the federal government.
In the past few years, electronic tools have begun to transform the reporting system — reducing or eliminating the burden on doctors, nurses or medical laboratories to fill out reports on potential epidemics, according to Scott Danos, an independent consultant in Atlanta.
Danos, a former senior adviser at the CDC who retired after more than 30 years with the agency, said the basic challenge in tracking epidemics has been that patient diagnosis and treatment data comes in many forms to the local and state health agencies, which in turn must hand it off to the CDC and HHS. Those agencies have to analyze the data and then send back information to the states.
About four years ago, the CDC launched a national program called BioSense, which gave state health agencies an application that can transmit and receive epidemic data with federal agencies in near real time. The data, which comes from larger hospitals, laboratories and other health data sources, is compiled by the CDC and offers states a big-picture view of where a potential epidemic may be spreading.
For example, if a number of people going to hospitals with flu-like symptoms — or if there’s a run on a particular type of medical test — that data is reported through BioSense to the CDC from the state health agencies. The CDC then cross-references that information with data it receives from large national health care providers, pharmacies and other government agencies such as the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.
"They then overlay it in sophisticated ways in Atlanta along with views back to every state so they can go in and query it to see what’s happening where they are," Danos said. But there is no precise data about individual patients and whether specific cases of swine flu have been confirmed. And out of the approximately 7,500 hospitals in the U.S., only several hundred are feeding into the CDC’s BioSense health data network.
In 2004, federal officials rolled out the National Electronic Disease Surveillance System (NEDSS), which allows the exchange of specific, standards-based health data using secure Internet connections. The system data includes patient names, test results, diagnoses and treatments. To boost interoperability, NEDSS relies on standardized reporting templates that can be used with commercial software and minimizes proprietary data. Each state chooses the applications it uses to gather health care data so it can be collected in a central state-level database.
The electronic reports are far more accurate than the paper-based reports of earlier decades because of the standardization of data formats, Danos said. All states are moving toward the use a NEDSS-compliant system, according to Danos, but not all hospitals, medical laboratories or private physician practices are yet on board with the system. Just 16 states are currently live on the NEDSS reporting system.
"We have made great advancements over the last five to 10 years," said Hamaker, who is the NEDSS coordinator at the Texas Department of State Health Services. "But there’s always going to be room for improvement. There will always be new technologies and new capabilities. Am I satisfied where we are? I’m impressed in relationship to where we’ve come."
Texas and the other 15 other states on NEDSS use a product called Orion Health Rhapsody Integration Engine from Orion Health Inc., which normalizes the data coming in from health facilities for use in regional and state systems and then feeds it through the NEDSS system to the CDC.
That’s the same system a hospital will use to accept data from various departments and make it accessible in a patient’s electronic health record.
While the U.S. has moved forward with new health data surveillance systems, other countries such as Mexico don’t have systems that are as sophisticated. Without accurate reporting, epidemics can spread unchecked, even if some cases are reported up the government chain.
"We do have a lot of concern about Mexican disease surveillance — especially in a country that doesn’t have some of the penetration of high-technology surveillance systems that the U.S. has," Danos said.
Uber Operations and Pandemic Influenza: http://blog.uberops.com/2009/04/27/pandemic-flu-uber-operations/
SEC and Homeland Security need Web backup, GAO says October 28, 2009
Posted by gonzalezloumiet in DHS, H1N, H1N1, Internet.Tags: H1N1, Internet
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Mon Oct 26, 2009 6:53pm EDT
By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Securities exchanges have a sound network back-up if a severe pandemic keeps people home and clogging the Internet, but the Homeland Security Department has done little planning, Congressional investigators said on Monday.
The department does not even have a plan to start work on the issue, the General Accountability Office said.
But the Homeland Security Department accused the GAO of having unrealistic expectations of how the Internet could be managed if millions began to telework from home at the same time as bored or sick schoolchildren were playing online, sucking up valuable bandwidth.
Experts have for years pointed to the potential problem of Internet access during a severe pandemic, which would be a unique kind of emergency. It would be global, affecting many areas at once, and would last for weeks or months, unlike a disaster such as a hurricane or earthquake.
H1N1 swine flu has been declared a pandemic but is considered a moderate one. Health experts say a worse one — or a worsening of this one — could result in 40 percent absentee rates at work and school at any given time and closed offices, transportation links and other gathering places.
Many companies and government offices hope to keep operations going as much as possible with teleworking using the Internet. Among the many problems posed by this idea, however, is the issue of bandwidth — especially the "last mile" between a user’s home and central cable systems.
"Such network congestion could prevent staff from broker-dealers and other securities market participants from teleworking during a pandemic," reads the GAO report, available here
"The Department of Homeland Security is responsible for ensuring that critical telecommunications infrastructure is protected."
