Wednesday June 6 2012
Transcript of Wednesday June 6 2012
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DAILY GLANCE
Star t End Room Function7:00 AM 8:00 AM Hilton Omaha - Saint Nicholas Foyer Coffee Break for Roundtable Sessions
7:30 AM 8:30 AM Grand Ballroom B&C Continental Breakfast
7:30 AM 10:30 AM Pre-Function Grand Ballroom Cyber Café
7:30 AM 10:30 AM Grand Ballroom B&C Exhibit Hall
7:30 AM 10:30 AM Pre-Function Grand Ballroom Registration
8:00 AM 5:00 PM 215 Business Office
10:00 AM 10:30 AM Grand Ballroom B&C AM Break
12:00 PM 1:00 PM Pre-Function Grand Ballroom Lunch Cash Concessions
12:00 PM 2:00 PM Lunch Break - On your own
3:30 PM 4:00 PM Pre-Function Grand Ballroom PM Break
ROUNDTABLE SESSIONS
H I LTON OMAHA � 7 : 1 5AM - 8AM
Cozzens Surveillance / Informatics Lab Interoperability Cooperative: Advancing Electronic Laboratory Reporting through collaborative efforts between hospitals, vendor systems, information exchanges, and public health
PLENARY SESSION
CENTURYL I NK C ENTER OMAHA � 8 : 30AM - 1 0AM
Grand Ballroom A Outstanding Poster Presentation Awards (8:20 AM – 8:30 AM)
Grand Ballroom A Plenary (8:30 AM – 10:00 AM) Moving Forward in the Ever Changing World
206 Chronic Disease / MCH / Oral Health Use of GIS: Road Maps to Health
208 Cross Cutting Improving Epidemiologic Data Related to Tribal and Other Racial/Ethnic Disparities
216 Environmental Health Cluster Investigations
201 Infectious Disease I What are the Laboratory Results Telling Us?
202 Infectious Disease II Healthcare Associated Infections Surveillance Methods: Using the Data
209 Injury Injuries Resulting from Extreme Weather: A New Risk Factor?
205 Late-Breakers Late-Breakers
213 Occupational Health I Emerging Issues in Occupational Health
214 Occupational Health II Topics in Work-Related Lung Disease
203 Surveillance / Informatics I Using Surveillance Data to Improve Clinical Care
BREAKOUT SESSIONS
CENTURYL I NK C ENTER OMAHA � 1 0 : 30AM - 1 2 PM
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SPECIAL SESSIONS
CENTURYL I NK C ENTER OMAHA � 1 2 PM - 5 : 30 PM
207 National Toxic Substance Incidents Program Awardees Annual Meeting (12:00 PM – 2:00 PM and 4:00 PM – 5:30 PM)
205 Climate Change Subcommittee – Disaster Epidemiology (12:30 PM – 2:00 PM and 4:00 PM – 5:30 PM)
Rome Chronic Disease / MCH / Oral Health
National mentorship program in applied chronic disease epidemiology
Mercer Cross Cutting I Update from MMWR
Flatiron Cross Cutting II Roundup of Developments in Public Health Law, 2011
Washington City
Cross Cutting III Epidemic Intelligence Service (EIS) field assignment roundtable discussion
Paxton Environmental Health Lessons learned from CDC public health responses to the Fukushima Japan nuclear reactor accident and rubidium Rb-82 generator recall
Prague Environmental Health / Occupational Health / Injury
Environmental Health / Occupational Health / Injury Steering Committee update
Hill Infectious Disease I The Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA): Update and what implications it has for states
Herndon Infectious Disease II Improving viral hepatitis surveillance: What are the essential data elements for collection?
Murray Occupational Health Exploring collaborative efforts between NCIPC and NIOSH state grantees to enhance state injury prevention programs
Cozzens Surveillance / Informatics I
United States - Mexico binational case and outbreak notification communication pathway pilot
Merchants Surveillance / Informatics II
Meaningful Use: Inpatient and ambulatory clinical care electronic health record data for public health syndromic surveillance
ROUNDTABLE SESSIONS
H I LTON OMAHA � 1 P M - 1 : 4 5 PM
204 Surveillance / Informatics II Variation in State Reporting Requirements: How Bad is the Disease and What are the Options for Prevention and Treatment?
