6533b838fe1ef96bd12a4782
RESEARCH PRODUCT
FluDetWeb: an interactive web-based system for the early detection of the onset of influenza epidemics
Francisco VerdejoMiguel A. Martinez-beneitoDavid ConesaMaria Teresa MirallesAntonio López-quílezsubject
Web serverComputer sciencePosterior probabilityHealth Informaticscomputer.software_genrelcsh:Computer applications to medicine. Medical informaticsHealth informaticsDisease OutbreaksWorld Wide WebUser-Computer InterfaceSoftwareComputer SystemsInfluenza HumanHumansWeb applicationInternetbusiness.industryHealth PolicyUsabilityUnited StatesComputer Science ApplicationsIdentification (information)Population Surveillancelcsh:R858-859.7The InternetSoftware engineeringbusinesscomputerSoftwaredescription
Abstract Background The early identification of influenza outbreaks has became a priority in public health practice. A large variety of statistical algorithms for the automated monitoring of influenza surveillance have been proposed, but most of them require not only a lot of computational effort but also operation of sometimes not-so-friendly software. Results In this paper, we introduce FluDetWeb, an implementation of a prospective influenza surveillance methodology based on a client-server architecture with a thin (web-based) client application design. Users can introduce and edit their own data consisting of a series of weekly influenza incidence rates. The system returns the probability of being in an epidemic phase (via e-mail if desired). When the probability is greater than 0.5, it also returns the probability of an increase in the incidence rate during the following week. The system also provides two complementary graphs. This system has been implemented using statistical free-software (ℝ and WinBUGS), a web server environment for Java code (Tomcat) and a software module created by us (Rdp) responsible for managing internal tasks; the software package MySQL has been used to construct the database management system. The implementation is available on-line from: http://www.geeitema.org/meviepi/fludetweb/. Conclusion The ease of use of FluDetWeb and its on-line availability can make it a valuable tool for public health practitioners who want to obtain information about the probability that their system is in an epidemic phase. Moreover, the architecture described can also be useful for developers of systems based on computationally intensive methods.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2009-07-01 | BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making |