Innovations in disease surveillance and monitoring
Innovations in disease surveillance and monitoring
While there have been worldwide improvements in public health over the past few decades, new viruses and other pandemics are expected to increase as we move towards high-density, urban living. But with only 49 countries reporting high-quality cause of death data to the WHO, the exact burden of infectious diseases is impossible to know. As made clear by the COVID-19 pandemic, there is a vital need for identifying and monitoring the spread of new infectious diseases. Novel sources of data offer the opportunity to expand the geographic scope and timeliness of surveillance activities. This chapter reviews six new health surveillance approaches, such as syndromic data collection, as well as three other novel data collection methods, such as movement tracking using telecommunications data, that have the potential to offer useful health insights. However, most of these methods are in their comparative infancy and need rigorous testing and investment before a pandemic strikes so that countries are not left scrambling to innovate during a crisis period. Particularly important is that countries aim to establish an inclusive national data infrastructure, which fosters third party partnerships and innovation, with epidemic intelligence as core objective of that system. The focus should be data-driven and evidence-based decision-making during crisis periods as well as day-to-day policy-making.
1-21
Espey, Jessica
cb16d2a6-2e51-43df-a274-e85776ab605a
Dam, Hayden
2e3339ac-9cba-4399-b57a-5a340902a416
2021
Espey, Jessica
cb16d2a6-2e51-43df-a274-e85776ab605a
Dam, Hayden
2e3339ac-9cba-4399-b57a-5a340902a416
Espey, Jessica and Dam, Hayden
(2021)
Innovations in disease surveillance and monitoring.
In,
Haring, Robin, Kickbusch, Ilona, Ganten, Detlev and Moeti, Matshidiso
(eds.)
Handbook of Global Health.
Springer UK, .
(doi:10.1007/978-3-030-05325-3_16-1).
Record type:
Book Section
Abstract
While there have been worldwide improvements in public health over the past few decades, new viruses and other pandemics are expected to increase as we move towards high-density, urban living. But with only 49 countries reporting high-quality cause of death data to the WHO, the exact burden of infectious diseases is impossible to know. As made clear by the COVID-19 pandemic, there is a vital need for identifying and monitoring the spread of new infectious diseases. Novel sources of data offer the opportunity to expand the geographic scope and timeliness of surveillance activities. This chapter reviews six new health surveillance approaches, such as syndromic data collection, as well as three other novel data collection methods, such as movement tracking using telecommunications data, that have the potential to offer useful health insights. However, most of these methods are in their comparative infancy and need rigorous testing and investment before a pandemic strikes so that countries are not left scrambling to innovate during a crisis period. Particularly important is that countries aim to establish an inclusive national data infrastructure, which fosters third party partnerships and innovation, with epidemic intelligence as core objective of that system. The focus should be data-driven and evidence-based decision-making during crisis periods as well as day-to-day policy-making.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 9 November 2020
Published date: 2021
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 497490
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/497490
PURE UUID: fc41a155-9038-4a2c-a536-b9aeef57f705
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Date deposited: 23 Jan 2025 17:51
Last modified: 25 Jan 2025 03:20
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Contributors
Author:
Jessica Espey
Author:
Hayden Dam
Editor:
Robin Haring
Editor:
Ilona Kickbusch
Editor:
Detlev Ganten
Editor:
Matshidiso Moeti
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