Grants totaling about $11.5 million from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are going to three organizations for enhancing CDCs BioSense biosurveillance program and improving disease detection.
CDC has designated the three recipients as centers of excellence in public health informatics. They received three-year grants.
The New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene received about $3 million to implement and evaluate a model electronic health record system designed to support public health programs and epidemiological analysis, CDC announced Jan. 8.
The principal investigator for that project, Dr. Farzad Mostashari, is an assistant commissioner of that department and its top epidemiologist. Mostashari has criticized how CDC has developed BioSense, which bypasses traditional public health disease reporting processes in the interest of speedy information collection.
Johns Hopkins Universitys Applied Physics Laboratory in Baltimore received a $4 million grant to investigate new technologies which will improve the timeliness and accuracy of electronic disease surveillance systems and enhance the development of a national disease surveillance network, CDCs news release said.
The principal investigator for that laboratorys project, Joseph Lombardo, worked for several years on developing the Defense Departments ESSENCE surveillance system.
The third and largest grant went to the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. The $4.5 million project there, headed by Dr. Matthew Samore, will investigate new technologies which will improve the timeliness and accuracy of electronic disease surveillance systems and enhance the development of a national disease surveillance network, the release said.
The goal of this funding will be identifying new tools and methods to enhance health information sharing and ultimately lead to the adoption of a nationwide, technology-based, integrated health care surveillance system. We hope well be able to detect emerging public health threats earlier and more efficiently, said Dr. Steve Solomon, director of the Coordinating Center for Health Information and Service at CDC.
From the battlefield to the home front: Managing medical data
Government Health IT presents Col. Claude Hines Jr., program manager for the Defense Health Information Management System, in this recent InSight eSeminar. Col. Hines discusses the health information technology and tactical challenges faced by the military medical community in Iraq, Afghanistan and other areas of conflict. In doing so, he describes the current information technology solutions for transferring clinical data between battlefield care givers to health care personnel at military treatment facilities worldwide.