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Tagged: michigan

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

The University of Michigan's Center for Geospatial Medicine will use a $9.8 million federal grant to study Type 2 diabetes in four under-served counties in North Carolina, Mississippi and West Virginia. It focuses on those enrolled in Medicare, Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program.

"This will allow researchers to visualize complex relationships among the locations of diabetes patients, patterns of health care and available social resources," said Marie Lynn Miranda, dean of the U-M School of Natural Resources and Environment and director of the Center for Geospatial Medicine, in a news release. "The information will serve as the basis for intervention design, decision support and real-time monitoring of interventions."

The U-M program is working with a multi-state research team to reduce death and disability from the most common form of the disease. The center uses spatially based methods for analyzing environmental threats to communities.

- AnnArbor.com

Duke is in on it, too.

- press release

A study of malaria used GIS to remove environmental factors to explore if the disease is related to poverty. Does malaria cause poverty? Or the other way round? Or is there no connection?

Results show that households with a child who tested positive for malaria at the time of the survey had a wealth index that was, on average, 1.9 units lower (p-value <0.001), and that an increase in the wealth index did not reveal significant effects on malaria. 

As I understand it, that's correlation, not causation, at this point, but if there is a connection it could impact how intervention is attempted.

- 7th Space

The University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton Business School held the “Your Big Ideas Challenge,” for Penn Medicine and selected 10 submissions for further development.

One team developed a schedule maker to help visitors schedule appointments with healthcare professionals and physicians, find out what they need to bring to their appointments and fill out pre-visit questionnaires to save time. They can also print maps of the campuses they are traveling to. Users can add themselves to waiting lists if they want to make appointments for specific times and can get email or text message reminders of their appointments.

Another team developed a patient kiosk system where visitors can identify where their appointments are, or visit friends or family and map out a paths to get there.

Med City News

by Adena Schutzberg on 05/16 at 03:00 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share
Narrow your search further: diabetes, gis, health, malaria, michigan, navigation

Tuesday, May 01, 2012

The Texas Forest Service and Texas A&M University have unveiled a new Web application that will forewarn residents when conditions are ripe for wildfire. The free application — dubbed TxWRAP — is designed to help homeowners and communities determine wildfire risk so they can act before a wildfire strikes. IT's Esri, Bing and DTS Agile based. The public viewer uses the term map themes along with map layers. Does the public know what a map theme is?

- Longview New-Journal

There was a good bit of buzz (at least on this blog) about Michigan signing on with Microsoft for aerial imagery in 2009. Now one county that submitted an intent to participate in year 3 (this year) is getting in on the deal.

Ogemaw County’s Geographic Information System (GIS) aerial photographs will be getting upgraded this year, but some townships’ aerial photos may not be revised.

The Board of Commissioners approved the purchase of aerial photography from Bing Maps during its April 26 meeting. The photography will be up to date, as the last aerial photos were taken 15 years ago, said Equalization Director John Awrey. Awrey added the new photography, scheduled for this spring, will have a much higher resolution.

Awrey said purchasing the upgraded files for the county’s GIS system costs $16,100, with eight townships providing a combined $4,600 for the files and the county paying the rest of the bill. 

- Ogemaw County Herald

Pinellas County (Florida) Commissioners unanimously approved a six-year $2.46 million contract April 24 with Esri. The county will consolidate and standardize on Esri products since the current system includes a mix of products, some of which are outdated and unsupported. There is bad news for resellers and other vendors per a report from Property Appraiser Pam Dubov, BTS Director Paul Alexander and Purchasing Manager Joe Lauro, all members of the EGIS committee.

Since the county invested heavily in this software product, it was prudent to leverage the established close working relationship with ESRI [sic] to negotiate directly on a non-competitive basis and bypass potential resellers of the product line.

From what I understand it's a four year deal where the county get "all you can eat." In the fourth year the county must inventory its licenses for use in determining how much it will pay for perpetual licensing.

