Public health surveillance systems gain significant benefits from integrating existing early incident detection systems,supported by closed data sources, with open source data.However, identifying potential alerting incidents relies on finding accurate, reliable sources and presenting the high volume of data in a way that increases analysts work efficiency; a challenge for any system that leverages open source data. In this paper, we present the design concept and the applied design science research methodology of ChemVeillance, a chemical analyst surveillance system.Our work portrays a system design and approach that translates theoretical methodology into practice creating a powerful surveillance system built for specific use cases.Researchers, designers, developers, and related professionals in the health surveillance community can build upon the principles and methodology described here to enhance and broaden current surveillance systems leading to improved situational awareness based on a robust integrated early warning system.
Revised: July 26, 2017 |
Published: May 11, 2017
Citation
Huang Z., K. Han, L.E. Charles-Smith, and M.J. Henry. 2017.Design Science Methodology Applied to a Chemical Surveillance Tool. In Proceedings of the 2016 CHI Conference Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI EA 2017), May 6-22, 2017, Denver, Colorado, 2652-2658. New York, New York:ACM.PNNL-SA-123266.doi:10.1145/3027063.3053263