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Surveillance Network Takes Aim at Bioterror...Is this What Drudge is Upset About?
New York Times ^ | January 27, 2003 | WILLIAM J. BROAD and JUDITH MILLER

Posted on 01/26/2003 8:47:22 PM PST by woofie

To secure early warning of a bioterror attack, the government is building a computerized network that will collect and analyze health data of people in eight major cities, administration officials say.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is to lead the multimillion-dollar surveillance effort, which officials expect to become the cornerstone of a national network to spot disease outbreaks by tracking data like doctor reports, emergency room visits and sales of flu medicine. "Our goal is to have a model that any city could pick up and apply," a senior administration official said of the plan.

Officials would not disclose the program's cost or which cities will be involved. But experts say Washington is likely to be one of the eight.

Such surveillance is now possible because of an explosion in commercial medical databases that health authorities, with permission and under strict legal agreements, are starting to mine. In ambition and potential usefulness, the health network goes far beyond an environmental surveillance system, disclosed by the administration last week, that will sniff the air for dangerous germs.

The emerging health monitoring network, officials and experts say, will provide information that could save lives if terrorists strike with deadly germs like smallpox or anthrax. In detecting attacks, a head start of even a day or two can greatly lower death rates by letting doctors treat rapidly and prevent an isolated outbreak from becoming an epidemic. A senior official said President Bush was expected to refer to these new bioterrorism defenses in his State of the Union address.

The disease centers' initiative represents a sharp swing to civilian leadership in a field the military pioneered and once dominated. But even in civilian hands, the emerging network has raised concerns that such surveillance may violate individual medical privacy rights.

Officials said concerns were initially heightened because of the Pentagon's central role in the genesis of many systems, and especially because Vice Adm. John M. Poindexter, architect of the much-criticized Pentagon computer surveillance effort known as Total Information Awareness, is in charge of the Defense Department agency that finances some of the government's disease monitoring research.

In November, as the Bush administration came under fire for Admiral Poindexter's project, White House officials ordered the military to drop plans to link four cities into a $420 million health monitoring network and shifted responsibility for such work to the new domestic security agency. The transfer was not motivated by privacy concerns, administration officials say, but by a judgment that the military was ill suited to exploit monitoring for public health.

"We all agreed that doing this surveillance in the civilian sector was not the military's job," Dr. Anna Johnson-Winegar, a Pentagon biodefense official, said in an interview.

Experts say the prospect of war with Iraq, and the chance that Baghdad might retaliate with germ weapons, are accelerating the effort to expand and integrate scores of rudimentary disease surveillance systems being developed by cities, states and the federal government. But public health experts argue that even if the United States never suffers another bioterror attack like the anthrax strikes of late 2001, the emerging network can still help doctors better track, treat and prevent natural disease outbreaks.

"We want as much protection as we can afford," said Dr. Daniel M. Sosin, director of public health surveillance at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta. Dr. Sosin is helping to expand the nation's health surveillance to incorporate the new systems.

Supporters of the emerging surveillance network insist it raises few privacy issues, saying that the data are laundered of names and identifiers. People are not tracked as individuals, they say, but their symptoms are, and often their age, sex and ZIP code as well. But computer surveillance itself has drawn criticism from the American Civil Liberties Union, members of Congress and others.

The system is needed, proponents say, because few cheap, reliable sensors exist for detecting deadly germs in such likely target areas as subways and shopping malls. Sensors are also prone to false positives, or incorrect germ identifications.

Dr. Thomas R. Frieden, the health commissioner of New York City, which has one of the nation's most highly developed rapid surveillance systems, said the emerging network could help authorities gauge the dimensions of germ attacks and reassure the public.

He pointed to a case in November in which a New Mexico man visiting New York was found to have bubonic plague, a deadly contagious disease. "We were concerned this was bioterrorism," Dr. Frieden said. "But we didn't see any signals. We didn't see any alarms. That added to our confidence to rule out bioterrorism."

Experts say most of the new systems, military and civilian, are still experimental. A critical challenge is finding needles in the haystacks of data about common ailments like respiratory infections, which can rise and fall with great suddenness in winter.

Dr. Marcelle Layton, New York City's assistant health commissioner for communicable diseases, said another challenge was ensuring that there are enough public health officials to respond to alarms that the new environmental and medical surveillance systems might sound.

"The best system will be useless if it's only a fire alarm with no firefighters to put out the flames," Dr. Layton said.

