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Methods and tools for epidemiological biosurveillance in data-limited settings Presenter: Kathryn H. Jacobsen, MPH, PhD Associate Professor of Epidemiology,

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Presentation on theme: "Methods and tools for epidemiological biosurveillance in data-limited settings Presenter: Kathryn H. Jacobsen, MPH, PhD Associate Professor of Epidemiology,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Methods and tools for epidemiological biosurveillance in data-limited settings Presenter: Kathryn H. Jacobsen, MPH, PhD Associate Professor of Epidemiology, George Mason University kjacobse@gmu.edu

2 Framework Complex Models Operational Use Field Data Data limitations in: Conflict & post-conflict areas Disaster areas Places with under-developed public health systems

3 Data Needs How quickly can we set up a system to collect health surveillance data in places with… – No current map – No population census data – No electronic medical records – Almost no public health information system for reporting of infectious diseases – Limited access to laboratory testing

4 Data Collection Components 1.Geography (mapping) 2.Demography (household surveys) 3.Epidemiology (syndromic surveillance / laboratory testing)

5 Principles Accessible technology: Nearly all of these data collection activities can be conducted by local partners with smartphones and free, open-source apps – Reduces IP concerns about data collection devices – Data are stored on a secure server – Protects IP related to data integration and interpretation Partner technical support: This work can complement local public health information efforts

6 Community-Participatory GIS (PGIS) of Neighborhoods & Streets Start with images from open sources Local residents walk streets (red) and section boundaries (blue) with GPS- equipped smartphones Add named features to a GIS Add additional points of interest to the GIS

7 Community-Participatory GIS (PGIS) of Neighborhoods & Streets All partners have immediate access to key spatial information Facilitates communication by providing a common language for place names clinic gas station bar bank

8 Household Health Survey Access to utilities (water, electricity) Household health Use of the healthcare system (preferred providers) All data entered directly into a smartphone linked to the GIS (with care taken to protect the confidentiality of personal information) Participation rate: Pre-survey community meetings Local interviewers Red dots are for illustration only.

9 Community-based Surveillance System Local volunteers report new cases of diseases of interest in person or via text message (incentive: cell phone minutes + free testing at locally-run NGO hospital)

10 Syndromic Surveillance Syndromic (symptom-based) data collection activities – SMS reporting of weekly cases in an assigned “catchment area” via cell phone from community health volunteers (CHVs) in urban and rural areas – SMS reporting from nationwide military units improved weekly reporting compliance from 76% to 100% of Sierra Leone’s military medical units over a year GPS-linked environmental testing (water, chickens/birds, etc.)

11 Framework Complex Models Operational Use Smartphone Open-source apps Once teams are familiar with the smartphone technology, the data collection process can be very time (and cost) efficient.

12 Disclaimer: The views expressed herein are those of the presenter and are not representative of the Department of the Navy or the Department of Defense.


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