Detecting disease outbreaks in mass gatherings using internet data

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Standard

Detecting disease outbreaks in mass gatherings using internet data. / Yom-Tov, Elad; Borsa, Diana; Cox, Ingemar Johansson; McKendry, Rachel A.

I: Journal of Medical Internet Research, Bind 16, Nr. 6, e154, 2014.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Yom-Tov, E, Borsa, D, Cox, IJ & McKendry, RA 2014, 'Detecting disease outbreaks in mass gatherings using internet data', Journal of Medical Internet Research, bind 16, nr. 6, e154. https://doi.org/10.2196/jmir.3156

APA

Yom-Tov, E., Borsa, D., Cox, I. J., & McKendry, R. A. (2014). Detecting disease outbreaks in mass gatherings using internet data. Journal of Medical Internet Research, 16(6), [e154]. https://doi.org/10.2196/jmir.3156

Vancouver

Yom-Tov E, Borsa D, Cox IJ, McKendry RA. Detecting disease outbreaks in mass gatherings using internet data. Journal of Medical Internet Research. 2014;16(6). e154. https://doi.org/10.2196/jmir.3156

Author

Yom-Tov, Elad ; Borsa, Diana ; Cox, Ingemar Johansson ; McKendry, Rachel A. / Detecting disease outbreaks in mass gatherings using internet data. I: Journal of Medical Internet Research. 2014 ; Bind 16, Nr. 6.

Bibtex

@article{6a9fdb83a14d4f90911106b6fff2f6b8,
title = "Detecting disease outbreaks in mass gatherings using internet data",
abstract = "Mass gatherings, such as music festivals and religious events, pose a health care challenge because of the risk of transmission of communicable diseases. This is exacerbated by the fact that participants disperse soon after the gathering, potentially spreading disease within their communities. The dispersion of participants also poses a challenge for traditional surveillance methods. The ubiquitous use of the Internet may enable the detection of disease outbreaks through analysis of data generated by users during events and shortly thereafter. Objective: The intent of the study was to develop algorithms that can alert to possible outbreaks of communicable diseases from Internet data, specifically Twitter and search engine queries. Methods: We extracted all Twitter postings and queries made to the Bing search engine by users who repeatedly mentioned one of nine major music festivals held in the United Kingdom and one religious event (the Hajj in Mecca) during 2012, for a period of 30 days and after each festival. We analyzed these data using three methods, two of which compared words associated with disease symptoms before and after the time of the festival, and one that compared the frequency of these words with those of other users in the United Kingdom in the days following the festivals. Results: The data comprised, on average, 7.5 million tweets made by 12,163 users, and 32,143 queries made by 1756 users from each festival. Our methods indicated the statistically significant appearance of a disease symptom in two of the nine festivals. For example, cough was detected at higher than expected levels following the Wakestock festival. Statistically significant agreement (chi-square test, P",
keywords = "Data mining, Infectious disease, Infodemiology, Information retrieval, Mass gatherings",
author = "Elad Yom-Tov and Diana Borsa and Cox, {Ingemar Johansson} and McKendry, {Rachel A.}",
year = "2014",
doi = "10.2196/jmir.3156",
language = "English",
volume = "16",
journal = "Journal of Medical Internet Research",
issn = "1439-4456",
publisher = "JMIR Publications",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Detecting disease outbreaks in mass gatherings using internet data

AU - Yom-Tov, Elad

AU - Borsa, Diana

AU - Cox, Ingemar Johansson

AU - McKendry, Rachel A.

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - Mass gatherings, such as music festivals and religious events, pose a health care challenge because of the risk of transmission of communicable diseases. This is exacerbated by the fact that participants disperse soon after the gathering, potentially spreading disease within their communities. The dispersion of participants also poses a challenge for traditional surveillance methods. The ubiquitous use of the Internet may enable the detection of disease outbreaks through analysis of data generated by users during events and shortly thereafter. Objective: The intent of the study was to develop algorithms that can alert to possible outbreaks of communicable diseases from Internet data, specifically Twitter and search engine queries. Methods: We extracted all Twitter postings and queries made to the Bing search engine by users who repeatedly mentioned one of nine major music festivals held in the United Kingdom and one religious event (the Hajj in Mecca) during 2012, for a period of 30 days and after each festival. We analyzed these data using three methods, two of which compared words associated with disease symptoms before and after the time of the festival, and one that compared the frequency of these words with those of other users in the United Kingdom in the days following the festivals. Results: The data comprised, on average, 7.5 million tweets made by 12,163 users, and 32,143 queries made by 1756 users from each festival. Our methods indicated the statistically significant appearance of a disease symptom in two of the nine festivals. For example, cough was detected at higher than expected levels following the Wakestock festival. Statistically significant agreement (chi-square test, P

AB - Mass gatherings, such as music festivals and religious events, pose a health care challenge because of the risk of transmission of communicable diseases. This is exacerbated by the fact that participants disperse soon after the gathering, potentially spreading disease within their communities. The dispersion of participants also poses a challenge for traditional surveillance methods. The ubiquitous use of the Internet may enable the detection of disease outbreaks through analysis of data generated by users during events and shortly thereafter. Objective: The intent of the study was to develop algorithms that can alert to possible outbreaks of communicable diseases from Internet data, specifically Twitter and search engine queries. Methods: We extracted all Twitter postings and queries made to the Bing search engine by users who repeatedly mentioned one of nine major music festivals held in the United Kingdom and one religious event (the Hajj in Mecca) during 2012, for a period of 30 days and after each festival. We analyzed these data using three methods, two of which compared words associated with disease symptoms before and after the time of the festival, and one that compared the frequency of these words with those of other users in the United Kingdom in the days following the festivals. Results: The data comprised, on average, 7.5 million tweets made by 12,163 users, and 32,143 queries made by 1756 users from each festival. Our methods indicated the statistically significant appearance of a disease symptom in two of the nine festivals. For example, cough was detected at higher than expected levels following the Wakestock festival. Statistically significant agreement (chi-square test, P

KW - Data mining

KW - Infectious disease

KW - Infodemiology

KW - Information retrieval

KW - Mass gatherings

U2 - 10.2196/jmir.3156

DO - 10.2196/jmir.3156

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 24943128

AN - SCOPUS:84906243474

VL - 16

JO - Journal of Medical Internet Research

JF - Journal of Medical Internet Research

SN - 1439-4456

IS - 6

M1 - e154

ER -

ID: 154523237