Human Influenza Surveillance: the Demand to Expand

The World Health Organization Influenza Program is one of the best developed and longest running infectious disease surveillance systems that exists. It maintains a worldwide watch of influenza's evolution to assist delivery of appropriately formulated vaccines in time to blunt seasonal epidemi...

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Main Author: Scott P. Layne
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2006-04-01
Series:Emerging Infectious Diseases
Subjects:
Online Access:https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/12/4/05-1198_article
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spelling doaj-524e4f83e9964ceda3349bdada715a142020-11-24T21:50:08ZengCenters for Disease Control and PreventionEmerging Infectious Diseases1080-60401080-60592006-04-0112456256810.3201/eid1204.051198Human Influenza Surveillance: the Demand to ExpandScott P. LayneThe World Health Organization Influenza Program is one of the best developed and longest running infectious disease surveillance systems that exists. It maintains a worldwide watch of influenza's evolution to assist delivery of appropriately formulated vaccines in time to blunt seasonal epidemics and unpredictable pandemics. Despite the program's success, however, much more is possible with today's advanced technologies. This article summarizes ongoing human influenza surveillance activities worldwide. It shows that the technology to establish a high-throughput laboratory network that can process and test influenza viruses more quickly and more accurately is available. It also emphasizes the practical public health and scientific applications of such a network.https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/12/4/05-1198_articleInfluenzasurveillancepublic healthvaccinesantiviralshigh-throughput
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Scott P. Layne
spellingShingle Scott P. Layne
Human Influenza Surveillance: the Demand to Expand
Emerging Infectious Diseases
Influenza
surveillance
public health
vaccines
antivirals
high-throughput
author_facet Scott P. Layne
author_sort Scott P. Layne
title Human Influenza Surveillance: the Demand to Expand
title_short Human Influenza Surveillance: the Demand to Expand
title_full Human Influenza Surveillance: the Demand to Expand
title_fullStr Human Influenza Surveillance: the Demand to Expand
title_full_unstemmed Human Influenza Surveillance: the Demand to Expand
title_sort human influenza surveillance: the demand to expand
publisher Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
series Emerging Infectious Diseases
issn 1080-6040
1080-6059
publishDate 2006-04-01
description The World Health Organization Influenza Program is one of the best developed and longest running infectious disease surveillance systems that exists. It maintains a worldwide watch of influenza's evolution to assist delivery of appropriately formulated vaccines in time to blunt seasonal epidemics and unpredictable pandemics. Despite the program's success, however, much more is possible with today's advanced technologies. This article summarizes ongoing human influenza surveillance activities worldwide. It shows that the technology to establish a high-throughput laboratory network that can process and test influenza viruses more quickly and more accurately is available. It also emphasizes the practical public health and scientific applications of such a network.
topic Influenza
surveillance
public health
vaccines
antivirals
high-throughput
url https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/12/4/05-1198_article
work_keys_str_mv AT scottplayne humaninfluenzasurveillancethedemandtoexpand
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