There is increasing demand for ways to use syndromic surveillance data for population health surveillance. The authors developed a nontraumatic oral health classification that could provide timely burden estimates of oral health-related visits to North Carolina (NC) emergency departments (EDs) using BioSense syndromic data. A combination of literature review, input by subject matter experts, and analysis of syndromic data was employed to create a classification that used select chief complaint text and ICD-9-CM codes for visit inclusion and exclusion criteria. Visit estimates created using this classification could contribute to policy decisions aimed at reducing this unnecessary burden on NC EDs
This presentation will review the process and the details of the recommendations developed by the mu...
Early detection of a new outbreak or new information about a public health issue could prevent morbi...
This poster presentation will describe the inclusion of triage notes into a syndromic surveillance s...
There is increasing demand for ways to use syndromic surveillance data for population health surveil...
To develop a nontraumatic oral health classification that could es-timate the burden of oral health-...
In a syndromic dual use application, North Carolina emergency department (ED) visits for oral health...
Using the chief complaint field from our established syndromic ED system, we developed definitions f...
ObjectiveThe objective was to use syndromic surveillance data from the North Carolina Disease Event ...
Syndromic surveillance (SS) data has predominantly been used for surveillance of infectious disease ...
Syndromic surveillance is used by state agencies to collect real-time information on disease outbrea...
To utilize an established syndromic reporting system for surveil-lance of potentially preventable em...
Syndromic surveillance is a relatively new tool being explored for early detection of disease outbre...
Discusses the current state of syndromic surveillance using inpatient and ambulatory clinical data i...
Smoking is a significant risk factor for initiation and progression of oral diseases. A patient's cu...
The advent of Meaningful Use has allowed for the expansion of data collected at the hospital level a...
This presentation will review the process and the details of the recommendations developed by the mu...
Early detection of a new outbreak or new information about a public health issue could prevent morbi...
This poster presentation will describe the inclusion of triage notes into a syndromic surveillance s...
There is increasing demand for ways to use syndromic surveillance data for population health surveil...
To develop a nontraumatic oral health classification that could es-timate the burden of oral health-...
In a syndromic dual use application, North Carolina emergency department (ED) visits for oral health...
Using the chief complaint field from our established syndromic ED system, we developed definitions f...
ObjectiveThe objective was to use syndromic surveillance data from the North Carolina Disease Event ...
Syndromic surveillance (SS) data has predominantly been used for surveillance of infectious disease ...
Syndromic surveillance is used by state agencies to collect real-time information on disease outbrea...
To utilize an established syndromic reporting system for surveil-lance of potentially preventable em...
Syndromic surveillance is a relatively new tool being explored for early detection of disease outbre...
Discusses the current state of syndromic surveillance using inpatient and ambulatory clinical data i...
Smoking is a significant risk factor for initiation and progression of oral diseases. A patient's cu...
The advent of Meaningful Use has allowed for the expansion of data collected at the hospital level a...
This presentation will review the process and the details of the recommendations developed by the mu...
Early detection of a new outbreak or new information about a public health issue could prevent morbi...
This poster presentation will describe the inclusion of triage notes into a syndromic surveillance s...