4.7 Article

Infectious Disease Surveillance in the Big Data Era: Towards Faster and Locally Relevant Systems

Journal

JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 214, Issue -, Pages S380-S385

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jiw376

Keywords

big data; medical claims; Internet search queries; syndromic data; death certificates; electronic patient records; influenza; infectious diseases surveillance; real-time monitoring

Funding

  1. DHS RAPIDD program
  2. European Commission
  3. Lundbeck Foundation
  4. Fogarty International Center, NIH

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While big data have proven immensely useful in fields such as marketing and earth sciences, public health is still relying on more traditional surveillance systems and awaiting the fruits of a big data revolution. A new generation of big data surveillance systems is needed to achieve rapid, flexible, and local tracking of infectious diseases, especially for emerging pathogens. In this opinion piece, we reflect on the long and distinguished history of disease surveillance and discuss recent developments related to use of big data. We start with a brief review of traditional systems relying on clinical and laboratory reports. We then examine how large-volume medical claims data can, with great spatiotemporal resolution, help elucidate local disease patterns. Finally, we review efforts to develop surveillance systems based on digital and social data streams, including the recent rise and fall of Google Flu Trends. We conclude by advocating for increased use of hybrid systems combining information from traditional surveillance and big data sources, which seems the most promising option moving forward. Throughout the article, we use influenza as an exemplar of an emerging and reemerging infection which has traditionally been considered a model system for surveillance and modeling.

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