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    Date Issued2020 (1)2017 (1)AuthorLassmann, Britta (2)Madoff, Lawrence C. (2)
    Ramatowski, John W. (2)
    Desai, Angel N. (1)Guerra, Winter (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases and Immunology (2)Document TypeJournal Article (2)KeywordImmunology and Infectious Disease (2)Infectious Disease (2)Computer Sciences (1)Emerging infectious diseases (1)Epidemiology (1)View MoreJournalConflict and health (1)International journal of infectious diseases : IJID : official publication of the International Society for Infectious Diseases (1)

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    Infectious disease outbreaks among forcibly displaced persons: an analysis of ProMED reports 1996-2016

    Desai, Angel N.; Ramatowski, John W.; Marano, Nina; Madoff, Lawrence C.; Lassmann, Britta (2020-07-22)
    Background: The United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR) estimates the number of forcibly displaced people increased from 22.7 million people in 1996 to 67.7 million people in 2016. Human mobility is associated with the introduction of infectious disease pathogens. The aim of this study was to describe the range of pathogens in forcibly displaced populations over time using an informal event monitoring system. Methods: We conducted a retrospective analysis of ProMED, a digital disease monitoring system, to identify reports of outbreak events involving forcibly displaced populations between 1996 and 2016. Number of outbreak events per year was tabulated. Each record was assessed to determine outbreak location, pathogen, origin of persons implicated in the outbreak, and suspected versus confirmed case counts. Results: One hundred twenty-eight independent outbreak events involving forcibly displaced populations were identified. Over 840,000 confirmed or suspected cases of infectious diseases such as measles, cholera, cutaneous leishmaniasis, dengue, and others were reported in 48 destination countries/territories. The average rate of outbreak events concerning forcibly displaced persons per total number of reports published on ProMED per year increased over time. The majority of outbreak events (63%) were due to acquisition of disease in the destination country. Conclusion: This study found that reports of outbreak events involving forcibly displaced populations have increased in ProMED. The events and outbreaks detected in this retrospective review underscore the importance of capturing displaced populations in surveillance systems for rapid detection and response.
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    Planning an innovation marathon at an infectious disease conference with results from the International Meeting on Emerging Diseases and Surveillance 2016 Hackathon

    Ramatowski, John W.; Lee, Christopher Xiang; Mantzavino, Aikaterini; Ribas, Joao; Guerra, Winter; Preston, Nicholas D.; Schernhammer, Eva; Madoff, Lawrence C.; Lassmann, Britta (2017-12-01)
    A hackathon is best described as an 'innovation marathon'. Derived from the words 'hacking' and 'marathon', it brings together multidisciplinary teams to collaborate intensely over a short period of time to define a problem, devise a solution, and design a working prototype. International scientific meetings are conducive to successful hackathons, providing an audience of expert professionals who describe challenges and ensure the proposed solutions address end-user needs. Collaborations with local organizations and academic centers are crucial to attracting complementary specialties such as IT advisors, engineers, and entrepreneurs to develop sustainable projects. The core process of first identifying and deconstructing a problem followed by solution iteration is applicable to challenges at workplaces around the world. Ultimately, this model can be used to drive innovation and catalyze change in the global health community. The planning, execution, and outcomes of a hackathon event organized in conjunction with the International Meeting on Emerging Diseases and Surveillance (IMED 2016) are described in this article. Physicians, public health practitioners, veterinarians, IT professionals, engineers, and entrepreneurs came together for 2 days to develop solutions at the intersection of emerging infectious diseases and climate change. Projects that resulted from the IMED 2016 Hackathon included environmental impact assessment software for humanitarian organization relief efforts; enhanced communication tools to prevent disease outbreaks; a participatory mobile application to speed the elimination of rabies in Indonesia; integrated disease surveillance platforms; and an improved search function for infectious disease outbreak reports in the ProMED-mail network.
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