Last data update: May 06, 2024. (Total: 46732 publications since 2009)
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Modernizing Centers for Disease Control and Prevention informatics using surveillance data platform shared services
Lee B , Martin T , Khan A , Fullerton K , Duck W , Kinley T , Stoutenburg S , Hall J , Crum M , Garcia MC , Iademarco MF , Richards CL . Public Health Rep 2018 133 (2) 33354917751130 Public health surveillance is the cornerstone of public health practice.1 In the United States, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and states share responsibility for the surveillance enterprise. States have primary responsibility for traditional name-based disease reporting, and they subsequently share anonymized data with CDC. At the same time, CDC maintains many surveillance systems at the federal level. For decades, the number of these single-disease or condition, single-purpose surveillance systems has grown as CDC has needed to expand surveillance data collection to address new public health problems. Currently, CDC has more than 110 surveillance systems. Although these systems provide CDC with the surveillance data needed by the agency, many are experienced as repetitive and burdensome by state and local public health departments, with little or no coordination. This profusion of CDC systems results in duplication of effort, discrepancies among the data elements collected by various programs, and the need to use multiple information technology (IT) systems, which may not be interoperable. |
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