@disclosetv
14h
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"NOW - Trump boat is trolling Rehoboth Beach in Delaware where Biden has a home and is expected back for the weekend."
I looked up "Kentucky's Integrated Surveillance Information Systems/NEDSS". It's only named that way to conceal the fact that the CDC/FEDS have access to your medical records. Having them raises issues, you see.
Trying to search for 'Kentucky's system leads to the CDC's system which it invites states to fill with patient information. All 50 states have complied.
I believe this is the product of the fake HIPPA rules - people tried to explain when HIPPA was rolled out that it actually eliminated privacy and let many agencies share your medical information freely, similar to the Patriot Act, which weaponized the intel agencies, giving them complete access to information about you collected by any local, state, or federal agency.
"All your private medical information R belong to us!"
Oh, I'm sure they'll say it's just Covid information tracking, but it's not. Say, I wonder if this system allows information sharing to track disease so that the Federal government know's who has been 'naughty' and who has been 'nice'? (Vaccinated/Unvaccinated)
Wouldn't it be great if the Biden administration could send out vaccine strike teams to the homes of the unvaccinated first? Oh, give them clipboards and tell them to 'ask' if all are vaccinated, but door to door is a tiring job so prioritize conservative areas, Christians, people speaking up against the government. You know, just the usual. Take notes of the structure, any guard dogs or fences in order to make their planned mandatory vaccine and passport roll out more efficient.
https://www.cdc.gov/nndss/about/nedss.html
Integrated Surveillance Information Systems/NEDSS
Integrated surveillance information systems in public health departments are primary sources of data for the National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System (NNDSS). These systems are based on the National Electronic Disease Surveillance System (NEDSS) architectural standards. By encouraging the use of and helping to support standards-based public health surveillance systems, NEDSS helps public health agencies accept electronic data exchanges from healthcare systems and enables health departments to create and send standards-based case notifications to CDC for NNDSS. Currently, jurisdictions can send case notifications by using different standards; the CDC NNDSS Modernization Initiative is working to provide a single, new standard to transmit data to CDC.
NEDSS helps connect the healthcare system to public health departments and those health departments to CDC by
- providing leadership and resources to state and local health departments to adopt standards-based systems needed to support national disease surveillance strategy;
- defining the content (i.e., disease diagnosis, risk factor information, lab confirmation results, and patient demographics) of messages sent using the HL7 messaging standard;external icon
- implementing content standards that the healthcare industry currently uses (for example, LOINC as the standard for transmitting laboratory test names and SNOMED as the standard for transmitting test results) for increased interoperability between public health departments and the healthcare industry; and
- providing the NEDSS Base System (NBS), a CDC-developed information system, to help reporting jurisdictions manage reportable disease data and send notifiable diseases data to CDC. For more information about NBS, please access the NBS web site at https://www.cdc.gov/nbs/.
Today, all 50 states and Washington, D.C., use NEDSS-compatible integrated surveillance information systems to send case notifications to NNDSS. To be considered NEDSS compatible, states must have information systems meeting these requirements:
- disease data entry directly through an Internet browser-based system, thereby creating a database accessible by health investigators and public health professionals,
- electronic laboratory reporting that enables labs to report cases to health departments,
- integration of multiple health information databases into a single repository, and
- electronic messaging capabilities, enabling states to share information efficiently with CDC and other health agencies.
HEre's a quote from the above:
"They also utilized the state’s immunization registry to look for fully vaccinated persons."
They could, if they were honest and didn't lie about the results, compare mortality of those 'fully vaccinated' to the unvaccinated....but they couldn't report he results then, could they?
If they wanted to, they could have added fields to the existing database to house vaccine adverse event information in order to actively and efficiently capture information critical to public health upon introducing an experimental mass vaccination. If they wanted to.
That database is really a good idea when you think about it. Most people want the federal government to keep a close eye on their sexually transmitted diseases, drug use, mental health issues etc. and share them with whatever agency or branch of the government (local/state/federal) wants that kind of information.
Thread: COVID-19 Vaccines Offer More Protection than Previous Infection: CDC Study (freerepublic.com)