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You don't have to be a public health official to know that as of July 1, there are over 40 states with alerts on salmonella outbreaks. Nor do you have to wait for traditional data sources like the World Health Organization or the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, whose reporting is sometimes delayed.
An online project called HealthMap (www.healthmap.org) makes the information available to all comers. As reported in the July issue of PLoS Medicine, it extracts, categorizes, filters and integrates a variety of Web-based data sources, even penetrating blogs, listservs, chatrooms, and online news reports--not your usual sources for monitoring global health.
"It's a disease-mining system that uses the Internet to look for outbreaks going on around the world, bringing all this information together in one view," explains John Brownstein, PhD, co-founder of HealthMap and an assistant professor at the Informatics Program (CHIP) at Children's Hospital Boston.
Launched in September 2006 as an experimental project by Brownstein, an epidemiologist by training, and his CHIP colleague Clark Freifeld, a software developer, HealthMap currently serves as a direct information source for approximately 20,000 unique visitors per month. In fact, many regular users come from the WHO, the CDC, and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control. Aided by a $450,000 grant from Google, HealthMap has expanded its surveillance reach and now mines the Internet in English, Chinese, Spanish, Russian and French. Additional languages such as Hindi, Portuguese and Arabic are under development.
"Many developing regions in the world still lack essential public health information infrastructure, and these areas are often most vulnerable to the threat of emerging disease," notes Freifeld.
While the Internet contains plenty of information about infectious diseases, the myriad sources are often not structured or organized and, until now, have not been synthesized.
HealthMap also ignores international boundaries, facilitating early disease warnings even when governments want to keep things under wraps. For example, public health agencies in China were aware of and working to combat SARS well before the deadly virus made global headlines.
"We've traced the earliest reports of SARS back to Internet chat rooms where people were talking about this problem going on in Guangdong Province," says Brownstein, who is also affiliated with Harvard Medical School. "The only information coming out to the rest of the world was through such informal channels, but nobody paid much attention at that point."
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