Literature DB >> 35415433

SISS-Geo: Leveraging Citizen Science to Monitor Wildlife Health Risks in Brazil.

Marcia Chame1, Helio J C Barbosa2, Luiz M R Gadelha2, Douglas A Augusto1, Eduardo Krempser1, Livia Abdalla1.   

Abstract

The well-being of human and wildlife health involves many challenges, such as monitoring the movement of pathogens; expanding health surveillance; collecting data and extracting information to identify and predict risks; integrating specialists from different areas to handle data, species and distinct social and environmental contexts; and the commitment to bringing relevant information to society. In Brazil, there is still the difficulty of building a system that is not impaired by its large territorial extension and its poorly integrated sectoral policies. The Brazilian Wildlife Health Information System, SISS-Geo (SISS-Geo is the abbreviation of "Sistema de Informação em Saúde Silvestre Georreferenciado" (which translates to "Georeferenced Wildlife Health Information System") and can be accessed at http://www.biodiversidade.ciss.fiocruz.br or http://sissgeo.lncc.br (in Portuguese)), is a platform for collaborative monitoring that intends to overcome the challenges in wildlife health. It aims at the integration and participation of various segments of society, encompassing the registration of animals occurrences by citizen scientists; the reliable diagnosis of pathogens from the laboratory and expert networks; and computational and mathematical challenges in analytical and predictive systems, model interpretation, data integration and visualization, and geographic information systems. It has been successfully applied to support decision-making on recent wildlife health events, such as a Yellow Fever epizootic. © Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2019.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Citizen science; Information system; Wildlife health

Year:  2019        PMID: 35415433      PMCID: PMC8982816          DOI: 10.1007/s41666-019-00055-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Healthc Inform Res        ISSN: 2509-498X


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