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Brownstein and Mandl believes that the surveillance data support a different approach to immunization, one based not on who's at risk for influenza, but on who's spreading the disease.
"General influenza immunization policies target high-risk individuals - kids under 24 months, the elderly, and people with underlying disease," Mandl says. "But if avian flu is coming in and you want to stop it from spreading, you might want to vaccinate the people who are transmitting it to everyone else. In a pandemic, where people are getting sick and dying, you might want to reallocate who gets the vaccine."
The study drew its data from two real-time population health monitoring systems: the Automated Epidemiological Geotemporal Integrated Surveillance system, or AEGIS, developed by Children's emergency department, and the National Bioterrorism Syndromic Surveillance Demonstration Project. The health care settings analyzed were pediatric, adult, general and community emergency departments and a large HMO network.
"Millions of federal dollars are invested in real-time surveillance to detect bioterrorism," Mandl points out. "But these systems have a dual use, allowing us to look very quickly at the transmission dynamics of diseases like influenza during peacetime."
To view the article online, visit www.aje.oxfordjournals.org
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