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. 2011 Jun;9(2):89-115.
doi: 10.1089/bsp.2011.0007.

Improving the evidence base for decision making during a pandemic: the example of 2009 influenza A/H1N1

Collaborators, Affiliations

Improving the evidence base for decision making during a pandemic: the example of 2009 influenza A/H1N1

Marc Lipsitch et al. Biosecur Bioterror. 2011 Jun.

Abstract

This article synthesizes and extends discussions held during an international meeting on "Surveillance for Decision Making: The Example of 2009 Pandemic Influenza A/H1N1," held at the Center for Communicable Disease Dynamics (CCDD), Harvard School of Public Health, on June 14 and 15, 2010. The meeting involved local, national, and global health authorities and academics representing 7 countries on 4 continents. We define the needs for surveillance in terms of the key decisions that must be made in response to a pandemic: how large a response to mount and which control measures to implement, for whom, and when. In doing so, we specify the quantitative evidence required to make informed decisions. We then describe the sources of surveillance and other population-based data that can presently--or in the future--form the basis for such evidence, and the interpretive tools needed to process raw surveillance data. We describe other inputs to decision making besides epidemiologic and surveillance data, and we conclude with key lessons of the 2009 pandemic for designing and planning surveillance in the future.

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Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
A schematic view of the public health decisions required in a pandemic response, the evidence needed to make these decisions in an informed fashion, and the sources of data and interpretive tools necessary to generate this evidence. The numbers under “surveillance inputs” follow the order of section 2. Color images available online at www.liebertonline.com/bsp

References

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