Title: Applications of GIS Technology in Professional Health
1Applications of GIS Technology in Professional
Health
Christian Connections for International Health
Annual Conference, May 27 29, 2006 Scott A.
Todd
2What is GIS (Geographic Information System)
- Geographic ? Maps
- Information ? Database
- System ? Hardware, Software, Data,
- People, Plans/Programs
GIS combines the intuitive visual clarity of a
map together with the information structuring,
searching and analyzing power of a database.
3What is not GISGPS - The Global Positioning
System
A GPS receiver is a tool used for data
collection, determining your position on the
earth, or wayfinding GPS coordinates can be a
type of data input for a Geographic Information
System
4Data The Main Ingredient
How GIS Works. . .
Features, Attributes Operations
- Vector points, lines, polygons (areas)
- Raster images (aerial photos), grids
- Tabular databases, spreadsheets
5Features (Vector data)
- Points Village, Facility, Household, Patient
- Lines Roads, Rivers, Utility Line
- Polygons Parcel, Census Tract, Service Area
6Attributes (Tabular Data)
- Events/Objects Village name, Facility type,
- Household size, Patient condition
- Route/Network Road capacity, River name,
- Sewer main size, Boundary length
- Area/Region Parcel size (Acres), Demographics,
- Service Area (number of patients)
7Operations - Geoprocessing
- Data Integration Collection, Conversion,
Rectification, - Correlation/Confirmation
- Management Data update/maintenance, Joining w/
- other databases, Merge data sets
- Analysis Selection/Extraction, Proximity,
Distribution, - Relationships, Overlay, Change/Trends
- Reporting Printed Maps, Tabular Reports
8So What . . .
- A Geographic Information System is not just a
fancy tool for making attractive, detailed maps. - GIS provides a dynamic visual representation of
the information contained in a database, along
with the power to query and manage the database. - GIS tools support the creation and integration of
various kinds of data sets to analyze and better
understand existing patterns, distributions and
relationships between features. - GIS analysis can generate new data to support
clearer insight and communication for needs
assessment, decision making for strategic
planning and data management for implementation,
monitoring and evaluation of programs and
initiatives.
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10Who Uses GIS
- Archaeology
- Agriculture
- Banking
- Defense and Intelligence
- Education
- Electric and Gas
- Engineering
- Fire/EMS/Disaster/Homeland Security
- Forestry
- Government (Federal, State, County, Local)
- Health and Human Services
- Insurance
- Landscape Architecture
- Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice
- Libraries and Museums
- Location Services
- Logistics
- Marine, Coast and Oceans
- Marketing
- Media
- Mining and Earth Sciences
- Natural Resources
- Petroleum
- Real Estate
- Retail Business
- Telecommunications
- Transportation
- Universities
- Water and Wastewater
- Weather
Source Environmental Systems Research Institute
Geography Matters, White Paper, 2002
11Health Geography
- It is useful to divide the geography of health
into two interrelated areas - The geography of disease, which covers the
exploration, description and modelling of the
spatio-temporal (space-time) incidence of disease
and related environmental phenomena, the
detection and analysis of disease clusters and
patterns, causality analysis and the generation
of new disease hypotheses - The geography of healthcare systems, which deals
with the planning, management and delivery of
suitable health services (ensuring among other
things adequate patient access) after determining
healthcare needs of the target community and
service catchment zones.
Source Boulos, Kamel MN - Geographic Informatics
in Health, School for Health, University of Bath
Bath BA2 7AY, UK
12 GIS Health Software
GIS Software Developing Organization Price
EpiInfo / EpiMap Center for Disease Control (CDC) Free
HealthMapper World Health Organization (WHO) Free
SIGEpi Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) 100 Health Inst. 500 Non-Profit 1000 Private
ArcGIS Environmental Systems Research Institute (ESRI) 1500 Maintenance
Source Alsahhar, Belew, Getachew, McElroy - GIS
in Public Health, University of Dallas, Oct 2005
13 WHO HealthMapper
- About HealthMapper
- Original version 1993 by World Health
Organization - Supports range of infectious diseases in over 60
countries - Public Health Needs Capable of Addressing
- Analysis of disease outbreaks, chronic diseases,
injuries - Limited Management of distribution of health
resources - Software is Free
- Data Format Support
- Import and modify shapefiles
- Import and Link Excel, Access, dBase, .CSV,
.REC (EpiInfo) - System Requirements Windows (98/NT/2000/Me/XP)
Source Alsahhar, Belew, Getachew, McElroy - GIS
in Public Health, University of Dallas, Oct 2005
14 WHO HealthMapper
- Advantages
- Free can be downloaded from WHO website
- Very useful in supporting health
surveillance, disease - prevention and control
- Disadvantages
- Limited complex statistical capabilities
- Data not provided with software
- Publicly funded programs
- Limited Technical support
Source Alsahhar, Belew, Getachew, McElroy - GIS
in Public Health, University of Dallas, Oct 2005
15 EpiInfo / EpiMap
- About EpiInfo / EpiMap
