http://www.news24.com/News24/Technology/News/0,,2-13-1443_2126614,00.html

IBM unleashes pandemic tool
08/06/2007 13:42  - (SA) 


San Francisco - IBM researchers released free software on Friday to help
public health officials prevent pandemics of diseases such as bird flu or
dengue fever. 

IBM's Spatiotemporal Epidemiological Modeler (STEM) is a tool for public
health scientists worldwide to forecast how diseases will spread in the same
way meteorologists predict the paths of storms, according to researchers. 


"STEM will allow public health officials to model the spread of a disease
much like modeling a storm or hurricane," said Joseph Jasinski, IBM
Healthcare and Life Sciences engineer. 


He said: "It allows us to produce a public health 'weather map' for the
spread of a particular disease. 


"Until now, it has been difficult to simulate health crisis scenarios on a
global scale. STEM gives us the power to do that." 


IBM's open-source software is available to scientists, researchers and
public health protectors worldwide through the nonprofit Eclipse Foundation,
according to lead STEM researcher Dan Ford.

Provides 'base information' 

"We noticed several years ago that the people who would supposedly help us
react to avian influenza were a very divided lot; isolated in countries and
focused on things related to their funding sources," Ford said. 


"With STEM we created a tool that can act as a unifying platform to form a
community that, hopefully, is global." 


The software is a refinement of software IBM released three years ago. 


The program provides base information, such as road maps and
macro-economics, and allows public health officials to "tweak" it with local
details such as air traffic patterns. 


Information available from anywhere in the world can be added to customise
programs that forecast how particular diseases will likely spread in local
regions, Ford said. 


"You might have someone that is an expert in the mathematics of disease
propagation and another person with useful data like migratory bird paths,"
Ford said. "This tool lets them put their expertise together and share it." 


Won't 'predict future' 


The software is simple enough to run on a typical laptop computer, and the
open-source format means that it is public property and can be improved on
by anyone with the skill. 


STEM comes with basic disease models and the geographic layout of "pretty
much of the entire world" and can link to display results on internet giant
Google's mapping programme, according to IBM. 


"It is still in the early days, so there is a lot of work to do on the
project," said Ford, who works at IBM's Almaden Research Lab in California. 


"This isn't going to predict the future. What it will do is give insight
into where choke points might be and the magnitude of decisions. To a
researcher, this is a big boost." 


IBM said researchers from its Israel, China and United States labs have been
working on the project for nearly three years. 



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