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1 nd Internet-based data collection for public health surveillance.
2 undamental to biomedical research and public health surveillance.
3 e comprehensiveness and timeliness of public health surveillance.
4 ence of acquired cardiovascular disease, and health surveillance.
5 settings are a valuable location for public health surveillance.
6 ly, meat inspection provides data for animal health surveillance.
7 it a scalable solution for real-time public health surveillance.
8 it is a promising tool for supporting public-health surveillance.
9 typically not included in trials, and public health surveillance.
10 asible IMI case prediction models for public health surveillance.
11 idance for the wastewater approach to public health surveillance.
12 etive and predictive platforms for real-time health surveillance.
13 s critical for clinical diagnosis and public health surveillance.
14 insights for clinical management and public health surveillance.
15 h remains the most widespread form of public health surveillance.
16 cifically addressed ethical issues in public health surveillance.
17 lications in clinical diagnostics and public health surveillance.
18 detection for clinical diagnosis and public health surveillance.
19 ghtly focused on ethics applicable to public health surveillance.
20 l diagnostics, infection control, and public health surveillance.
21 o inform patient treatment and enable public health surveillance.
22 s and their role in clinical care and public health surveillance.
23 rming hospital-specific policies, and public health surveillance.
24 and management of tuberculosis and in public health surveillance.
25 lies as proxies for environmental and public health surveillance.
26 rus strains is an important aspect of global health surveillance.
27 y deployed surveys may hold value for public health surveillance.
28 rtant implications for clinical practice and health surveillance.
29 -related respiratory symptoms during routine health surveillance.
30 in various matrices is essential for public health surveillance.
31 It is time to shake up public health surveillance.
32 S) as collected under the auspices of public health surveillance.
33 ions and assist infection control and public health surveillance.
34 and underscore the need for continued public health surveillance.
35 ity of form CMS-2728 for research and public health surveillance.
36 comprehensively validated for use in public health surveillance.
37 tifying novel data sources to enhance public health surveillance.
38 fetal origins of adult health, and for pubic health surveillance.
39 ons in disease diagnostics as well as normal health surveillance.
42 ring institutions (piped water suppliers and health surveillance agencies in six countries) and estim
43 um tolerated values recommended by Brazilian Health Surveillance Agency (Agencia Nacional de Vigilanc
47 des have been proposed as a method of public health surveillance and are widely used in public health
48 access to HIV-1 prevention and care, public health surveillance and control programmes should be gre
50 tors using data from the China Nutrition and Health Surveillance and derived mortality rates from the
51 ld be missed throughout much of Africa where health surveillance and diagnostics are poor and comorbi
53 nced data, enhances WBE precision for public health surveillance and environmental risk assessment.
54 th achondroplasia (birth to 16 y of age) for health surveillance and future research to determine ass
55 These models will aid in establishing public health surveillance and guide strategic vaccination prog
57 e of our unique access to Connecticut public health surveillance and hospital data and our direct con
59 9) testing is a critical component of public health surveillance and pandemic control, especially amo
60 e-associated infections indicate that public health surveillance and prevention activities should con
61 r, underscoring the importance of integrated health surveillance and preventive strategies that encom
62 , and physiology currently influences global health surveillance and research in disease ecology, vir
63 he importance of advanced planning of public health surveillance and response at these religious even
64 t eliminate all of the uncertainty in public health surveillance and subsequent decision-making, we m
66 light the need for more investment in public health surveillance and ultimately, assays that are not
68 ment, advances in health research and public health surveillance, and modern security techniques.
69 l for environmental monitoring, occupational health surveillance, and personalized health management.
70 of sequencing in clinical diagnoses, public health surveillance, and population genetics studies.
73 sed socioeconomic measures in routine public health surveillance, and to reinforce policies and progr
75 essing these gaps requires an integrated One Health surveillance approach, which is challenging to es
76 ommendations reflect the necessity of mental health surveillance as part of comprehensive survivor-fo
77 Patient data were acquired through public health surveillance as part of National Notifiable Disea
79 S: Active, nationally representative, public health surveillance based on patient visits to 60 EDs in
81 S Department of Defense and the Armed Forces Health Surveillance Branch and its Global Emerging Infec
82 e Oswaldo Cruz Foundation and Secretariat of Health Surveillance, Brazilian Ministry of Health, the N
83 enhance clinical decision-making and public health surveillance by reducing the risk of missed H5N1
84 whole-genome sequencing into routine public health surveillance can enable the early detection and l
86 ore they are detected via clinical or public health surveillance, can inform strategies for preventio
88 the US Department of Defense's Armed Forces Health Surveillance Center Defense Medical Ecounter Data
90 tudy was conducted using routinely collected health surveillance data and chloroplatinate exposure da
91 tudies, for interpreting clinical and public health surveillance data and for the design and implemen
92 ectional analysis of population-based public health surveillance data assessed the sociodemographic,
94 aive forecasts that rely only on past public health surveillance data may not reliably represent noro
95 l-level socioeconomic information in most US health surveillance data necessitates using area-based s
96 s conducted a case-cohort study using public health surveillance data sets to examine perinatal risk
98 00 people with a PrEP indication) and public health surveillance data to document HIV diagnoses from
101 of enteric pathogens is essential for public health surveillance, detection, and tracking of outbreak
102 nclude links between the environment and One Health, surveillance, diagnostics, routes of transmissio
105 asma specimens, which will strengthen public health surveillance efforts for HAV outbreak detection a
106 improve both clinical diagnostics and public health surveillance efforts in multiple areas, including
107 tudy highlights the utility of UDT in public health surveillance efforts related to patients treated
108 nd this modeling approach complements public health surveillance efforts to identify areas with a hig
113 not clear, and the evidence base for public health surveillance, epidemiology, and response at event
114 veloped throughout South America towards One Health surveillance, focusing on zoonotic pathogens, and
115 ractice guideline strongly recommends mental health surveillance for all survivors of childhood, adol
117 The practical implications are that public health surveillance for artemisinin resistance should no
121 infection could improve diagnosis and public health surveillance for Jamestown Canyon virus disease.