BREAKOUT SESSIONS
CENTURYL I NK C ENTER OMAHA � 1 0 : 30AM - 1 2 PM
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214 Chronic Disease / MCH / Oral Health
Position Statement Discussion
208 Cross Cutting Position Statement Discussion
213 Environmental Health / Occupational Health / Injury
Position Statement Discussion
216 Infectious Disease Position Statement Discussion
206 Chronic Disease / MCH / Oral Health
Poor Birth Outcomes: The Social and Clinical Aspects
208 Cross Cutting Strategic Prevention Work
216 Environmental Health Disaster Epidemiology
201 Infectious Disease I Leveraging Technology to Serve Public Health
202 Infectious Disease II Hepatitis
209 Injury Youth Substance Abuse
213 Occupational Health I Job-specific Issues
214 Occupational Health II Topics in Work-Related Lung Disease
203 Surveillance / Informatics I Bringing Surveillance Data Together in Innovative Ways
204 Surveillance / Informatics II Position Statement Discussion
BREAKOUT SESSIONS
C ENTURYL I NK C ENTER OMAHA � 2 PM - 3 : 30 PM
BREAKOUT SESSIONS
CENTURYL I NK C ENTER OMAHA � 4 PM - 5 : 30 PM
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R o u n d t a b l e S e s s i o n sHilton Omaha � 7:15AM - 8aM
COZZENS
SURVEILLANCE / INFORMATICS
1323664 Lab Interoperability Cooperative: Advancing Electronic Laboratory Reporting through collaborative efforts between hospitals, vendor systems, information exchanges, and public health
Jeff Benning, Surescripts Debra Konicek, College of American Pathologists
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OUTSTANDING POSTER PRESENTATION AWARDS
8:20AM - 8:30AM
Grand Ballroom A
A w a r d s P r e s e n t a t i o n Tom Safranek, Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services
P l e n a r y8:30AM - 10AM
Grand Ballroom A
P l e n a r y
8:30AM - 10AM � GRAND BALLROOM A
MOVING FORWARD IN THE EVER CHANGING WORLD
Moderators:Jerry Fagliano, New Jersey Department of Health and Senior ServicesBetsy Kagey, Georgia Department of Public HealthSharon Watkins, Florida Department of Health
Panelists:
One Health in practice: Identifying emerging infectious diseases at the human-domestic animal-wildlife interfaceJonna AK Mazet, Professor of Epidemiology and Disease Ecology and Director of the One Health Institute and Wildlife Health Center at UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine
Models or muddles? Climate change, uncertainty, and future infectious disease threatsDavid N. Fisman, Dalla Lana School of Public Health
Digital disease detection: Harnessing social media for public health surveillanceJohn S. Brownstein, Harvard Medical School
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J O N N A A K M A Z E T , D V M , M P V M , P H DDr. Mazet is a Professor of Epidemiology and Disease Ecology and Director of the One Health Institute and Wildlife Health Center at UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine where she focuses on global health issues and disease transmission among wildlife, domestic animals and people. Dr. Mazet founded California’s Oiled Wildlife Care Network (OWCN), the premier model wildlife emergency management system worldwide and remains a consulting expert on animal emergency preparedness and response, serving on multiple government and NGO advisory panels.
In 1998, Dr. Mazet was appointed to the faculty of the School of Veterinary Medicine and became co-director of the fledgling Wildlife Health Center (WHC). She took the WHC from an academic idea to a $21 million per year global research and service unit dedicated to balancing the needs of people and wildlife. Key accomplishments of the center include identification of the source and mechanism of zoonotic pathogen pollution in coastal communities, surveillance for avian influenza in the Pacific Flyway, pioneering approaches to investigating disease transmission at hot human-animal-environment interfaces, and assisting in the conservation of numerous endangered species through the application of novel and creative epidemiological and ecological methods.
Currently, Dr. Mazet is the Principal Investigator and Director on a new global early warning system, named PREDICT, that is being developed with funding of $75 million over five years by the US Agency for International Development’s (USAID) Emerging Pandemic Threats Program. PREDICT is a multi-institutional, transdisciplinary project in 24 developing countries that is establishing a global surveillance system for zoonotic diseases emerging from wildlife using geospatial modeling, genomics, molecular virology and targeted field studies at hot zoonotic disease transmission interfaces. She leads a network of global NGOs and governmental agencies to build capacity within the PREDICT countries to develop surveillance systems and complete the necessary research to halt the next pandemic, like influenza, SARS, Ebola and HIV that have preceded the program. IN the first two years of the program, PREDICT has implemented surveillance in 20 developing countries, trained over 900 professionals in field and laboratory techniques and biosafety, and discovered over 100 novel viruses.
