Ali Mokdad from the Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation will be speaking 
next week in the computing and the developing world seminar.  There are 
tremendous challenges in conducting accurate public health surveys in the 
developing world  - Ali will be talking about these in the context of 
technology change.  This is a great opportunity to learn more about a very 
important domain, where there are many open computing and technology problems.


CSE 590f,  Wednesday,  January 21,  4:00-4:50 pm,  CSE 403.
Public Health Surveillance in a Changing Telecommunication Environment.
Dr. Ali Mokdad,  IHME and UW
The rapid changes in telecommunication technology has changed public health 
surveillance.  For example, response rates for most random digit dial (RDD) 
telephone surveys declined precipitously, leaving researchers to question the 
validity and reliability of these data.  The growth in telemarketing efforts, 
increased use of cellular telephones, advancements in caller-identification and 
call-screening technology, and the advent of "do not call" lists have helped to 
accelerate this drop in surveys participation.  As a result, several large 
surveillance system are using a "multi mode" approach to data collection by 
administering their surveys via the web,  mail, cellular telephone, and 
landline telephone.   The presentation will provide an overview of the 
challenges and solutions.
Dr. Mokdad recently joined the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at 
the University of Washington.  The main mission of IHME is to monitor global 
health conditions and health systems, as well as evaluate interventions, 
initiatives, and reforms. This will provide high quality and timely information 
on health so that policymakers, researchers, donors, practitioners, local 
decision-makers, and others can better allocate limited resources to achieve 
optimal results.

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: 
<http://changemm.cs.washington.edu/mailman/private/change/attachments/20090115/c18be923/attachment.html>

Reply via email to