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Tagged: health, british columbia

Tuesday, February 07, 2012

A new map pinpoints well-defined areas of the Eastern United States where humans have the highest risk of contracting Lyme disease, one of the most rapidly emerging infectious diseases in North America, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. researchers found high infection risk confined mainly to the Northeast, Mid-Atlantic and Upper Midwest and low risk in the South. The results were published in the February issue of the American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

- press release

How do you figure out where to off teen health services in Gaston, North Carolina?

To decide where the satellite services were needed, officials used county GIS mapping data to see where teenage clients live. An emphasis was placed on pinpointing teens classified as being “at-risk” for not getting the services they need, [ the health department’s medical director, Velma] Taormina said.

“Gastonia had the most teens, but there were also hot spots around the county,” she said. “To address that, we chose to expand our clinical services for teens to those Bessemer City and Cherryville locations. Teens there may have transportation issues with getting to Gastonia.”

- Gaston Gazette

Billed as the first official British Columbia government mobile application, the BC Health Services Locator launched Monday on Apple's iTunes app store.

- Vancouver Sun

by Adena Schutzberg on 02/07 at 05:45 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Monday, January 23, 2012

Here, we examine visually, through a series of maps, the association between obesity, diabetes, and sedentary transportation.

The maps are striking, but Anne Price and Ariel Godwin conclude:

... the relationship between sedentary travel and health outcomes can be misleading when additional contributing factors are not taken into account. While it is not our intent to claim a direct causal link between transportation modes and obesity rates, it is hard to deny the existence of some geographic patterns.

- Planetizen

Health Canada is drafting national guidelines for electricity-generating wind turbines that will establish a recommended minimum safe distance between the structures and homes. ...The Health Canada guidelines will deal with noise and shadow flicker, and will account for the power of the turbine, the size of the blade and local geography, [Dr. Moira] McKinnon [Saskatchewan's chief medical health office] said.

No doubt they'll need ot use GIS, once they figure out the details to manage noise and other impacts.

The Phoenix Star

The [second edition of the online] British Columbia Atlas of Wellness shows that northerners are more likely to smoke, eat unhealthy food and die sooner than their counterparts in Vancouver and Victoria.

- Times Colonist

Earlier this week, the Missouri Hospital Association launched www.MissouriHealthMatters.com. I recommend checking it out. The site contains quality of care and patient satisfaction data filtered through GIS technology with hospital specific information in a dashboard format. My thanks to David Dillon, MHA's VP of media relations, for giving me the heads-up on the website. I can attest to David's observation that the reports contain the same data as reported to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, "however the interface is much more user-friendly and locally-focused."

It uses ArcGIS Explorer Onilne, which took a while to load on my machine.

- Columbia Tribune

A RESEARCH OBSERVATORY based at NUI Maynooth [Kildare, Ireland] have unveiled a new online mapping tool that aims to show exactly how some parts of Ireland are covered by hospitals or schools.

The accessibility map, produced by the All-Island Research Observatory, highlights areas based on their proximity to facilities like hospitals, primary schools and secondary schools.

The map helps show diparities in services.

- The Journal.IE

by Adena Schutzberg on 01/23 at 05:45 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Thursday, July 21, 2011

On Monday, the American Trauma Society released an interactive map that allows users to gauge availability of care across the entire U.S. You can pick a location — searchable by state, congressional district or ZIP code — and figure out whether it falls within a "safety" zone: an area in which you're within 45 minutes to an hour away from advanced trauma care, either by ambulance or helicopter, in case of a health emergency.

Tech is Esri (and very slow when I visited; basemap: OSM.

- Time

There's a distinct pattern for organ donors in British Columbia:

British Columbia has 187 postal areas and five out of the six lowest forms a solid block in east Vancouver and north Richmond.

Those areas with about 10% participation in donations includes many new immigrants where language and cultural barriers may limit who hears about and feels comfortable signing up for a donation. The map, I'm guessing built with Google Fusion Tables has no legend.

- Global Edmonton

Dr. Daniel Griffith, professor of geospatial analysis at UT Dallas’ School of Economic, Political and Policy Sciences, has been selected by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to aid a review of the health effects of atrazine, a herbicide used extensively in farming. ...

 

Specifically, Griffith will be responsible for the assessment of geographic sampling, spatial statistics and spatial epidemiological issues. For example, he’ll use his expertise in spatial statistics to review the water monitoring networks that the EPA uses to study the contamination impact of atrazine seeping into rivers, reservoirs and watersheds that are sources of community water supplies. Griffith will study where the monitors are located and the frequency of data that is collected from them.

- UT Dallas press release

by Adena Schutzberg on 07/21 at 06:42 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

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