phone Pomoc-kontakt

The New York Times Agency May 2010

EN_00913897_2510
The New York Times Agency May 2010
(NYT1) PITTSBURGH -- July 3, 2002 -- CIR-BIOTERROR-ALERTS -- Computer networks have been used for years by public health officials to monitor outbreaks of disease. But the reporting and compiling can take a day or more, delaying detection of an outbreak. Today, several universities and hospitals are developing systems to collect and analyze disease information in real time -- as soon as a patient is admitted to a hospital emergency room, for example. Dr. Jeremy Espino, left, and Dr. Michael Wagner, developers of a disease surveillance program at the University of Pittsburgh that tracks data from 15 hospital emergency departments. (Gary Tramontina/The New York Times) *LITE
CENA MINIMALNA - 100 USD
2002-07-03
EAST NEWS
The New York Times Agency
Gary Tramontina/The New York Times/Redux
17336376
0,37MB
15cm x 10cm przy 300dpi
15, 2002, 3, A, ADMITTED, AN, ANALYZE, AND, ARE, AS, AT, BEEN, BUT, BY, CAN, COLLECT, COMPILING, COMPUTER, DATA, DAY, DELAYING, DEPARTMENTS, DETECTION, DEVELOPERS, DEVELOPING, DISEASE, DR, EMERGENCY, ESPINO, EXAMPLE, FOR, FROM, GARY, HAVE, HEALTH, HOSPITAL, HOSPITALS, IN, INFORMATION, IS, JEREMY, JULY, LEFT, LITE, MICHAEL, MONITOR, MORE, NETWORKS, NEW, NYT1, OF, OFFICIALS, OR, OUTBREAK, OUTBREAKS, PATIENT, PITTSBURGH, PROGRAM, PUBLIC, REAL, REDUX, REPORTING, ROOM, SEVERAL, SOON, SURVEILLANCE, SYSTEMS, TAKE, THAT, THE, TIME, TIMES, TO, TODAY, TRACKS, TRAMONTINA, UNIVERSITIES, UNIVERSITY, USED, WAGNER, YEARS, YORK,