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''By combining these two elements, we hope to promote good practices around influenza control,'' says Mandl, an internationally recognized expert on biosurveillance and personally controlled health records.
The second grant, of $1 million, will focus on advanced technologies for investigating and managing disease outbreaks and was awarded to Dr. Aneel Advani, a new CHIP investigator in informatics and infectious disease. Advani will direct a collaboration between Children's, the NASA Ames Research Center in California, and public health departments in Massachusetts and Georgia to develop an automated call center for conducting large-scale epidemiologic investigations during an outbreak. People living in affected areas will be telephoned, and after a brief conversation they will be directed to an automated system, using computer-generated voice technology, where they can provide details of their illness in confidence.
''During a large-scale outbreak, such as the recent experience with SARS in Toronto, health departments can become overwhelmed by the large number of case investigations and public inquiries,'' notes Advani. ''This automated system will allow health agencies to rapidly enhance their capabilities during outbreak emergencies.''
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