Introduction to Statistical Methods for Biosurveillance

With an Emphasis on Syndromic Surveillance

Ronald D Fricker author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:25th Feb '13

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Introduction to Statistical Methods for Biosurveillance cover

Presents basic and advanced methods with a focus on demonstrated added value for a broad class of public health surveillance problems.

Bioterrorism is not a new threat, but in an increasingly interconnected world, the potential for catastrophic outcomes is greater today than ever. The medical and public health communities are establishing biosurveillance systems designed to proactively monitor populations for possible disease outbreaks as a first line of defense. The ideal biosurveillance system should identify trends not visible to individual physicians and clinicians in near-real time. Many of these systems use statistical algorithms to look for anomalies and to trigger epidemiologic investigation, quantification, localization and outbreak management. This book discusses the design and evaluation of statistical methods for effective biosurveillance for readers with minimal statistical training. Weaving public health and statistics together, it presents basic and more advanced methods, with a focus on empirically demonstrating added value. Although the emphasis is on epidemiologic and syndromic surveillance, the statistical methods can be applied to a broad class of public health surveillance problems.

ISBN: 9780521191340

Dimensions: 242mm x 162mm x 26mm

Weight: 670g

411 pages