CDC Adopts Near Real-Time Flu Tracking System
CWmike writes "The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention launched an effort this week to better and more easily track for H1N1 and other seasonal influenza activity throughout the US. The CDC said it is now tracking data on 14 million patients from physician practices and hospitals stored on a database hosted by GE Healthcare. The data is submitted daily from physicians' offices and hospitals that use GE's electronic medical record system. The data is then uploaded to GE Healthcare's Medical Quality Improvement Consortium, a database repository designed with HIPAA-compliance parameters of patient anonymity and best practices, where it can be the subject of medical data queries. The CDC can perform queries to look for flu-like symptoms being reported by physicians, and then disseminate the data for health care providers and local government officials throughout the country, who can alert businesses and others about flu outbreak hot spots. The CDC also hopes its analysis of the data helps it better understand the characteristics of H1N1 outbreaks and to determine who is most at risk for developing complications from the virus. Prior to implementing the new system, the CDC relied heavily on tracking insurance claims data, which could take days or weeks to make its way to the agency's medical staff for analysis. The medical data is normalized so that, for example, reports of hypertension, HTN, and high blood pressure all mean the same thing when a researcher enters a query against the data."
You can find the latest map on the CDC site and look at how helpful it is! Apparently everyone's boned except for DC, Georgia, Guam, Hawaii, Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands. Since there's no report of flu in the Virgin Islands, I propose the government provides free plane tickets for anyone who isn't infected so that they might escape the wave of vomit brewing in our fair country.
But in all seriousness their report does have some decent data on it.
My work here is dung.
Why did that green dot just appear over my house on that map?
is GE can then take the database info and use it to go after their credit card customers who might be sickest, that way ensuring they'll get their dough before the patients croak.
Time travelling higgs-boson-baguette-dropping-birds you say?
AccountKiller
General Electric Healthcare?
Wasn't there something a while back where researchers were tracking the flue via google searches on flu or flu-like symptoms and corelating the requesting IPs with their geographical regions? That seemed better, because I had the flu, but I didn't go to a doctor...and by the time the doctor knows, the infected individual has already spread the germs. This GE system still lags considerably IMO.
This is purely antidotal but a colleague got sick and when to the doctor. The doctor, without testing, said he had H1N1. So is that the kind of data that's being used or is this coming from verified tests? Even if the doctors are telling the CDC it's verified who is checking that they actually did the tests?
It all starts at 0
While fir is a great building material, I don't think it applies in these examples
The entirety of the USA has swine flu!
What, that's not what the map shows?
Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
I sneezed and a team of STS (Special Tissue Services) operatives rappelled down and entered through the window feet first to present a tissue and a squirt of antibacterial hand foam. When they clocked the pepper pot and my cheese bagel much hilarity ensued.
So google's flu results will be validated a few days faster. People start feeling crappy, do some self diagnosis via google, then see a doctor who then files a report when then is summarized and reported by the CDC.
I'm in my right mind and I have the answer to everything!
Interesting to me though: Ever since the first outbreak, I've known several people who had symptoms that matched the H1N1 symptoms. Each one of them wound up seeing a doctor over the severity of the symptoms and NOT A SINGLE ONE was swabbed for culture to see if what they had WAS H1N1. Does it not seem odd that the only tracking of this epidemic/pandemic is either non-existent or only being done by doctors/medical facilities that have a certain type of records system?
Real time flu tracking, eh? Let's all sneeze at once and see if we can crash it.
There's already a "near realtime flu tracking system." It's called Twitter.
Tired of FB/Google censorship? Visit UNCENSORED!
This is purely antidotal but a colleague got sick and when to the doctor. The doctor, without testing, said he had H1N1.
This is actually a reasonably diagnosis.
From statistical sampling of the population (with strain typing) that's been done so far, the normal seasonal flu strains are not really circulating yet, while H1N1 has been observed to be spiking in frequency. I think there's some diagnosis guideline out there that your family doctor should assume any flu case is H1N1, at this time of the year.
so where are the pretty graphics? Say a map of the US with color codng for hotspots?