As a professor in the School of Veterinary Medicine, Dr. Mazet provides service to government agencies and the public faced with emerging infectious disease challenges, including U.S. Agency for International Development, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, U.S. Geological Survey, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, California Department of Fish and Game, National Marine Fisheries Service, and the U.S. Marine Mammal Commission. She is active in international One Health research programs, such as tuberculosis in Africa, disease conflict in Yellowstone National Park, and pathogen pollution of coastal waters with an emphasis on ecology of infectious diseases and wildlife diagnostics and disease surveillance. She has made significant contributions to the development of the School of Veterinary Medicine’s and the veterinary profession’s emphasis on ecosystem health, especially as it relates to public health and has contributed to curricular development in this realm to help to maintain the veterinarian’s role in society.
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D a v i d F i s m a n , M D , M P HDr. David Fisman is Associate Epidemiology in the Division of Epidemiology, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, and at the Institute for Health, Policy, Management and Evaluation, both at the University of Toronto. He his MD from the University of Western Ontario in 1994 and trained in Internal Medicine and Clinical Infectious Diseases at McGill, Brown, and Harvard Universities. In 2000 he received an MPH from Harvard School of Public Health, where he was also an AHRQ Fellow at the Harvard Centre for Risk Analysis. His research interests are in the intersection of epidemiological methodology and infectious disease surveillance and control, and including problems in disease seasonality and environmental influence on infectious disease occurrence. He collaborates extensively with front-line
epidemiologists and public health professionals at the local, provincial, and federal levels in Canada.
J o h n S . B r o w n s t e i n , P h DJohn Brownstein is an Assistant Professor of Pediatrics at Harvard Medical School, and has joint appointments in the Children’s Hospital Boston Informatics Program at the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology and the Division of Emergency Medicine. Dr. Brownstein was trained as an epidemiologist at Yale University where he received his PhD. Dr. Brownstein works on novel spatial modeling approaches for accelerating the translation of public health surveillance research into practice. This research has focused on a variety of infectious diseases including malaria, dengue, HIV, West Nile virus, Lyme disease, RSV and influenza. He is also leading the development several novel GIS-based surveillance systems, including HealthMap.org, a global infectious disease
intelligence system. Dr. Brownstein has advised the Institute of Medicine, the US Department of Health and Human Services, and the White House on real-time public health surveillance. He has authored over thirty articles in the area of spatial epidemiology. This work has been reported on widely including pieces in Science, Nature, New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, CNN, National Public Radio and the BBC.
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B r e a k o u t S e s s i o n sCenturyLink Center Omaha � 10:30AM - 12PM
CHRONIC DISEASE / MCH / ORAL HEALTH
206 USE OF GIS: ROAD MAPS TO HEALTH
Moderator: Khosrow Heidari, South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control
10:30 AM – 11:00 AM 1327393 The chronic disease epidemiologist’s guide to geographic information systems
(GIS) Joshua Tootoo, University of Michigan
11:00 AM – 11:30 AM 1332658 Development of “potential for impact” maps to focus efforts to reduce obesity
through environmental changes as part of the Communities Putting Prevention to Work (CPPW) program
David Busse, Douglas County Health Department
11:30 AM – 12:00 PM 1329609 Stroke mortality and geographic disparities in drive times to Georgia Coverdell
Acute Stroke Registry facilities Michael Bryan, Georgia Department of Public Health
CROSS CUTTING
208 IMPROVING EPIDEMIOLOGIC DATA RELATED TO TRIBAL AND OTHER RACIAL/ETHNIC DISPARITIES
Moderator: Joseph McLaughlin, Alaska Department of Health and Social Services
10:30 AM – 11:00 AM 1333092 Impact of inclusion of Indian Health Service hospitalizations on surveillance of
alcohol-related chronic disease hospitalizations in New Mexico Jim Roeber, New Mexico Department of Health
11:00 AM – 11:30 AM 1327707 Racial misclassification and disparities in mortality among American Indians/
Alaska Natives and other races, Washington ** Jenine Dankovchik, Northwest Portland Area Indian Health Board
11:30 AM – 12:00 PM 1332618 Evaluating progress among hospitals in collecting improved race, ethnicity and
tribal data in New Mexico Sue Noell Stone, New Mexico Department of Health
** RWJF Award Finalists
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B r e a k o u t S e s s i o n sCenturyLink Center Omaha � 10:30AM - 12PM
ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
216 CLUSTER INVESTIGATIONS
Moderator: Carina Blackmore, Florida Department of Health
10:30 AM – 11:00 AM 1331772 CSTE/CDC Guidelines for Investigating Cancer Clusters Kanta Sircar, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
11:00 AM – 11:30 AM 1332868 Florida’s updated response to community concerns located near a National
Priority Listing (NPL) site: Review of cancer data and communications strategy Sharon Watkins, Florida Department of Health
11:30 AM – 12:00 PM 1331769 Hockey player hemoptysis in New Hampshire, January 2011 Steffany Cavallo, New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services
