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Weapon
against epidemics: Cell phones |

Workers in Kenya use EpiSurveyor for the first time
nationwide during this year's children's health week.
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Cell phone technology is
helping developing nations prepare for disease threats
such as a new strain of swine flu, an outbreak of measles
or the increased spread of HIV.
Kenya proved it in 2007, when the East African nation
suffered its first case of the polio virus in more than 20
years, said Yusuf Ajack Ibrahim, a health care worker at
the Kenyan Ministry of Public Health and Sanitation.
As thousands of Somalis fled to Kenya to avoid violence in
their homeland, the exodus
sparked a serious health crisis, Ibrahim said.
"One case of confirmed wild polio virus put at risk the
lives of 100,000 children," he said.
Kenyan health officials determined that they needed a way
to quickly survey and assess the situation and initiate a
massive immunization campaign.
The solution was on the Internet, where they found a free,
open-source application designed for personal digital
assistants, called EpiSurveyor. Open-source software is
posted online for anyone to use and alter to suit their
needs.
Downloading the software to cell phones enabled officials
to gather data directly from the site of the outbreak and
send it electronically back to headquarters for faster
analysis. This cuts down on the time officials have to
spend collecting paper surveys and analyzing them
individually before they can begin treating people.
"The information gave us useful feedback not only on the
affected area but on the
neighboring ones as well and helped us put plans and
measures in place to stop the spread of the virus,"
Ibrahim added.
Physician and epidemiologist Dr. Joel Selanikio predicts
that within a year, health officials will be using the
technology to track other threats in developing nations,
such as the recent Mexican swine flu outbreak.
Selanikio invented EpiSurveyor in 2003, after he and
American Red Cross technologist Rose Donna began searching
for a more efficient way to gather data on immerging
diseases.
They started a nonprofit organization, DataDyne, aiming to
use mobile devices to efficiently and immediately gather
public health information.
"Collecting data on paper and then taking two years to
enter the data is a tremendous drain and barrier to good
public health," said Selanikio, who teaches pediatrics at
Washington's Georgetown University Hospital.
Mobile devices such as PDAs or handheld computers have
been used for field studies since the late 1990s, but
electronic survey methods have traditionally been
expensive, labor-intensive and challenging to implement on
a global scale.
Many global health institutions are now encouraging the
use of advanced methodologies such as smart phones and
open-source software as the next generation of data
transmission, said Dr. Ramesh Krishnamurthy, an
informatics scientist at the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention.
EpiSurveyor frees health care workers from hiring
programmers to create electronic surveys. Data gatherers
can customize their questionnaires online, download the
questionnaires onto a cell phone that has Internet
capability, poll patients and do direct analysis, all
through a touch pad on a cell phone.

A Kenya Ministry of
Health worker collects health data from a woman and
her son. |
Ibrahim credits the
technology with saving Zambians who were threatened
by a frightening outbreak of measles in 2007.
The government didn't know that vaccine supplies
were low, he said. Using EpiSurveyor, health care
workers discovered that 60 percent of their vaccine
stockpiles in remote areas were missing. They
mobilized a response within three weeks, he said. |
"Imagine if we have an
outbreak of measles and the information is relayed to us
three
months after the outbreak. By the time we respond, lives
would have been lost, but if we can get the information in
a day or half a day, we an mount a quick response,"
Ibrahim said.
"By being able to relay the information at an appropriate
time, that -- in and of itself -- is life-saving," he
added.
Fans point out that EpiSurveyor's success hinges on ready
access to technology already in place.
"There are 4 billion mobile phones in the world; 2.2
billion of those are in the developing world," said Claire
Thwaites, who heads a partnership between the United
Nations Foundation and the Vodafone Foundation, which
funded EpiSurveyor.
Sixty-four percent of all mobile phone users live in the
developing world, according to a U.N. estimate. By 2012,
the U.N. believes, half of all residents in remote areas
of the world will have mobile phones.
Compare mobile ubiquity to the 305 million PCs or 11
million hospital beds in the developing world, Thwaites
said. The potential for mobile technology to help manage
health care is huge, she said.
With the help of the U.N.'s World Health Organization and
government health officials in more than 20 African
countries, more than 800 health care workers are now
trained to use this cell phone software, revolutionizing
the way health care data can be collected, monitored and
assessed.
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