Reading CDC's website, it's quite interesting to see that according to them 36,000 people on average die from seasonal flu and that's during the flu season. H1N1 only caused what, roughly 500-600 deaths since begining of the year and according to them it's active the whole year. http://www.cdc.gov/flu/about/disease/us_flu-related_deaths.htm Hmm, is anyone else getting flashbacks to Wag the Dog? No?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A0JqQyl09zQ
Did Google CEO's mention quite a few months back that they were implementing data mining search technology to track viral pandemics against what people's keyword searches were for on Google? I wonder what happened of that. Maybe it'll show up on my new Google Dashboard.
I'm sure that there are lots of studies from manufacturers of hand cleaners and other potions that there products kill xx% of flue viruses. I know I'm being bombarded by directions all the way from my HR department to the CDC on how to prevent getting swine flu. While I'm sure that some of those narrow studies are correct that lots of alcohol will kill the virus, does any of this really make any difference with preventing transmission of the flu. There are lots of assumptions built into suggestions that people cough into their elbow, wash their hands, etc will prevent the transmission of the flu. Are there any real world population studies to see if this makes any difference? I know this is almost like asking /. if they are sure that the world is not flat, but some times it worth checking.
You must read fine print to know Walmart & Sam's Club cards are GE cards before clicking _apply_. GE has caused me to want to close both cards. On my list to do today.
...will there be a Google maps mashup with this data??
This video is broken into 6 parts. The first looked fairly reasonable, but in the second she brought up an item which seemed kind of silly to me. Unless I am mistaken, she was suggesting that if you put two live viruses into a test tube that they will somehow mix and turn into one super-virus with the qualities of the two former. Was I hearing that correctly? --Because she went off on that tangent with great energy and I'm fairly certain that this is an entirely false proposition. Especially weird since she said she was a doctor. But then, she's also a hard-core catholic, so she's obviously got some blind spots.
Still, accidentally shipping a vaccine in such huge quantities which happens to include live samples of the Bird Flu is certainly a vast screw-up which could have killed millions of people. But I don't see how it could have morphed into a super-virus simply by Bird Flu being present in the drug. Viruses, if I understand them correctly, just don't work that way.
This video strikes me as being a little COINTELPRO; bent truths being used to muddy the issue beyond comprehension for the average person.
Though, I certainly wouldn't rule out malice these days when it comes to population control. Deliberately distributing selected quantities of Bird Flu through a wide-scale vaccination policy would have been en effective way to kick the knees out from under a population.
-FL
Be skeptical about flu reports. For example, almost all reports about the flu give an incorrect name, possibly showing the level of understanding of the author. "H1N1" is a major type of flu, not a specific strain.
I notice that whenever there is a lot of joking on Slashdot, there is apparently an underlying feeling of skepticism, even if the skepticism is not conscious.
Note that the map linked in the grandparent comment says "*This map indicates geographic spread and does not measure the severity of influenza activity." Apparently that means that, if one person in a state had the flu, the entire state would be marked by the CDC as having flu activity.
Remember the 36,000 is in a vaccinated populas.
The swine flu has only been going since April, not the beginning of the year.
It is hitting a different demographic.
More children died from August to October from swine flu then die all year from season flu.
This has happend off flu season.
We are entering flu seaon with almost no vaccinated population
It's a pandemic.
Pandemic are know for bouncing around for a few year and changing.
This is poised to be very nasty. So what are they suipposed to do? Do nothing and risk a huge flu pandemic, or tell people what precautions to take and limit it's impact?
Sadly, people like you are so myopic that when there precautions are heeded and limit the flu your the type of Jackass that goes 'we didn't need it."
As it looks right now, a lot of children will die this season.
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
"But I don't want to get on the cart"
I am the unwilling control for my Origin.