INFECTIOUS DISEASE I
201 WHAT ARE THE LABORATORY RESULTS TELLING US?
Moderator: Alfred DeMaria, Massachusetts Department of Public Health
10:30 AM – 11:00 AM 1319431 An evaluation of pertussis PCR cycle threshold values by case classification,
Washington State, 2007-2011 Azadeh Tasslimi, Washington State Department of Health
11:00 AM – 11:30 AM 1326181 Use of automated testing in syphilis diagnosis and its impact on surveillance −
Connecticut, 2010 Kelley Bemis, Connecticut Department of Public Health
11:30 AM – 12:00 PM 1330258 Evaluation of false positive hantavirus results in a commercial ELISA Barbara Knust, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
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B r e a k o u t S e s s i o n sCenturyLink Center Omaha � 10:30AM - 12PM
INFECTIOUS DISEASE I I
202 HEALTHCARE ASSOCIATED INFECTIONS SURVEILLANCE METHODS: USING THE DATA
Moderator: Marion Kainer, Tennessee Department of Health Moderator: Paul Malpiedi, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
10:30 AM – 10:53 AM 1331722 Post-discharge surveillance for surgical site infections in New Hampshire
hospitals Katrina Hansen, New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services
10:53 AM – 11:15 AM 1322204 Using National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) data to guide Tennessee’s
Multidisciplinary Advisory Group Brynn Berger, Tennessee Department of Health
11:15 AM – 11:38 AM 1329564 Mandatory surgical site reporting in New Hampshire critical access hospitals Elizabeth Daly, New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services
11:38 AM – 12:00 PM 1329826 A Clostridium difficile infection prevention project involving collaborative
groups of long term care facilities: Initial challenges and lessons learned Nicole Bryan, New York State Department of Health
INJURY
209 INJURIES RESULTING FROM EXTREME WEATHER: A NEW RISK FACTOR?
Moderator: Michael Heumann, Consultant
10:30 AM – 11:00 AM 1330271 Increased risk of fall-related injury in Philadelphia due to adverse weather
events Kathryn Gevitz, Philadelphia Department of Public Health
11:00 AM – 11:30 AM 1330777 Injuries following historic tornados — Alabama, April 2011 Thomas Niederkrotenthaler, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
LATE-BREAKERS
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B r e a k o u t S e s s i o n sCenturyLink Center Omaha � 10:30AM - 12PM
OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH I
213 EMERGING ISSUES IN OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Moderator: Kathy Leinenkugel, Iowa Department of Public Health
10:30 AM – 11:00 AM 1327250 Assessment of flight attendants’ exposure to Polybrominated Diphenyl Ether
(PBDE) flame retardants Stella Beckman, California Department of Public Health
11:00 AM – 11:30 AM 1329957 Characteristics of health-care workers who did not receive annual influenza
vaccination, Georgia, 2010 Antionette Lavender, Georgia Department of Public Health
11:30 AM – 12:00 PM 1326889 Healthcare personnel influenza vaccination coverage and policies in South
Carolina acute care facilities, 2011-2012 Katherine Habicht, South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control
OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH I I
214 TOPICS IN WORK-RELATED LUNG DISEASE
Moderator: Margaret Filios, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
10:30 AM – 11:00 AM 1315470 State-specific proportions of asthma related to work: An update from the Be-
havioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, 2006–2009 Gretchen Knoeller, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
11:00 AM – 11:30 AM 1324189 Work-related asthma in the retail trade industry — California, Massachusetts,
Michigan, and New Jersey, 1993–2006 Christen Seaman, CDC/National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health
11:30 AM – 12:30 PM 1333123 A regional excess of mesothelioma attributable to two occupational cohorts in
Minnesota Allan Williams, Minnesota Department of Health
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B r e a k o u t S e s s i o n sCenturyLink Center Omaha � 10:30AM - 12PM
SURVEILLANCE / INFORMATICS I
203 USING SURVEILLANCE DATA TO IMPROVE CLINICAL CARE
Moderator: Bryant Karras, Washington State Department of Health
10:30 AM – 11:00 AM 1318335 Collecting detailed cancer registry data to perform outcomes-based
