论文标题
2014年埃博拉流行病和Covid-19的数字监视网络
Digital Surveillance Networks of 2014 Ebola Epidemics and Lessons for COVID-19
论文作者
论文摘要
2014年埃博拉病毒爆发可以为Covoid-19提供课程,以及正在进行的变体监视以及使用多方法方法来检测公共卫生准备的准备。我们越来越看到将本地位置的信息传输到分层系统的延迟和断开连接,以使整体准备和响应更加主动,而与应对诸如2014年埃博拉病毒之类的紧急情况相比。对于我们的Covid-19,及时考虑是否可以使用数字监视网络和支持系统来启动正式和社区的临时网络,以促进促进强者的传播(即感染,确认病例,医院或诊所的死亡或诊所的死亡)和社区薄弱的变化。这将允许及时检测孤立的可疑病例的症状,以使整体监视和干预策略更加有效。数字监视网络的使用可以进一步促进全球对复杂紧急情况的认识,例如埃博拉病毒,以构建对发展和发展中国家中基于社区的全球紧急监视所需的信息基础设施。在这项研究中,使用该计划中的数据进行监测新兴疾病(Promed)和Factiva数据库进行了对2014年3月至2014年10月的传播的系统分析。使用数字监视网络,我们旨在使用报告的可疑/可能/可能的案例在世界各地的不同位置绘制个人/群体的网络连接,从本地化到全球化的埃博拉传播。我们认为,可以通过了解响应者(例如当地卫生当局)和散布者(感染的个人和团体)之间的社交网络联系来加强公共卫生的准备和响应。
2014 Ebola outbreaks can offer lessons for the COVOID-19 and the ongoing variant surveillance and the use of multi method approach to detect public health preparedness. We are increasingly seeing a delay and disconnect of the transmission of locally situated information to the hierarchical system for making the overall preparedness and response more proactive than reactive for dealing with emergencies such as 2014 Ebola. For our COVID-19, it is timely to consider whether digital surveillance networks and support systems can be used to bring the formal and community based ad hoc networks required for facilitating the transmission of both strong (i.e., infections, confirmed cases, deaths in hospital or clinic settings) and weak alters from the community. This will allow timely detection of symptoms of isolated suspected cases for making the overall surveillance and intervention strategy far more effective. The use of digital surveillance networks can further contribute to the development of global awareness of complex emergencies such as Ebola for constructing information infrastructure required to develop, monitor and analysis of community based global emergency surveillance in developed and developing countries. In this study, a systematic analysis of the spread during the months of March to October 2014 was performed using data from the Program for Monitoring Emerging Diseases (ProMED) and the Factiva database. Using digital surveillance networks, we aim to draw network connections of individuals/groups from a localized to a globalized transmission of Ebola using reported suspected/probable/confirmed cases at different locations around the world. We argue that public health preparedness and response can be strengthened by understanding the social network connections between responders (such as local health authorities) and spreaders (infected individuals and groups).