A review of evaluations of electronic event-based biosurveillance systems.

Electronic event-based biosurveillance systems (EEBS's) that use near real-time information from the internet are an increasingly important source of epidemiologic intelligence. However, there has not been a systematic assessment of EEBS evaluations, which could identify key uncertainties about...

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Main Authors: Kimberly N Gajewski, Amy E Peterson, Rohit A Chitale, Julie A Pavlin, Kevin L Russell, Jean-Paul Chretien
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4203831?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-fb91485869a64ec9803a52886d757bbf2020-11-25T00:46:33ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-01910e11122210.1371/journal.pone.0111222A review of evaluations of electronic event-based biosurveillance systems.Kimberly N GajewskiAmy E PetersonRohit A ChitaleJulie A PavlinKevin L RussellJean-Paul ChretienElectronic event-based biosurveillance systems (EEBS's) that use near real-time information from the internet are an increasingly important source of epidemiologic intelligence. However, there has not been a systematic assessment of EEBS evaluations, which could identify key uncertainties about current systems and guide EEBS development to most effectively exploit web-based information for biosurveillance. To conduct this assessment, we searched PubMed and Google Scholar to identify peer-reviewed evaluations of EEBS's. We included EEBS's that use publicly available internet information sources, cover events that are relevant to human health, and have global scope. To assess the publications using a common framework, we constructed a list of 17 EEBS attributes from published guidelines for evaluating health surveillance systems. We identified 11 EEBS's and 20 evaluations of these EEBS's. The number of published evaluations per EEBS ranged from 1 (Gen-Db, GODsN, MiTAP) to 8 (GPHIN, HealthMap). The median number of evaluation variables assessed per EEBS was 8 (range, 3-15). Ten published evaluations contained quantitative assessments of at least one key variable. No evaluations examined usefulness by identifying specific public health decisions, actions, or outcomes resulting from EEBS outputs. Future EEBS assessments should identify and discuss critical indicators of public health utility, especially the impact of EEBS's on public health response.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4203831?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kimberly N Gajewski
Amy E Peterson
Rohit A Chitale
Julie A Pavlin
Kevin L Russell
Jean-Paul Chretien
spellingShingle Kimberly N Gajewski
Amy E Peterson
Rohit A Chitale
Julie A Pavlin
Kevin L Russell
Jean-Paul Chretien
A review of evaluations of electronic event-based biosurveillance systems.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Kimberly N Gajewski
Amy E Peterson
Rohit A Chitale
Julie A Pavlin
Kevin L Russell
Jean-Paul Chretien
author_sort Kimberly N Gajewski
title A review of evaluations of electronic event-based biosurveillance systems.
title_short A review of evaluations of electronic event-based biosurveillance systems.
title_full A review of evaluations of electronic event-based biosurveillance systems.
title_fullStr A review of evaluations of electronic event-based biosurveillance systems.
title_full_unstemmed A review of evaluations of electronic event-based biosurveillance systems.
title_sort review of evaluations of electronic event-based biosurveillance systems.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Electronic event-based biosurveillance systems (EEBS's) that use near real-time information from the internet are an increasingly important source of epidemiologic intelligence. However, there has not been a systematic assessment of EEBS evaluations, which could identify key uncertainties about current systems and guide EEBS development to most effectively exploit web-based information for biosurveillance. To conduct this assessment, we searched PubMed and Google Scholar to identify peer-reviewed evaluations of EEBS's. We included EEBS's that use publicly available internet information sources, cover events that are relevant to human health, and have global scope. To assess the publications using a common framework, we constructed a list of 17 EEBS attributes from published guidelines for evaluating health surveillance systems. We identified 11 EEBS's and 20 evaluations of these EEBS's. The number of published evaluations per EEBS ranged from 1 (Gen-Db, GODsN, MiTAP) to 8 (GPHIN, HealthMap). The median number of evaluation variables assessed per EEBS was 8 (range, 3-15). Ten published evaluations contained quantitative assessments of at least one key variable. No evaluations examined usefulness by identifying specific public health decisions, actions, or outcomes resulting from EEBS outputs. Future EEBS assessments should identify and discuss critical indicators of public health utility, especially the impact of EEBS's on public health response.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4203831?pdf=render
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