comparative effectiveness research—Florida, 2011 Youjie Huang, Florida Department of Health
11:00 AM – 11:30 AM 1330679 Developing a nationwide surveillance system for international adoptees Kailey Nelson, CDC Minneapolis Quarantine Station / Minnesota Department of Health
11:30 AM – 12:00 PM 1331528 A predictive influenza model using demographic, clinical and public health
surveillance data Steve Di Lonardo, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene
SURVEILLANCE / INFORMATICS I I
204 VARIATION IN STATE REPORTING REQUIREMENTS: HOW BAD IS THE DISEASE AND WHAT ARE THE OPTIONS FOR PREVENTION AND TREATMENT?
Moderator: Rita Altamore, Washington State Department of Health
10:30 AM – 12:00 PM 1366722 Variation in state reporting requirements: How bad is the disease and what are
the options for prevention and treatment? Rita Altamore, Washington State Department of Health
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S p e c i a l s e s s i o n s12PM - 2PM
ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
207 NATIONAL TOXIC SUBSTANCE INCIDENTS PROGRAM AWARDEES ANNUAL MEETING
12:00 PM - 2:00 PM The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry funds state health departments through the National Toxic Substances Incidents Program (NTSIP) to conduct surveillance on acute chemical incidents and their associated public health impacts. States use this data for prevention, preparedness, and response.
There are currently 7 funded and 2 unfunded states that participate in NTSIP. This is a yearly meeting of states to present program information and share results.
Meeting continues from 4:00 PM – 5:30 PM
ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
205 CLIMATE CHANGE SUBCOMMITTEE – DISASTER EPIDEMIOLOGY
12:30 PM - 2:00 PM Many local and state health departments are investigating the potential public health impacts of climate change. There is significant overlap between areas of concern under projected climate change scenarios and disaster preparedness (for example, heat waves, wildfires, flooding, and other extreme weather events). Issues of interest to both climate change and disaster preparedness epidemiologists include indicator development and use, morbidity and mortality in extreme weather events, surveillance and reporting in disasters, experiences with integrating reporting with the national weather service (NC example), and rapid needs assessment using CASPER.
Meeting contines from 4:00 PM – 5:30 PM
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R o u n d t a b l e S e s s i o n sHilton Omaha � 1PM - 1:45PM
WASHINGTON CITY
ROME
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PRAGUE
CHRONIC DISEASE / MCH / ORAL HEALTH
1318615 National mentorship program in applied chronic disease epidemiology Khosrow Heidari, South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control Donald Austin, Oregon Health and Science University
CROSS CUTTING I
1331060 Update from MMWR Ronald Moolenaar, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention John Moran, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
CROSS CUTTING I I
1330910 Roundup of developments in public health law, 2011 Frederic Shaw, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Matthew Penn, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
CROSS CUTTING I I I
1331742 Epidemic Intelligence Service (EIS) field assignment roundtable discussion Walter Daley, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Diana Bensyl, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
1330726 Lessons learned from CDC public health responses to the Fukushima Japan nuclear reactor accident and rubidium Rb-82 generator recall
Art Chang, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Satish Pillai, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH / OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH / INJURY
1367293 Environmental Health / Occupational Health / Injury Steering Committee update Martha Stanbury, Michigan Department of Community Health
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INFECTIOUS DISEASE I
1341106 The Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA): Update and what implications it has for states
Dale Morse, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Tim Jones, Tennessee Department of Health
