Displaying results 1 - 8 of 13
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Monitoring for Local Transmission of Zika Virus using Emergency Department Data
Content Type: Abstract
The first travel-associated cases of Zika virus infection in New York City (NYC) were identified in January 2016. Local transmission of Zika virus from imported cases is possible due to presence of Aedes albopictus mosquitos. Timely detection of… read more -
Comparison between HL7 and Legacy Syndromic Surveillance Data in New York City
Content Type: Abstract
Data from the Emergency Departments (EDs) of 49 hospitals in New York City (NYC) is sent to the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DOHMH) daily as part of the syndromic surveillance system. Currently, thirty-four of the EDs transmit data as… read more -
Building a Better Syndromic Surveillance System: the New York City Experience
Content Type: Abstract
The New York City (NYC) syndromic surveillance system has monitored syndromes from NYC emergency department (ED) visits since 2001, using the temporal and spatial scan statistic in SaTScan for aberration detection. Since our syndromic system was… read more -
Tractable Use Cases for Collaboration in Public Health Surveillance
Content Type: Abstract
The mission of the ISDS TCC is to bridge the gap between the analytic needs of public health practitioners and the expertise of researchers from other fields for the enhancement of disease surveillance, including situational awareness of chronic as… read more -
Differentiating ZIP Codes in Syndromic Data; What Can They Tell Us?
Content Type: Abstract
The NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DOHMH) ED syndromic surveillance system receives data from 95% of all ED visits in NYC totaling 4 million visits each year. The data include residential ZIP code as reported by the patient. ZIP code… read more -
Evaluating Syndromic Data for Surveillance of Non-infectious Disease
Content Type: Abstract
Syndromic surveillance data has predominantly been used for surveillance of infectious disease and for broad symptom types that could be associated with bioterrorism. There has been a growing interest to expand the uses of syndromic data beyond… read more -
Evaluating Utility of Cold-Injury Syndromic Surveillance Data in New York City
Content Type: Abstract
Cold weather exposure-related injuries range from hypothermia to less severe conditions such as frost bite, trench foot, and chilblains, which are all preventable causes of mortality and morbidity. In recent years, NYC has successfully used… read more -
Using Syndromic Emergency Department Data to Augment Oral Health Surveillance
Content Type: Abstract
Using the chief complaint field from our established syndromic ED system, we developed definitions for potentially preventable oral health visits (OHV) and examined patterns in 2009-2011 data. Under the widest definition, OHV comprised about 1% of… read more