122 are a vulnerable group in need of long-term health surveillance for psychiatric disorders and somati
123 olecular subtyping could be useful in public health surveillance for S. enterica serotype typhimurium
124 ated opportunities to develop unified public health surveillance for this disorder and its complicati
126 electronic health records for vision and eye health surveillance has both advantages and disadvantage
127 hors note that defining activities as public health surveillance has important implications, because
128 investigation of patients reported to public health surveillance hospitalized with SARS-CoV-2-related
129 y are still useful for the purpose of public health surveillance if they can be corroborated by empir
130 nical HF registries as a platform for public health surveillance, implementation research, and random
131 ting, care, and treatment; strengthen public health surveillance; improve HCV preventive services for
132 s: Active, nationally representative, public health surveillance in 58 EDs located in the United Stat
135 Data from a parallel system of reproductive health surveillance in Matlab were used to clarify study
136 f this epidemic, as well as to contribute to health surveillance in monitoring possible future epidem
138 vised Common Rule expressly addresses public health surveillance in relation to scientific research a
140 ise international recommendations for mental health surveillance in survivors of childhood, adolescen
141 rgency Medical Service (EMS) records and the Health Surveillance Information System of patients assis
144 ion-based study was conducted under a public health surveillance mandate from the US Food and Drug Ad
147 lready beginning to revolutionise how public health surveillance networks monitor and tackle bacteria
149 of Google search trends in augmented public health surveillance of alcohol-related healthcare needs
150 AND PARTICIPANTS: Statewide enhanced public health surveillance of California residents who were hos
152 SARS-COV-2 variants is important for public health surveillance of potential viral threats and for e
154 eaves little time or resources for organized health surveillance of the affected population, and even
156 e research such as vaccine trials and public health surveillance of tick-borne disease patterns.
158 s of LTBI screening and treatment for public health surveillance or disease management were excluded.
159 BI screening and treatment is part of public health surveillance or disease management were excluded.
160 ry and have numerous applications for public health surveillance, outbreak investigation, and the dia
161 havior, are needed to improve routine public health surveillance, outbreak response, and pandemic pre
163 d as "a serious and current threat to public health surveillance, particularly for Shiga toxin-produc
165 y demonstrates the utility of GMM for public health surveillance, planning, and equitable response st
167 onal Safety and Health (NIOSH) Coal Workers' Health Surveillance Program (CWHSP) is a surveillance pr
168 Mexico HPV Pap Registry, a statewide public health surveillance program, receives mandatory reportin
170 bidity Record [SMR] 01, SMR02, and the Child Health Surveillance Programme-Pre School), linking birth
177 vides open access to both traditional public health surveillance signals (cases, deaths, and hospital
178 data of 12,167 individuals from a network of health surveillance sites (the South Asia Biobank) to th
179 st ever recorded; data collected from public health surveillance sources can help to identify emergin
180 dividual impacts the clinical management and health surveillance strategies in the index patient and
182 e deployed in human biomonitoring and public health surveillance studies to guide policy intervention
183 ne-off nature, innovative tactics for public health surveillance, such as crowdsourcing digital weara
185 y were linked with data from demographic and health surveillance surveys with a unique identifier com
186 isease Control and Prevention Vision and Eye Health Surveillance System (VEHSS) as well as clinical a
187 FFS) enrollment data from the Vision and Eye Health Surveillance System (VEHSS) to examine ophthalmic
191 (2) cases identified through the Catalonian Health Surveillance System of children diagnosed with SA
192 with the monthly South Australian population health surveillance system report of randomly selected p
194 ty collected in the China Maternal and Child Health Surveillance System to generate representative es
196 paring persons reported to the Department of Health surveillance system with patients listed in the N
197 aningfully to a comprehensive vision and eye health surveillance system, but none currently provide a
203 biology, inference of transmission in public health surveillance systems and more generally for WGS a
204 e identified opportunities to improve public health surveillance systems and uses of data for plannin
208 hey could more easily go unnoticed by public health surveillance systems than Asian strains due to th
210 urgent need for better regional and national health surveillance systems to underpin efforts to addre
212 utlined herein may be applied to refine oral health surveillance systems, inform dental epidemiologic
213 e paucity of socioeconomic data in US public health surveillance systems, no consensus exists as to w
214 This justifies the development of patient health surveillance systems, that can continuously monit
219 is given of a model-based approach to public health surveillance that has been effective in quantifyi
220 the move to a public health approach through health surveillance, this may increase the quality of ev
222 rovide rapid, cost-effective, year-round One Health surveillance to help control IAV epidemic and pan
223 findings emphasize the importance of public health surveillance to identify potential issues with co
226 S-CoV-2 antibody tests for diagnosis, public health surveillance, vaccine development and the selecti
228 ay not be suitable for key aspects of public health surveillance where it is now extensively applied.
229 e linked data from a longitudinal population health surveillance (which is maintained by the Africa H
230 e (2003 to 2013), and compared weekly public health surveillance with search query data to characteri