INFECTIOUS DISEASE I I
1331961 Improving viral hepatitis surveillance: What are the essential data elements for collection?
Ruth Jiles, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Elizabeth Hughes, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
1326542 Exploring collaborative efforts between NCIPC and NIOSH state grantees to enhance state injury prevention programs
John Myers, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
SURVEILLANCE / INFORMATICS I
1332871 United States - Mexico binational case and outbreak notification communication pathway pilot
Steve Waterman, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
SURVEILLANCE / INFORMATICS I I
1326740 Meaningful Use: Inpatient and ambulatory clinical care electronic health record data for public health syndromic surveillance
Geraldine Johnson, New York State Department of Health Charles Ishikawa, International Society for Disease Surveillance
R o u n d t a b l e S e s s i o n sHilton Omaha � 1PM - 1:45PM
MERCHANTS
COZZENS
MURRAY
HERNDON
H I L L
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B r e a k o u t S e s s i o n sCenturyLink Center Omaha � 2PM - 3:30PM
CHRONIC DISEASE / MCH / ORAL HEALTH
206 POOR BIRTH OUTCOMES: THE SOCIAL AND CLINICAL ASPECTS
Moderator: Charlan Kroelinger, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
2:00 PM – 2:30 PM 1332522 A closer look at infant deaths due to prematurity: Variation in receipt of antenatal
corticosteroids, Massachusetts 2000-2008 Lizzie Harvey, Massachusetts Department of Public Health
2:30 PM – 3:00 PM 1321699 Assessing neonatal withdrawal syndrome among Michigan infants, 2000-2009 Kim Hekman, Michigan Department of Community Health
3:00 PM – 3:30 PM 1330405 A mixed methods approach to identify community solutions to decrease racial
disparities in infant mortality Laurin Kasehagen, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
CROSS CUTTING
208 STRATEGIC PREVENTION WORK
Moderator: Patricia Quinlisk, Iowa Department of Public Health
2:00 PM – 2:30 PM 1332166 Adding working conditions to the public health agenda on obesity Letitia Davis, Massachusetts Department of Public Health
2:30 PM – 3:00 PM 1326622 Implementation of the Strategic Prevention Framework (SPF) and state and
community level outcomes John Park, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
3:00 PM – 3:30 PM 1324503 Strategic prevention framework (SPF): Relationship between community-level
characteristics and processes on population-level outcomes Kelly Vander Ley, RMC Research Corporation
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B r e a k o u t S e s s i o n sCenturyLink Center Omaha � 2PM - 3:30PM
ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
216 DISASTER EPIDEMIOLOGY
Moderator: Michael Heumann, Consultant
2:00 PM – 2:30 PM 1314616 Preparing for functional needs while sheltering during a disaster — Kentucky,
2011 Amy Kolwaite, Kentucky Department for Public Health
2:30 PM – 3:00 PM 1321809 Community Assessment for Public Health Emergency Response (CASPER) one
year following the Gulf Coast Oil Spill— Alabama nd Mississippi, 2011 Danielle Buttke, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
3:00 PM – 3:30 PM 1327491 Mortality in tornado outbreak — Alabama, 27 April 2011 Cindy Chiu, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
INFECTIOUS DISEASE I
201 LEVERAGING TECHNOLOGY TO SERVE PUBLIC HEALTH
Moderator: Lawrence Madoff, Massachusetts Department of Public Health
2:00 PM – 2:22 PM 1332460 Increasing the utility of and access to statewide and local influenza surveillance
data by leveraging currently existing technology infrastructure Colin Malone, Florida Department of Health
2:22 PM – 2:45 PM 1331403 Utilization of social media during a large outbreak of sapovirus-associated
gastroenteritis for rapid case finding, specimen collection and investigation Brian Labus, Southern Nevada Health District
2:45 PM – 3:08 PM 1332884 Use of the Emergency Community Notification System to detect outbreaks and
conduct disease investigations Jennifer Merte, Clark County Public Health
3:08 PM – 3:30 PM 1324553 Social network analysis as a tool in infectious disease cluster investigations Katarina Grande, University of Wisconsin-Madison
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B r e a k o u t S e s s i o n sCenturyLink Center Omaha � 2PM - 3:30PM
INFECTIOUS DISEASE I I
202 HEPATITIS
Moderator: Elizabeth Bancroft, Los Angeles County Department of Public Health
2:00 PM – 2:30 PM 1318306 Epidemiology of hepatitis A virus infection (HAV) in Connecticut, 2006-2011 Paul Gacek, Connecticut Department of Public Health
2:30 PM – 3:00 PM 1318434 Changing epidemiology of hepatitis A in Arizona following intensive immunization
programs (1988-2007) Laura Erhart, Arizona Department of Health Services
3:00 PM – 3:30 PM 1323643 Benefits of funding chronic hepatitis B and C surveillance: New York City’s
