Published on in Vol 8, No 1 (2016):

Data Blindspots: High-Tech Disease Surveillance Misses the Poor

Data Blindspots: High-Tech Disease Surveillance Misses the Poor

Data Blindspots: High-Tech Disease Surveillance Misses the Poor

The full text of this article is available as a PDF download by clicking here.

Journals

  1. Murray M, Buckley J, Byers K, Fake K, Lehrer E, Magle S, Stone C, Tuten H, Schell C. One Health for All: Advancing Human and Ecosystem Health in Cities by Integrating an Environmental Justice Lens. Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics 2022;53(1):403 View
  2. Lee E, Arab A, Goldlust S, Viboud C, Grenfell B, Bansal S, Ferrari M. Deploying digital health data to optimize influenza surveillance at national and local scales. PLOS Computational Biology 2018;14(3):e1006020 View
  3. Henly S, Tuli G, Kluberg S, Hawkins J, Nguyen Q, Anema A, Maharana A, Brownstein J, Nsoesie E. Disparities in digital reporting of illness: A demographic and socioeconomic assessment. Preventive Medicine 2017;101:18 View