- Tampa Bay Newspapers

by Adena Schutzberg on 05/01 at 04:09 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share
Narrow your search further: esri, fire, michigan, microsoft, texas

Thursday, February 09, 2012

Westport, CT has a new Esri-based map viewer. The city is offering several 90 and 150 minute classes on using it. Good thing  - since I oculd not get the help to work. The old intro page says you must use IE not AOL or another browser. Safari worked fine.

- CT

The Franklin County, AL Geographic Information Systems (GIS) Consortium officially lauched its “virtual Franklin County,” also known as its public facing GIS. It's built on ArcGIS Viewer for Flex 2.

- Franklin County Times

The city of Southfield [MI] recently launched Destination Southfield, a collection of Geographic Information System -based sites that provide up-to-date interactive maps and information about city services, parks and polling locations. The information can be found at http://maps.cityofsouthfield.com/destinationsouthfield.

With Destination Southfield, the city has become one of the first communities in the country to take advantage of Environmental Systems Research Institute's local government common information model. ArcGIS for Local Government includes a series of maps and apps that are designed to work together across various city departments.

Silverlight. Interesting "hide and seek" menus.

- Hometown Life

by Adena Schutzberg on 02/09 at 03:00 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

The National Land Survey of Finland will open its topographic data on May 1st.

- SDI Magazine via @Christophe_ESRI) 

The head of St. Joseph County’s Transportation Authority [Michigan] wanted its latest vehicle to stand out...

A “vehicle-wrap” that covers the van’s exterior features a large-scale map of St. Joseph County. Although not suitable for actual map use, the design features most communities in the county and many major roads.

The "wrap" cost about $1000 and is considered a good advertising investement. 

- Sturgis Journal

The city of Safford, Arizona

 has cut three full-time employees from its Geographic Informations Systems Department, including administrator Raymond Brunner, who was the Arizona Professional Land Surveyors Association's Geospatial Professional of the Year for 2008. Safford is finalizing discussions with Graham County to disseminate information captured at the city's facility. A data collector was the only position retained in the city's GIS department.

The responsibilities will be merged into the county to save money.

[City Manager David] Kincaid said the GIS Department cost the city about $1.2 million over the past four years and $365,000 in the last year alone. The cost to keep systems running with only a data collector is estimated to be about $75,000, and the pending contract with the county is expected to be about $200,000 per year.

- East Arizona Courier

Oak Hill, West Virginia claims first in the county status on its planned GIS.

“This is the way of the future,” says [Town Manager Bill] Hannabass. “The county got on board with it a while back. I’m proud to follow them as the first municipality in the county, and one of the only ones in the state with GIS.”

The GIS administrator will be a police officer.

- Register Herald

by Adena Schutzberg on 01/31 at 05:31 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Thursday, January 19, 2012

The Berrien County, Michigan, Geographic Information System (GIS) is holding a seminar to introduce its new GIS provded by Schnieder Corporation. The session is free (I think), but using the GIS is not.

The cost of using the GIS website is $15 per day or $50 per month plus a processing fee compared to the previous website price of $10 per hour plus a processing fee.

- Niles Star

There are allegations the tourism board in Joplin, MO is handing out maps to encourage visitors to the tornado ravaged area. Officials say the map was created to respond to direct requests, rather than to promote such visits.

- Joplin Globe

Moscow has spent 20 billion roubles on its own map, hoping it will be used to crowdsource data on streetlight outages and the like. It should be online next month at atlas.mos.ru. The city feels maps from Google and Yandex can't do that job. I think Esri is doing the mapping.

Sergei Scherbina, Deputy Director at ESRI CIS- Moscow map service developer says the Moscow informational site will be updated frequently with more information and services for users.

Open data proponents are wary of the new map and how embeddable it may be.

- RT

The City Council of Bainbridge, GA has an agreement with the University of Georgia's Carl Vinson Institute of Government to develop a GIS (Geographic Information System) for the City. The $45,000 will put 7,300 parcels online in about four months.

by Adena Schutzberg on 01/19 at 02:59 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

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