The National Academies

The National Academies: What You Need To Know About Infectious Disease

What You Need To Know About Infectious Disease

Modeling Community Containment for Pandemic Influenza: A Letter Report (2006)

As the influenza virus continues to evolve and develop resistance to available pharmaceutical drugs, scientists and policymakers are concerned that the world may be hit with a pandemic that cannot be contained by vaccines and antivirals. If this is the case, nonpharmaceutical community containment strategies may be vital to helping protect the public against influenza outbreaks. The Institute of Medicine convened a committee to examine influenza epidemiology, existing containment models, and historical responses to influenza pandemics in order to assess the utility of community wide intervention strategies and make recommendations to policymakers. Modeling Community Containment for Pandemic Influenza is a letter summarizing this committee meeting.

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What do you know about infectious disease?

Public health officials can identify the outbreak of disease by monitoring certain patterns of behavior through syndromic surveillance. Which of the following is one of the signs used to identify a disease outbreak using this system?

  • Sorry, that’s incorrect.

    In syndromic surveillance, all of the above are used in addition to other patterns that suggest an outbreak. Despite the emergence of this innovative surveillance method, most surveillance still depends on tracking reported infections. 

  • Sorry, that’s incorrect.

    In syndromic surveillance, all of the above are used in addition to other patterns that suggest an outbreak. Despite the emergence of this innovative surveillance method, most surveillance still depends on tracking reported infections. 

  • Sorry, that’s incorrect.

    In syndromic surveillance, all of the above are used in addition to other patterns that suggest an outbreak. Despite the emergence of this innovative surveillance method, most surveillance still depends on tracking reported infections. 

  • Correct!

    In syndromic surveillance, all of the above are used in addition to other patterns that suggest an outbreak. Despite the emergence of this innovative surveillance method, most surveillance still depends on tracking reported infections.