Nonetheless, expectations run high.

"We think this will be important," said Dr. Alan P. Zelicoff, a physician at the Sandia National Laboratories who helped develop a widely used surveillance method, the Rapid Syndrome Validation Project, which is now used in California, New Mexico, Texas, Singapore and Australia. "We need to get disease reporting from the 19th to the 21st century."

For decades, disease surveillance has valued accuracy over speed. Nurses, doctors and public health officers gather raw data, often using paper forms sent by mail. In the background, federal, state and private laboratories use advanced technologies to determine the causes of disease and confirm diagnoses. But the process tends to take days or even weeks.

Moreover, the system is narrow, revealing little about the nation's overall health. While the federal disease control agency has more than 100 surveillance systems, most are designed to track a single organism or condition, like heart disease or flu virus. In addition, most are independent of one another.

The system has serious gaps. While laboratories usually comply with federal rules to report certain illnesses to health authorities, physicians often do not.

The military and the national weapons laboratories, increasingly worried about germ attacks, tried a new approach in the late 1990's. To learn of impending trouble quickly, they decided to scrutinize populations for clues of diseases before they were officially diagnosed. Experts zeroed in on how clusters of such symptoms as fever, cough, headache, vomiting, rash and diarrhea could suggest — but not prove — the presence of particular diseases, some of them lethal. The method was called syndromic surveillance.

An early military system was the Electronic Surveillance System for Early Notification of Community-Based Epidemics, or Essence. It drew medical data from some 400,000 members of the military and their dependents who lived in the Washington area — a major potential terrorist target, but hard for civilians to scan medically because of "the numerous city, county and state jurisdictions," according to a Defense Department statement.

After the 2001 terrorist attacks, the Pentagon's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency put $12 million into an experimental program, Essence 2, which tracked millions of civilians in the Washington area for signs of bioterrorism. The program now reports to Admiral Poindexter, whose Total Information Awareness program was dealt a setback by the Senate late last week, its future now in doubt. Joe Lombardo, a civilian who runs Essence 2, which is based at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory in Maryland, said that although Admiral Poindexter's office finances the system, Essence 2 shares no data with his computer surveillance project. Essence 2, he said, gathers electronic records from drugstore chains, hospitals and physician groups. Mr. Lombardo said about a dozen people were developing the technology and collecting and analyzing the data.

"We're not Big Brother," he said. "Our objective is to support public health. The information we receive has been sanitized by the provider to ensure that it is impossible to identify individuals."

(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...


TOPICS: Breaking News; Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: bigbubba; bioterrorisn; biowarfare
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1 posted on 01/26/2003 8:47:22 PM PST by woofie
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To: woofie
This is Drudge's Headline with a flashing light..

FEDS TO DATABASE HEALTH DETAILS OF CITIZENS

I think he is off base on this one

2 posted on 01/26/2003 8:53:07 PM PST by woofie (I dont believe in this tag line crap)
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To: woofie
Maybe the FEDS think that there will be an outbreak of something deadly, and a lot of people will show up for treatment and get entered in the system. Then, when the entries suddenly stop, the FEDS will know they're all dead and they will know a bioterror attack has taken place. It will give them time to get all the politicians and bureaucrats to safety.
3 posted on 01/26/2003 8:55:57 PM PST by Enterprise
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To: woofie
In my opinion, yes, this is what Drudge is referring to, though in the previous Drudge siren thread, absolutely everyone disagrees with me and is off on a tangent ranting about Hillary's medical ID system, which has nothing to do with anything in the NYT article.

90% of the time Drudge's "sirens" are simply a story about to go on-line in the New York Times, Time magazine, etc. etc.

I can't find anything that's in the Monday edition of ANYTHING having to do with medical databases other than this NYT story about bioterror monitoring (which does involve databasing).

