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© 1976 Oxford University Press

research-article

Surveillance Projects for Selected Diseases

Wm. H. FOEGE,1, ROBERT C. HOGAN2 and LADENE H. NEWTON3

1Assistant to the Center Director, Center for Disease Control Atlanta, Georgia 30333, U.S.A.
2Special Projects Branch, Bureau of Smallpox Eradication, Center for Disease Control Atlanta, Georgia 30333, U.S.A.
3Assistant to the Director (Program), Bureau of Tropical Diseases, Center for Disease Control Atlanta, Georgia 30333, U.S.A.

Foege, W. H. (Center for Disease Control, Atlanta, Georgia 30333, U.S.A.) Hogan, R. C. and Newton, L H. Surveillance projects for selected diseases. International Journal of Epidemiology 1976, 5: 29–37. Disease surveillance systems constitute the foundation for appropriate health plans. Surveillance data collection components at best are dependent on a series of contingencies. In developing countries scattered static health centres may result in biased and practically unusable data. A system is here described for collecting data from a sample of persons chosen for their statistical representation of the entire population. Monthly interviews can provide both prevalence and incidence data at low cost using paramedical personnel. Continuing work in this area could provide developing countries with alternative methods of defining their population-nutrition-communicable disease problems.


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