surveillance countermeasures - ορισμός. Τι είναι το surveillance countermeasures
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Τι (ποιος) είναι surveillance countermeasures - ορισμός

THE CONTINUOUS, SYSTEMATIC COLLECTION, ANALYSIS AND INTERPRETATION OF HEALTH-RELATED DATA NEEDED FOR THE PLANNING, IMPLEMENTATION, AND EVALUATION OF PUBLIC HEALTH PRACTICE
Clinical Surveillance; Syndromic survelliance; Syndromic surveillance; Syndromic Surveillance; Public Health Surveillance; Product surveillance, postmarketing; Epidemiological surveillance; Epidemiologic surveillance; Clinical surveillance; Active surveillance study

Countersurveillance         
MEASURES UNDERTAKEN TO PREVENT SURVEILLANCE
Technical surveillance counter-measures; Tscm; Technical surveillance countermeasures; TSCM; Counter eavesdropping; Bugsweeping; Bug sweep; Bug sweeps; Bug-sweeping; Bug sweeping; Counter-surveillance; Counter surveillance; Bug sweeper; Bug sweepers; Bugsweeper; Bugsweepers; Bug-sweeper; Bug-sweepers; Technical Surveillance Counter-Measures; Surveillance countermeasures; Surveillance detection
Countersurveillance refers to measures that are usually undertaken by the public to prevent surveillance, including covert surveillance. Countersurveillance may include electronic methods such as technical surveillance counter-measures, which is the process of detecting surveillance devices.
Public health surveillance         
Public health surveillance (also epidemiological surveillance, clinical surveillance or syndromic surveillance) is, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), "the continuous, systematic collection, analysis and interpretation of health-related data needed for the planning, implementation, and evaluation of public health practice."Public health surveillance, World Health Organization (accessed January 14, 2016).
Postmarketing surveillance         
PRACTICE OF MONITORING THE SAFETY OF A PHARMACEUTICAL DRUG OR MEDICAL DEVICE AFTER IT HAS BEEN RELEASED ON THE MARKET
Post-marketing surveillance; Post market safety surveillance; Post marketing surveillance; Post-market surveillance; Post market surveillance; Post-marketing experience; Postmarketing experience
Postmarketing surveillance (PMS), also known as post market surveillance, is the practice of monitoring the safety of a pharmaceutical drug or medical device after it has been released on the market and is an important part of the science of pharmacovigilance. Since drugs and medical devices are approved on the basis of clinical trials, which involve relatively small numbers of people who have been selected for this purpose – meaning that they normally do not have other medical conditions which may exist in the general population – postmarketing surveillance can further refine, or confirm or deny, the safety of a drug or device after it is used in the general population by large numbers of people who have a wide variety of medical conditions.

Βικιπαίδεια

Public health surveillance

Public health surveillance (also epidemiological surveillance, clinical surveillance or syndromic surveillance) is, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), "the continuous, systematic collection, analysis and interpretation of health-related data needed for the planning, implementation, and evaluation of public health practice." Public health surveillance may be used to track emerging health-related issues at an early stage and find active solutions in a timely manner. Surveillance systems are generally called upon to provide information regarding when and where health problems are occurring and who is affected.

Public health surveillance systems can be passive or active. A passive surveillance system consists of the regular, ongoing reporting of diseases and conditions by all health facilities in a given territory. An active surveillance system is one where health facilities are visited and health care providers and medical records are reviewed in order to identify a specific disease or condition. Passive surveillance systems are less time-consuming and less expensive to run but risk under-reporting of some diseases. Active surveillance systems are most appropriate for epidemics or where a disease has been targeted for elimination.

Techniques of public health surveillance have been used in particular to study infectious diseases. Many large institutions, such as the WHO and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), have created databases and modern computer systems (public health informatics) that can track and monitor emerging outbreaks of illnesses such as influenza, SARS, HIV, and even bioterrorism, such as the 2001 anthrax attacks in the United States.

Many regions and countries have their own cancer registry, which is monitors the incidence of cancers to determine the prevalence and possible causes of these illnesses.

Other illnesses such as one-time events like stroke and chronic conditions such as diabetes, as well as social problems such as domestic violence, are increasingly being integrated into epidemiologic databases called disease registries. A cost-benefit analysis is conducted on these registries to determine governmental funding for research and prevention.

Systems that can automate the process of identifying adverse drug events, are currently being used, and are being compared to traditional written reports of such events. These systems intersect with the field of medical informatics, and are rapidly becoming adopted by hospitals and endorsed by institutions that oversee healthcare providers (such as JCAHO in the United States). Issues in regard to healthcare improvement are evolving around the surveillance of medication errors within institutions.