Guess we'll find out when he eventually gets around to posting the link....has he mentioned it on the radio show or something? (which I do not listen to)

4 posted on 01/26/2003 8:58:04 PM PST by John H K
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To: Enterprise
We think this will be important," said Dr. Alan P. Zelicoff, a physician at the Sandia National Laboratories who helped develop a widely used surveillance method, the Rapid Syndrome Validation Project, which is now used in California, New Mexico, Texas, Singapore and Australia. "We need to get disease reporting from the 19th to the 21st century."
5 posted on 01/26/2003 8:58:20 PM PST by woofie (I dont believe in this tag line crap)
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To: Enterprise
LOL
6 posted on 01/26/2003 8:58:44 PM PST by CJ Wolf (it took you a while but the end result was a chuckle.)
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To: Enterprise
I thought we had canaries for that
7 posted on 01/26/2003 9:01:15 PM PST by woofie (I dont believe in this tag line crap)
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To: Heartlander2; bonesmccoy
Ping
8 posted on 01/26/2003 9:04:54 PM PST by woofie (I dont believe in this tag line crap)
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To: woofie
PETA would never allow us to sacrifice lil' tweetie birds to save human lives. How could even THINK of such a thing!
9 posted on 01/26/2003 9:07:00 PM PST by Enterprise
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To: woofie
Drudge goes overboard with his headlines. He loves to create chaos, but since the Lewinski break, he's had nothing better than the National Enquirer.
When he decides to get serious, maybe I'll read his site again. In the meantime, he's a toad.
10 posted on 01/26/2003 9:08:34 PM PST by concerned about politics (Achievement is politically incorrect.)
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To: *Bio_warfare
http://www.freerepublic.com/perl/bump-list
11 posted on 01/26/2003 9:12:40 PM PST by Free the USA (Stooge for the Rich)
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To: concerned about politics
I saw a report on FOX about the computer system Poindexter was working on to look for terrorists...It is looking for PATTERNS of activity and not information on individuals,and they have safeguards on it .Yet Drudge has slammed it every chance he can ...When we get attacked a few more times he will change his tune
12 posted on 01/26/2003 9:13:38 PM PST by woofie (I dont believe in this tag line crap)
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To: Free the USA
Thanks
13 posted on 01/26/2003 9:14:23 PM PST by woofie (I dont believe in this tag line crap)
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To: concerned about politics
Drudge goes overboard with his headlines.

Ah, the "it's Sunday and Drudge will be on the radio tonight siren." He does seem to get a bit shrill on Sunday.

As far as Drudge being upset about (insert proposed or non-existant database here)? I sometimes wonder if he thinks someone is going to track him going into a gay bar or something.

14 posted on 01/26/2003 9:54:33 PM PST by isthisnickcool
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To: woofie
Believe it or not it IS possible to set up databases without personal info...it gets "stripped" out.

This is the way the Cenus operates (honestly!). In all seriousness, Census data doesn't ever go to the FBI or IRS or anyone so individuals can be tracked down. Everything that comes out is "sanitized" so it provides info on towns, blocks, etc., but not individual people. In rural areas where one family may be the only one in a whole census block, this gets a little more difficult, but they really do make a good-faith effort not to track individual people with the final results.

When they COLLECT data they are asking for names, etc., to correlate people who move, etc., but this all eventually is thrown away and is not found in any census "product."
15 posted on 01/26/2003 9:55:37 PM PST by John H K
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To: woofie
Most Hospitals are aready networked and all this would do is notify the Feds if there were large numbers of people going to different hospitals for explained or unexplained reasons and a tip off those that need to know to a possible bio terror attack.

It's not to track patients .. it is to prepare us if we are attacked .. Remember the vaccines are not in every city but they are within a 12 hour distance should they be needed anywhere in the US

16 posted on 01/26/2003 10:04:29 PM PST by Mo1 (I Hate The Party of Bill Clinton)
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To: Mo1
bump
17 posted on 01/26/2003 10:41:53 PM PST by woofie (I dont believe in this tag line crap)
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To: woofie
I saw a report on FOX about the computer system Poindexter was working on to look for terrorists

It's also my understanding that a number of companies are looking into the possibilities of doing this ..

18 posted on 01/26/2003 10:47:44 PM PST by Mo1 (I Hate The Party of Bill Clinton)
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To: Mo1
It's not to track patients .. it is to prepare us if we are attacked .. Remember the vaccines are not in every city but they are within a 12 hour distance should they be needed anywhere in the US

You are correct...as I understand it we could be attacked with a bio agent and we wont know it unless someone notices and reports the symptoms

19 posted on 01/26/2003 10:53:10 PM PST by woofie (I dont believe in this tag line crap)
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To: Mo1
I have a friend who says "the constitution is not a suicide pact"...we need to protect ourselves
20 posted on 01/26/2003 10:55:10 PM PST by woofie (I dont believe in this tag line crap)
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