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SpatialNews.com Press Release

ESRI Health Conference Explores How GIS Is Shaping Global Health
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Redlands, CA - October 28, 2008 - ESRI's 2008 Health GIS Conference in Washington, D.C., explored advances in geographic information system (GIS) technology that meet critical needs to measure and analyze human health and programs on local to global scales. Attendees from more than 21 nations and 45 U.S. states gathered September 28–October 1 to discuss how they are using GIS in innovative ways, from spatial analysis used to measure health disparities to embedding GIS into organizational information technology.

Keynote speaker Christopher Murray, M.D., director, Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, reviewed how GIS contributes to improving health metrics and evaluation. "For each investment in health, we need to demonstrate that the money has been well spent. GIS plays a role in understanding spatial inequalities in health outcomes and coverage by providing spatial analysis tools for quantification, communication, and hypothesis generation."

Tom Vair, executive director, Sault Ste. Marie Innovation Centre (SSMIC), Ontario, Canada, related the center's successful use of data sharing through innovative GIS technology to stimulate economic development in the Sault Ste. Marie community. SSMIC attracted $10 million in new revenues to the region through GIS projects with an approximate $1 million investment.

Stephen Corbett, M.D., Ph.D., chief medical informatics officer, Loma Linda University Adventist Health Sciences Center, Loma Linda, California, described how the center's advanced emergency GIS (AEGIS) uses GIS to run a Web-based hospital emergency situational awareness system. "Users should be able to talk to each other through the map, in that they can edit the map, exchange text messages, identify the command structure, draw perimeters, and add cell phone photographs with the correct location information already built in," said Corbett.

Yasushi Ohkusa, Ph.D., chief researcher, Infectious Diseases Surveillance Center, National Institute of Infectious Diseases, Tokyo, Japan, described how the center is using GIS for spatial analysis and to model health scenarios in Japan such as tracking the geographic diffusion of virulent influenza through a crowded transportation system in Tokyo. Ohkusa added, "GIS allows visualization of very complex human interaction events and thus provides added understanding for policy makers and public health workers."

Carlos Castillo-Salgado, M.D., Ph.D., senior advisor for the Forum for Public Health in the Americas, Pan American Health Organization, said that the adoption of new knowledge is essential for success in improving human health. Castillo-Salgado also called for using GIS methods to quantify the results of health programs. "GIS can help do this by combining multiple data layers and providing spatial statistics tools that close the gap between what we know and what we do with that information," he stated.

W. Ed Hammond, Ph.D., chair, Health Level Seven (HL7), and professor emeritus, Duke University, stated, "The strength of health information systems depends on supportive data standards that enable the linking of information from different sources." Hammond also suggested that more collaborative participation between the HL7 and GIS communities is necessary to develop additional spatial data standards that have the capacity to inform the electronic patient record.

Other highlights of the conference included preconference seminars and workshops on Spatial Statistics (Lauren Scott, Ph.D., ESRI), Using GIS in the Health Organization (Kristin Kurland, Ph.D., Carnegie Mellon University), and New GIS Tools for Health Authorities (Alan Fremont, M.D., Ph.D., and Nicole Laurie, M.D., Ph.D., Rand Corporation); 80 professional scientific paper presentations; a hands-on GIS software learning center; a technical plenary that addressed ESRI software innovations; and the annual meeting of the ESRI Health and Human Services User Group (HUG).

For more information on the conference and GIS in health, visit www.esri.com/healthgis.

About ESRI
Since 1969, ESRI has been giving customers around the world the power to think and plan geographically. The market leader in GIS, ESRI software is used in more than 300,000 organizations worldwide including each of the 200 largest cities in the United States, most national governments, more than two-thirds of Fortune 500 companies, and more than 7,000 colleges and universities. ESRI applications, running on more than one million desktops and thousands of Web and enterprise servers, provide the backbone for the world's mapping and spatial analysis. ESRI is the only vendor that provides complete technical solutions for desktop, mobile, server, and Internet platforms. Visit us at www.esri.com.




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