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Published in: Emerging Themes in Epidemiology 1/2012

Open Access 01-12-2012 | Analytic perspective

Event-based internet biosurveillance: relation to epidemiological observation

Authors: Noele P Nelson, Li Yang, Aimee R Reilly, Jessica E Hardin, David M Hartley

Published in: Emerging Themes in Epidemiology | Issue 1/2012

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Abstract

Background

The World Health Organization (WHO) collects and publishes surveillance data and statistics for select diseases, but traditional methods of gathering such data are time and labor intensive. Event-based biosurveillance, which utilizes a variety of Internet sources, complements traditional surveillance. In this study we assess the reliability of Internet biosurveillance and evaluate disease-specific alert criteria against epidemiological data.

Methods

We reviewed and compared WHO epidemiological data and Argus biosurveillance system data for pandemic (H1N1) 2009 (April 2009 – January 2010) from 8 regions and 122 countries to: identify reliable alert criteria among 15 Argus-defined categories; determine the degree of data correlation for disease progression; and assess timeliness of Internet information.

Results

Argus generated a total of 1,580 unique alerts; 5 alert categories generated statistically significant (p < 0.05) correlations with WHO case count data; the sum of these 5 categories was highly correlated with WHO case data (r = 0.81, p < 0.0001), with expected differences observed among the 8 regions. Argus reported first confirmed cases on the same day as WHO for 21 of the first 64 countries reporting cases, and 1 to 16 days (average 1.5 days) ahead of WHO for 42 of those countries.

Conclusion

Confirmed pandemic (H1N1) 2009 cases collected by Argus and WHO methods returned consistent results and confirmed the reliability and timeliness of Internet information. Disease-specific alert criteria provide situational awareness and may serve as proxy indicators to event progression and escalation in lieu of traditional surveillance data; alerts may identify early-warning indicators to another pandemic, preparing the public health community for disease events.
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Metadata
Title
Event-based internet biosurveillance: relation to epidemiological observation
Authors
Noele P Nelson
Li Yang
Aimee R Reilly
Jessica E Hardin
David M Hartley
Publication date
01-12-2012
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Emerging Themes in Epidemiology / Issue 1/2012
Electronic ISSN: 1742-7622
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1742-7622-9-4

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