- Created by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC),
in 1985 - Latest Version Epi Info Version 3.3.2,
released Feb 2005 - Over 1,000,000 downloads in 180 countries
- Public Health Needs Capable of Addressing
- Meets most needs in epidemiological studies, such
as disease outbreaks or other public health
analysis - Software is Free
- Data Format Support
- Import and modify shapefiles
- Compatible with ESRI ArcView, MS Access, Excel,
dBase, CSV, XML - System Requirements (Windows 95/NT/98/2000/Me/XP)
-
Source Alsahhar, Belew, Getachew, McElroy - GIS
in Public Health, University of Dallas, Oct 2005
16 CDC EpiInfo/EpiMap
- Advantages of EpiInfo
- Meets most needs in epidemiological studies
- Free, can be downloaded from CDC WebPages
- With a little computer experience can do simple
useful analysis - Disadvantages of EpiInfo
- Lacks statistical spatial data analysis
- EpiInfo and EpiMap are two stand-alone programs
- Data not provided with software
- Publicly funded programs
- Limited Technical support - reference to
available manual
Source Alsahhar, Belew, Getachew, McElroy - GIS
in Public Health, University of Dallas, Oct 2005
17SIGEpi
- About SIGEpi
- Developed by Pan American Health Organization
(PAHO), latest version 1.4 - Supports Multi-languages (Spanish and Portuguese)
- Public Health Needs Capable of Addressing
- Provides complex analysis methods for health data
- Management of distribution of health resources
- Data Format Support
- Reads and processes files in Shapefile and
ArcInfo coverage formats from ESRI other formats
include Vector Product Format (VPF) CAD and
EpiMap - SIGEpi has RDBMS that use MS Access and
interchange in other formats (Dbase, Excel,
Btrieve, EpiInfo) - System Requirements Windows (98/NT/2000/Me/XP)
Source Alsahhar, Belew, Getachew, McElroy - GIS
in Public Health, University of Dallas, Oct 2005
18SIGEpi
- Price
- Health and Academic Institutions (100)
- Non-Profit Agencies (500)
- Personal and Private Agencies (1,000)
- Advantages
- Offers a broad GIS platform with functions for
statistical spatial data analysis integrated into
the program - Creates geographical layers based on geographic
data from GPS receivers - SIGEpi was built based on ESRIs MapObjects
- Disadvantages
- It has limitations in editing geographic
databases - Maintenance Technical support via Discussion
forum or emails or reporting errors or
recommendations
Source Alsahhar, Belew, Getachew, McElroy - GIS
in Public Health, University of Dallas, Oct 2005
19ESRI ArcGIS
- About ESRI ArcGIS
- Company started in 1969, founded by Jack and
Laura Dangermond, privately held company - ArcView 1.0 released in 1992
- Public Health Needs Capable of Addressing
- Analysis of disease outbreaks, chronic diseases,
injuries - Management of distribution of health resources
- Data Format Support
- Direct read and import capabilities of more than
70 different formats, including rasters (images)
and ODBC - Import, edit, and export of shape files
- Price Single user license 1500
- Annual Maintenance 500 to 3,000
- System Requirements Windows (98/NT/2000/Me/XP)
Source Alsahhar, Belew, Getachew, McElroy - GIS
in Public Health, University of Dallas, Oct 2005
20ESRI ArcGIS
- Technical Assistance
- Free for initial year of purchase
- Advantages
- Industry leader in Public health sector
- Many extensions built on ArcGIS
- Base data provided with software
- Software is scalable
- Custom Scripting Capabilities - in VB, C, .NET
- Disadvantages
- Expensive application and maintenance package
- Not specifically oriented toward Health
Applications - Need to have hands-on experience or extensive
training
Source Alsahhar, Belew, Getachew, McElroy - GIS
in Public Health, University of Dallas, Oct 2005
21Data Formats
- Each offers Free Online Training Manuals
- Each product offers Data format support for
- Shapefiles (.SHP)
- Excel
- .CSV
- MS Access
- dBase
- .REC
- Each product can read data from a GPS
Source Alsahhar, Belew, Getachew, McElroy - GIS
in Public Health, University of Dallas, Oct 2005
22Comparison Matrix
HealthMapper EpiInfo /EpiMap SIGEpi ArcGIS
Health Analytic Support Needs Met? Yes Yes Yes Yes
GIS Capabilities? Limited Limited Yes Yes
Cost Free Free 100 Health inst. 500 Non-Profit 1000 Private 1500 single user 500 -3000 Annual maintenance
Tech Support None Limited None Free 1st year
Source Alsahhar, Belew, Getachew, McElroy - GIS
in Public Health, University of Dallas, Oct 2005
23The Future of GIS in Health
- HealthQuery An online healthcare services/access
application. - Collaborative project of Good Hope Medical
Foundation, California Department of Health
Services Centre for Health Statistics, the
National Health Foundation (NHF), ESRI, Oracle
and Sun Microsystems - This figure shows a search for the nearest
hospitals within a 5-mile radius around 92373
(Zip code, CA, US). - HealthQuery found 4 locations.
Source Boulos, Kamel MN - Geographic Informatics
in Health, School for Health, University of Bath
Bath BA2 7AY, UK
24GIS Demonstration
25Sources
Contact
- Scott A Todd
- scott_at_gmi.org
- 610-617-0195
- Global Mapping International
- 15435 Glen Eagle Drive, Suite 100
- Colorado Springs, CO 80921 USA
- info_at_gmi.org
- Alsahhar, Belew, Getachew, McElroy - GIS in
Public Health - University of Dallas, Oct 2005
- Boulos, Kamel MN - Geographic Informatics in
Health - School for Health, University of Bath, Bath BA2
7AY, UK