Father of infodemiology cries foul over Times coverage

The father of infodemiology and infoveillance (think, Google Flu Trends, which records your illness-related searches), writes to Parallelnormal.

Google ripped-off his idea, he says, and the Times neglected to contact him for its story about Flu Trends.

An excerpt, and link to the post, where you’ll find the comment from University of Toronto Professor Gunther Eysenbach, MD:

The NYT even goes so far to (wrongly) report that “Google Flu Trends appears to be the first public project that uses the powerful database of a search engine to track the emergence of a disease.”. Wrong – apparently this reporter didn’t do his homework or checked the published literature.

via Google the flu? The feds will see you « parallelnormal

Eysenbach’s definition of infodemiology, from 2002: “Describing and analyzing information and communication patterns and its relationship to population health status.”

ABC asks: In a Pandemic, Who Gets to Live?

Answer: Anyone who works for the government!

CC/Judy Baxter

*Some* drivers, pilots and relief workers will be allowed to live. Photo: CC/Judy Baxter

The threat, too, of more deaths after the pandemic, leaps off this page (link, excerpt, below):

The new study emphasizes that if essential workers fail to come through, the entire structure of any society will begin to unravel. And thus, the aftermath of the epidemic could claim more lives than the virus.

via ABC News: In a Pandemic, Who Gets to Live?

Google the flu? The feds will see you

His Google searches may have given him away. Photo: CC/Daniel Horacio Agostini

Prepare to be reading a hell of a lot about “infoveillance” and “infodemiology,” and for the major news outlets to continue making nice to Google.

That’s because the biggest “infodemiology” experiment to-date is about to take place, now that we are at the end of flu shot season.

Thanks to a new Google product, Google Flu Trends federal watchers will track Americans’ illnesses this winter, based upon the search engine terms they use.

Any flu-stricken sap searching Google for a cure will find himself under the microscope.

Where people bang out searches for “sniffles” or “flu,” an outbreak might be seen by the feds as taking hold in that community.

Several searches from a single street for “hacking” and “high fever” might trigger a quarantine.

Google is making the usual assurances that the data will be aggregated, anonymized, etc…

But I know of no regulatory body authorized to march into Google’s offices, to insure the company scrubbing anyone’s personally identifiable information.

I can see why the CDC would covet such data: it will give epidemiologists specifics (in addition to hospital admissions data) on the course of an outbreak.

Such a project will also show the feds which communities haven’t gotten the “everyone must get a fllu shot” memo.

See the New York Times report.

CDC: Widespread needle reuse at clinics

(RediClinic is one of the “retail” healthcare clinics turning up in malls and pharmacies. Image: RediClinic website)

CDC head Dr. Julie Gerberding tells the AP (excerpt, below) that a recent finding of unsafe practices at a Nevada healthcare clinic “could represent the tip of an iceberg.”

40,000 patients might have been exposed to HIV or hepatitis, due to needle reuse and other unsafe practices at the clinic.

The quickie clinic model, meanwhile, is catching on, for folks who want to get a look-see while waiting for a prescription, or one of the hundreds of vaccine jabs they will get in their lifetimes.

MinuteClinics, for example, are appearing at CVS pharmacy locations throughout the United States.

MinuteClinics is headed by the former CEO of Arby’s. — mb

The Associated Press: CDC Warns of Safety Problems at Clinics
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., met Monday with CDC head Dr. Julie Gerberding, and on a media conference call after their meeting both strongly condemned practices at the clinic.

Health care accreditors “would consider this a patient safety error that falls into the category of a ‘never event,’ meaning this should never happen in contemporary health care organizations,” said Gerberding.

“This is the largest number of patients that have ever been contacted for a blood exposure in a health-care setting. But unfortunately we have seen other large-scale situations where similar practices have led to patient exposures,” Gerberding said.

New Vaccine against Deadliest Strain of Avian Flu

Pandemic flu is inevitable, says this guy (below). CDC’s track record with the seasonal flu, which has already killed more than 20 U.S. children this year. The CDC has recreated the 1918 pandemic flu virus, however.

– mb


(Vaccine researcher Ted M. Ross, and a transmission electron micrograph of influenza virus particles, or virions. Images: UPMC and CDC)

New Vaccine against Deadliest Strain of Avian Flu Tested by University of Pittsburgh Scientists – UPMC, Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Ted M. Ross, Ph.D., lead author of the study and assistant professor, Center for Vaccine Research, University of Pittsburgh. “To stem the spread of a potential pandemic, we need stockpiles of vaccines available that can be readily adapted to enhance the immune system’s response to new strains.”

A future flu pandemic is inevitable because of the virus’s ability to continually reinvent itself and the lack of broad immunity in humans, according to Dr. Ross. Influenza pandemics have occurred three times throughout modern history with deadly consequences. The first, the Spanish Flu of 1918, caused more deaths than World War I.

Boston Globe: Despite vaccine, flu "rages"

They’re dropping like flies at Emmanuel College, in Boston… –mb

(Unsure: Plenty of vaccine to go around this year. But it’s the wrong stuff. Photo: CDC)

Flu virus widespread around New England – The Boston Globe
The strains of flu virus used to make this season’s vaccine aren’t a good match with what’s circulating, meaning that the shot provides a weaker shield of protection than in most years.
The evidence of that can be found in the Jamaica Plain offices of the Massachusetts Department of Public Health.

Cigarette lights up B.U. biolab

Cigarette to blame for fire at site of future biolab – BostonHerald.com
Boston Police and Fire departments responded quickly and in strong numbers to the construction site of the unfinished and highly controversial Boston University National Emerging Infectious Diseases Lab after a report of a fire on the building’s fifth floor at 620 Albany St.

Links: National Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratories