• DocumentCode
    2600199
  • Title

    The Use of Public Health Grid Technology in the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention H1N1 Pandemic Response

  • Author

    Boyd, Terry ; Savel, Thomas ; Kesarinath, Gautam ; Lee, Brian ; Stinn, John

  • Author_Institution
    Centers for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC), Nat. Center for Public Health Inf., Atlanta, GA, USA
  • fYear
    2010
  • fDate
    20-23 April 2010
  • Firstpage
    974
  • Lastpage
    978
  • Abstract
    Historically in public health surveillance systems have been designed and operated as registries targeting specific health issues. These systems included data from specifically targeted segments of the population, with data elements designed to answer specific programmatic questions. The result has been a collection of silo information systems that rarely can be used to address new needs without extensive revision, rework, or redesign. This decreases the opportunities for cross communication between programmatic areas, and limits the ability of public health professionals to examine issues that cross traditional programmatic boundaries. Emerging public health threats often require the coordination of stakeholders from different areas of public health practice. 2009 H1N1 influenza provided a similar challenge. In order to avoid the problems of silo information systems, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention´s (CDC´s) National Center for Public Health Informatics (NCPHI) and its partners began exploring and developing research for de-centralized information architecture through a Public Health Grid (PHGrid). Through systems research and the exploration of PHGrid capabilities, the CDC was able to develop a pilot project that enabled secure and timely exchange of information across multiple programmatic areas. This paper describes the process and results for the pilot project.
  • Keywords
    diseases; grid computing; health care; medical information systems; public administration; surveillance; H1N1 pandemic response; National Center for Public Health Informatics; United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; decentralized information architecture; public health grid technology; public health surveillance system; silo information system; Biomedical informatics; Conferences; Control systems; Diseases; Government; Influenza; Information systems; Medical services; Public healthcare; Surveillance; Distributed Databases; Grid Computing; Opportunistic Networks; Privacy and Trust; Public Health; Security; Service-Oriented Framework and Middleware;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Advanced Information Networking and Applications Workshops (WAINA), 2010 IEEE 24th International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Perth, WA
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4244-6701-3
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/WAINA.2010.60
  • Filename
    5480933