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Kenneth D. Mandl

Researcher at Boston Children's Hospital

Publications -  351
Citations -  17512

Kenneth D. Mandl is an academic researcher from Boston Children's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Population. The author has an hindex of 68, co-authored 334 publications receiving 14913 citations. Previous affiliations of Kenneth D. Mandl include Swinburne University of Technology & University of Montana.

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SMART on FHIR: a standards-based, interoperable apps platform for electronic health records

TL;DR: The SMART on FHIR ( Substitutable Medical Applications and Reusable Technologies) platform as discussed by the authors is based on the Fast Health Interoperability Resources (FHIR) standard.
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HealthMap: global infectious disease monitoring through automated classification and visualization of Internet media reports.

TL;DR: HealthMap is a useful free and open resource employing text processing algorithms to identify important disease outbreak information through a user-friendly interface and demonstrates significant usefulness in managing the large volume of information processed by the system.
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Surveillance Sans Frontières: Internet-based emerging infectious disease intelligence and the HealthMap project.

TL;DR: John Brownstein and colleagues discuss HealthMap, an automated real-time system that monitors and disseminates online information about emerging infectious diseases.
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Implementing Syndromic Surveillance: A Practical Guide Informed by the Early Experience

TL;DR: Syndromic surveillance refers to methods relying on detection of individual and population health indicators that are discernible before confirmed diagnoses are made as discussed by the authors, in particular, before the laboratory confirmation of an infectious disease, ill persons may exhibit behavioral patterns, symptoms, signs, or laboratory findings that can be tracked through a variety of data sources.
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Early Experiences with Personal Health Records

TL;DR: This work describes the implementation challenges from 1999 to 2007 and postulate the evolving challenges the industry will face over the next five years.