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Best practices for integrating big data into the everyday public health practice
This talk will focus on how public health agencies can move Big Data from an abstract concept to a part of everyday public health practices. Fundamental to this transformation is the need for each public health agency to define a Big Data strategy that supports their mission and objectives. As an extension of the strategy, public health agencies must then carefully inventory and assess their data repositories. This is not a trivial task and requires careful assessment of the actual data versus the expected data. A Big Data roadmap can then be formed that implements the strategy based on the data available to the agency. Key to an achievable road map is walking before you run. Public health agencies have to start with Big Data projects where value can be realized in days and weeks versus months and years. This incremental approach provides agencies the opportunities to rapidly learn from their mistakes without disrupting the public health practice.
As public health agencies continuously execute the Big Data roadmap, they will build the best practices and repeatable processes that work for them based on their operational realities, available resources, and data sets.
Epidemiology
Public health or related research
Learning Objectives:
Identify 2 best practices for implementing Big Data within public health agencies
Keywords: Data/Surveillance, Information Technology
Qualified on the content I am responsible for because: For the last 13 years I have developed and implemented complex systems and data analytic solutions to state departments across the United States and federal agencies (CDC, NIOSH) focused on the use of innovate technologies to reduce costs while expanding public health capacity. Specifically, I have applied informatics based principles to allow public health practitioners to extract meaning from disparate data sources through data warehousing and business intelligence solutions.
Any relevant financial relationships? No
I agree to comply with the American Public Health Association Conflict of Interest and Commercial Support Guidelines, and to disclose to the participants any off-label or experimental uses of a commercial product or service discussed in my presentation.