surveillance$80670$ - tradução para grego
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surveillance$80670$ - tradução para grego

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

surveillance      
n. επιτήρηση
control room         
  • [[Greifswald Nuclear Power Plant]] control room in 1990.
ROOM WHERE A LARGE OR PHYSICALLY DISPERSED FACILITY OR SERVICE CAN BE MONITORED AND CONTROLLED
Control Room; Operations Room; Operations center; Operations control center; Ops room; Operations Control Center; OPCEN; Operations room; Surveillance room
αίθουσα ελέγχου
passport control         
  • A fingerprint scanner at [[Dulles International Airport]] collects biometric data on visitors, which can be used for confirming identities.
  • Dubai Airport]]
  • American Samoa entry stamp
  • Arabic papyrus with an exit permit, dated 24 January 722 AD, pointing to the regulation of travel activities. From Hermopolis Magna, Egypt
  • Slovakia]], which otherwise maintains open borders with other [[Schengen Area]] jurisdictions, closed borders to non-residents because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • BN(O) passports sported a burgundy red cover, identical to that of the [[British Citizen]] passports, albeit without the words "European Union" text at the top part of the cover between 1990 and March 2020.
  • American and Canadian border officers at Vancouver airport
  • Capital punishment for drug offences]]}}
  • [[ProPublica]] recording of crying children separated from their families.
  • North Korean policemen standing guard at North Korea-South Korea border. View from North Korea.
  • The purpose of the [[Great Wall of China]] was to stop the "barbarians" from crossing the northern border of China.
  • Hyder, Alaska has no border controls for travellers entering from Canada, and travellers flying between Hyder and other Alaskan cities by seaplane undergo internal border control
  • Quarantine operations deployed by mainland Chinese border control.
  • An International Certificate of Vaccination issued by the Bureau of Quarantine in the Philippines to an individual after being vaccinated with a [[COVID-19 vaccine]] in 2021.
  • sterile international transit area]]. Domestic and international passengers are thus not clearly separated. This enables easier transfers from domestic to international flights but requires international transit passengers to clear the border checkpoint even if their final destination is outside America.
  • ''Karta Polaka'' – specimen document
  • Map of the upcoming Rapid Transit system.
  • Sample of printed out eNTRI slip for Indian and mainland Chinese citizens to clear Malaysian border controls without a visa.
  • North Korean customs officer at [[Pyongyang Sunan International Airport]].
  • An OCI booklet exempting its bearer from usual immigration controls in India.
  • South Korean policemen standing guard at North Korea-South Korea border. View from South Korea.
  • Southern edge (customs border) of Captain Cook wharf, [[Ports of Auckland]], New Zealand. An [[electric fence]] is faintly visible behind the historical fence
  • Qing Dynasty]], 24th Year of the Guangxu Reign, 1898
  • Entry stamp at [[Lewiston–Queenston Bridge]], Ontario. Canada only conducts border control and stamps passports upon entry.
  • Other member states of the European Union}}
  • Children abducted by the American government pictured in a wire-mesh cage. (Photo taken by [[United States Customs and Border Protection]])
  • A road sign at an exit on [[Interstate 91]] in [[Vermont]] advising individuals entering the state of a quarantine policy adopted in response to COVID-19, photographed in November 2020.
MEASURES TAKEN TO REGULATE THE MOVEMENT OF GOODS AND PEOPLE ACROSS BORDERS
Immigration policy; Border crossing; Neutral territory; Immigration control; Border controls; Customs area; Customs border; Customs areas; International zones; Border vista; 🛂; Border zone; Border management; Local border traffic; Small border traffic; International territory; Immigration controls; Immigration checkpoint; Border Control; Passport Control; Immigration Policies; Passport control; Quilantan entry; Border security; Border surveillance; Customs, immigration and quarantine; Phytosanitary regulation; Controversies surrounding border control; History of border control; Border protection
έλεγχος διαβατηρίων

Definição

surveillance
n.
1) to conduct, maintain surveillance
2) to keep; place smb. under surveillance
3) around-the-clock, constant; close, strict surveillance (she was placed under strict surveillance)
4) electronic surveillance
5) under surveillance

Wikipédia

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.