连接生物监测门户网站和机构分析人员的国际网络,以检测生物威胁。

Flavia Riccardo, Mika Shigematsu, Catherine Chow, C Jason McKnight, Jens Linge, Brian Doherty, Maria Grazia Dente, Silvia Declich, Mike Barker, Philippe Barboza, Laetitia Vaillant, Alastair Donachie, Abla Mawudeku, Michael Blench, Ray Arthur
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引用次数: 6

摘要

预警和报告项目于2008年启动,目的是改进全球预警和风险评估,并评估将生物、化学、放射性核(CBRN)和大流行性流感威胁分析结合起来的可行性和机会。在基于事件的监测领域没有国际合作的情况下,EAR的创新方法在名为“全球卫生安全倡议”的国际合作框架内让流行病情报专家和基于互联网的生物监测系统提供者参与,该倡议由七国集团国家和墨西哥的卫生部、世界卫生组织和欧洲委员会参与。EAR项目在加拿大、欧洲疾病预防控制中心、法国、德国、意大利、日本、英国和美国公共卫生机构的流行病情报专家的指导下,将来自7个主要基于互联网的生物监测系统的数据汇集到一个共同门户网站,逐步优化以检测生物威胁。该小组成为EAR门户网站的第一批最终用户,组成了一个分析人员网络,使用共同的标准操作程序和风险评估工具轮流工作,不断筛选和评估网络上的公共信息,以发现可能表明有意释放生物制剂的事件。在第一个为期两年的试点阶段之后,对EAR项目监测生物威胁的能力进行了测试,证明其工作模式是可行的,并表明有关国家和国际机构的高度承诺。在测试期间,使用EAR平台的分析人员没有错过生物性质的故意事件,也没有发出假警报。通过这一初步评估的结果,本文提供了如何通过国际网络推进流行病情报领域的见解,更具体地说,是如何在EAR项目中进一步发展流行病情报的见解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Interfacing a biosurveillance portal and an international network of institutional analysts to detect biological threats.

Interfacing a biosurveillance portal and an international network of institutional analysts to detect biological threats.

Interfacing a biosurveillance portal and an international network of institutional analysts to detect biological threats.

The Early Alerting and Reporting (EAR) project, launched in 2008, is aimed at improving global early alerting and risk assessment and evaluating the feasibility and opportunity of integrating the analysis of biological, chemical, radionuclear (CBRN), and pandemic influenza threats. At a time when no international collaborations existed in the field of event-based surveillance, EAR's innovative approach involved both epidemic intelligence experts and internet-based biosurveillance system providers in the framework of an international collaboration called the Global Health Security Initiative, which involved the ministries of health of the G7 countries and Mexico, the World Health Organization, and the European Commission. The EAR project pooled data from 7 major internet-based biosurveillance systems onto a common portal that was progressively optimized for biological threat detection under the guidance of epidemic intelligence experts from public health institutions in Canada, the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States. The group became the first end users of the EAR portal, constituting a network of analysts working with a common standard operating procedure and risk assessment tools on a rotation basis to constantly screen and assess public information on the web for events that could suggest an intentional release of biological agents. Following the first 2-year pilot phase, the EAR project was tested in its capacity to monitor biological threats, proving that its working model was feasible and demonstrating the high commitment of the countries and international institutions involved. During the testing period, analysts using the EAR platform did not miss intentional events of a biological nature and did not issue false alarms. Through the findings of this initial assessment, this article provides insights into how the field of epidemic intelligence can advance through an international network and, more specifically, how it was further developed in the EAR project.

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