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Tagged: taiwan

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Taiwan

Chang Chung-chi, who was previously Section Chief at Ministry of the Interior’s Information Centre in charge of the planning, implementation and maintenance of Taiwan Geospatial One-Stop Portal (TGOS), has now been appointed been promoted to become the IT Director of Taichung City Government.

I think it's good to spread those with GIS experience around in government since they tend to bring that vision to their next position. That appears it will be case here.

- FutureGov Asia

New Zealand

A new tool designed to give Maori land owners, judges, researchers and local government an unprecedented picture of freehold land was officially launched last week.The Maori land Geographic Information System (GIS) Project is built on Google Maps and data from LINZ.

- Spatial Source/press release (Mar 4)

The Philippines

The Philippines is to undertake a unified mapping project that will update the country’s topographic map series and would implement a more detailed 1:10,000 map series for an estimated 50 per cent of the country’s land mass.

According to the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), Instead of the typical approach wherein different government agencies do their own mapping and GIS initiatives, this effort will pool funds for the acquisition of aerial photography and satellite imagery.

We are still working on such "for the nation" efforts here in the U.S.

- Future Gov

by Adena Schutzberg on 03/17 at 03:00 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share
Narrow your search further: maori, new zealand, taiwan

Monday, February 28, 2011

The Bureau of Health Promotion in Taiwan released its latest health map and revealed Taitung County in the east and Pingtung and Chiayi in the south have larger obese populations that other parts of the country. This analysis struck me as interesting:


The map indicates that there are larger obese populations in counties than in cities, Chiu said.

People who live in the counties are not aware of the importance of a healthy lifestyle, as many of them were raised or educated by their grandparents, [Director General] Chiu said.

- Focus Taiwan

Heart patients in Detroit Lakes, MN are twice as likely as others in the state to have arterial bypasses. Men in Bemidji three times as likely to have enlarged prostates removed.

Those factoid come from the first state-focused report from the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care. (pdf) The findings suggest that "doctors may be neglecting patients' preferences and basing surgery decisions on other factors." The data are from 2003 through 2007.

- Star Tribune

The U.S. Center for Disease Control (CDC) has launched a prototype “Chronic Disease GIS Exchange” website meant to provide a forum for sharing examples, ideas and techniques for using GIS to inform policy and document geographic disparities to help prevent heart disease, stroke and chronic diseases.

- via Spatial Sustain

A new article titled Geospatial resources for supporting data standards, guidance and best practice in health informatics is getting well read. It's about metadata and interoperability. And, full free access!

via @bernard_de_bono

Fiscal Officer [of Mount Vernon, Ohio] Linette Vance reported on some of the small changes in the 2011 permanent appropriations. She said there is some extra money available if needed for the purchase of computers, software and replacement of dental equipment.

“The budget will meet all of our needs for 2011,” she said. “We will do some necessary server upgrades and [increase] storage capacity and dental equipment. As far as computer software, we will get GIS software.”

Environmental Health Director Stuart Lentz noted the GIS software will be useful to accurately map sewer and water projects and could be used to map contagious disease clusters.

It's rare for local folks to think about disease mapping, so this is very cool.

- Mount Vernon News

A new study " aimed to test the appropriateness of new, inexpensive and simple GIS tools in poorly resourced areas of a developing country" for use in medical issues. The study was in Indonesia and the software trialed was open source. The conclusion, after training: "We demonstrated that GIS can be a useful and inexpensive tool for the decentralisation of health data analysis to low resource settings through the use of free and simple software, locally relevant training materials and by providing data collection tools to ensure data reliability."

- International Journal of Health Geographics

by Adena Schutzberg on 02/28 at 04:55 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share
Narrow your search further: dartmouth health atlas, health, minnesota, obesity, taiwan

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