experience Katherine Bornschlegel, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene
INJURY
209 YOUTH SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Moderator: Annie Hirsch, North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services
2:00 PM – 2:30 PM 1327363 Alcohol-attributable deaths and years of life lost among youth under age 21 Valerie Edwards, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
2:30 PM – 3:00 PM 1317867 Risk factors for marijuana use among Mississippi adolescents Tabeth Jiri, Jackson State University
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OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH I
213 JOB-SPECIFIC ISSUES
Moderator: Yvonne Boudreau, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Moderator: Corey Campbell, Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment
2:00 PM – 2:30 PM 1326194 Potential risk factors for work-related musculoskeletal pain to hired crop workers
in the United States John Myers, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
2:30 PM – 3:00 PM 1332585 Evaluation of taxicab safety cameras in reducing driver homicides using two
data sources Cammie Menendez, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
3:00 PM – 3:30 PM 1291619 Fire and feces: Cryptosporidium parvum outbreak associated with fighting a
barn fire — Indiana and Michigan, June 2011 Jenna Webeck, Michigan Department of Community Health
OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH I I
214 TOPICS IN WORK-RELATED LUNG DISEASE
Moderator: Margaret Filios, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
2:00 PM – 2:30 PM 1313321 Evaluation of the New Jersey Silicosis Surveillance System, 1993-2008 Jessie Gleason, New Jersey Department of Health and Human Services
2:30 PM – 3:00 PM 1366615 Occupational asthma incidence: Evidence from the 2006–2009 Behavioral Risk
Factor Surveillance System Asthma Call-Back Survey Gretchen Knoeller, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
3:00 PM – 3:30 PM 1331861 Current asthma prevalence among service workers: Using occupation information
from the 2010 Massachusetts Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System Kathleen Fitzsimmons, Massachusetts Department of Public Health
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SURVEILLANCE / INFORMATICS I
203 BRINGING SURVEILLANCE DATA TOGETHER IN INNOVATIVE WAYS
Moderator: David Blythe, Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene
2:00 PM – 2:30 PM 1332961 Rapid ad-hoc cross-jurisdictional sharing of syndrome data Ian Painter, University of Washington
2:30 PM 3:00 PM 1324631 Effects of electronic communicable disease reporting Jorge Gallegos, City of El Paso Department of Public Health
SURVEILLANCE / INFORMATICS I I
204 POSITION STATEMENT DISCUSSION
Moderator: Janet Hamilton, Florida Department of Health
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CHRONIC DISEASE / MCH / ORAL HEALTH
214 POSITION STATEMENT DISCUSSION
Moderator: Sara Huston, Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention
CROSS CUTTING
208 POSITION STATEMENT DISCUSSION
Moderator: Joseph Mclaughlin, Alaska Department of Health and Social Services
ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH / OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH / INJURY
213 POSITION STATEMENT DISCUSSION
Moderator: Martha Stanbury, Michigan Department of Community Health
INFECTIOUS DISEASE
216 POSITION STATEMENT DISCUSSION
Moderator: Alfred DeMaria, Massachusetts Department of Public Health
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ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
207 NATIONAL TOXIC SUBSTANCE INCIDENTS PROGRAM AWARDEES ANNUAL MEETING
4:00 PM – 5:30 PM The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry funds state health departments through the National Toxic Substances Incidents Program (NTSIP) to conduct surveillance on acute chemical incidents and their associated public health impacts. States use this data for prevention, preparedness, and response.
There are currently 7 funded and 2 unfunded states that participate in NTSIP. This is a yearly meeting of states to present program information and share results.
ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
205 CLIMATE CHANGE SUBCOMMITTEE – DISASTER EPIDEMIOLOGY
4:00 PM – 5:30 PM Many local and state health departments are investigating the potential public health impacts of climate change. There is significant overlap between areas of concern under projected climate change scenarios and disaster preparedness (for example, heat waves, wildfires, flooding, and other extreme weather events). Issues of interest to both climate change and disaster preparedness epidemiologists include indicator development and use, morbidity and mortality in extreme weather events, surveillance and reporting in disasters, experiences with integrating reporting with the national weather service (NC example), and rapid needs assessment using CASPER.