BLOCKING WEBSITES
Private Internet providers might need government authorization to block popular websites, it said, or to reduce residential transmission speeds to make way for commerce.
The Financial Services Sector Coordinating Council for Critical Infrastructure Protection and Homeland Security, a group of private-sector firms and financial trade associations, has been working to ensure that trading could continue if big exchanges had to close because of the risk of disease transmission.
"Because the key securities exchanges and clearing organizations generally use proprietary networks that bypass the public Internet, their ability to execute and process trades should not be affected by any congestion," the GAO report reads.
However, not all had good plans for critical activities if many of their employees were ill, the report reads.
Homeland Security had done even less, it said.
"DHS has not developed a strategy to address potential Internet congestion," the report said.
It had also not even checked into whether the public or even other federal agencies would cooperate, GAO said.
"The report gives the impression that there is potentially a single solution to Internet congestion that DHS could achieve if it were to develop an appropriate strategy," DHS’s Jerald Levine retorted in a letter to the GAO.
"An expectation of unlimited Internet access during a pandemic is not realistic," he added.
(editing by Philip Barbara)
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CDC Readies Internet Barrage To Combat Swine Flu August 24, 2009
Posted by gonzalezloumiet in CDC, H1N1.Tags: CDC, H1N1
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The U.S. Centers for Disease Control uses a range of Internet services, including Twitter, YouTube, and even games, to help spread flu-protection messages.
By Mitch Wagner, InformationWeek
Aug. 24, 2009
URL: http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=219401216
The Centers for Disease Control is preparing several electronic remedies to head off the spread of the H1N1 flu virus. The agency is planning to make use of Twitter, YouTube videos, and text messaging, as well as more traditional tools like e-mail blasts and Web pages. The goal is to saturate the Internet with information about how people can protect themselves against the flu.
The CDC is gearing up its efforts with the approach of autumn, and the flu season, and the possibility of a resurgence of the swine flu virus.
Central to the campaign is putting information on other Web sites, rather than requiring people to come to CDC.gov for information, said Janice Nall, director of the CDC’s e-health marketing division. "We’re trying to reach people where they are, not necessarily expecting them to come to us," she said. "All of our distribution is on channels that people are already using."
The agency has had some good experience with this approach, Nall said. H1N1 videos on CDC.gov have gotten about 100,000 page views, but the same videos on YouTube got 2.01 million views.
People look for videos on YouTube but not necessarily on the CDC.gov site. The videos are "nothing fancy," Nall said, some are just talking heads. "It’s not like they’re exciting, sexy videos," she said. "We’re just trying to get the content out in video format."
This philosophy of bringing information to places on the Internet where people are, rather than requiring people to come to CDC.gov, pervades the CDC’s electronic strategy. Other efforts include:
Widgets and content syndication: The CDC has built widgets that people can embed on their own Web pages, providing tips on H1N1 prevention. Schools are finding it useful to embed the widgets on their own sites, to inform their constituents. Likewise, automated syndication lets a Web site publisher include the latest H1N1 information on their Web site, in a style that conforms to the look of the site, without any further update once the syndication tools are installed.
Graphical buttons: The CDC is distributing graphical buttons reminding people to take basic health precautions, such as covering their mouths when they cough. People can embed the buttons on social networking sites, including MySpace and Facebook.
Twitter: The CDC has several Twitter feeds, with a total of 700,000 followers, for releasing health information. Popularity of the feeds increases exponentially during flu season.
E-mail: E-mail updates are available from the CDC via GovDelivery, a federal e-mail alert service. The agency has a federal employee mailing list for H1N1 alerts with more than 200,000 subscribers. It’s also building tools to send alerts out to all government e-mail list subscribers, a whopping 13 million addresses.
Texting: The CDC is piloting texting health alerts.
Blogger outreach: The agency is planning to hold Webinars targeted at independent bloggers, in the hopes that they’ll help get the information out when necessary. It’s targeting bloggers who focus on parenting issues–aka "Mommybloggers"–as well as those who focus on health issues.
Information on and links to all the CDC’s social media campaigns are available on an overview page at CDC.gov. Of the CDC’s e-health marketing group’s about 35 full-time staffers, three or four are working on social media.
Social media is especially important in cases of the H1N1 virus because it strikes young adults particularly hard compared with other flus, which are generally most dangerous to the very old and very young. Health officials say they need to get information to young adults in the channels that they use, such as social media.
The CDC is also dabbling with using games and virtual worlds to get information out. It has released a flu game into Whyville, a virtual world for tweens. Players can catch the "Why-Flu" by sneezing and talking in close proximity to avatars who haven’t been vaccinated. Whyville avatars who catch the electronic flu can’t talk. The game teaches good hygiene and health practices.
Grandparents often go on Whyville to spend time with their grandchildren so the game also exposes older people–another high-risk group–to the health information as well.




