| Literature DB >> 32517100 |
Luigi Possenti1, Lara Savini1, Annamaria Conte1, Nicola D'Alterio1, Maria Luisa Danzetta1, Alessio Di Lorenzo1, Maria Nardoia1, Paolo Migliaccio1, Susanna Tora1, Paolo Dalla Villa1.
Abstract
The Italian National Veterinary Services, public health professionals, and policy makers are asked to participate at different levels in the decision-making process for the management of non-epidemic emergencies. A decision support system offering the different administrative and operational emergency management levels with a spatial and decisional tool to be used in the case of natural disasters is still missing at the national level. Within this context, the Italian General Directorate for Animal Health of the Ministry of Health funded a research project for the implementation of a new Veterinary Information System for Non-Epidemic Emergencies (SIVENE), an innovative real-time decision support tool for emergency response in a disaster management scenario. SIVENE was developed according to a multi-layer architecture with four integrated components: the database layer, which was implemented by an RDBMS Oracle 11 g; the ReST service layer, which was created using J2EE, Spring, and MyBatis technologies; the web application (business framework and user interface), which was developed in Angular4 framework using TypeScript language; and the web Geographic Information Systems (GIS), which was realized through the implementation of a geodatabase in Oracle RDBMS 11 g. This system allows us to build up and dynamically create a set of dedicated checklists to be used in the field when gathering the information needed for the management of non-epidemic emergencies; employ the application on mobile devices, such as tablets and smartphones; and use the web GIS to manage and visualize data of veterinary interest and territorial maps of risk and damage.Entities:
Keywords: companion animals; information system; livestock; non-epidemic emergencies; veterinary emergencies; web GIS; web application
Year: 2020 PMID: 32517100 DOI: 10.3390/ani10060983
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 2.752