Play Disease Detective With New CDC AppMain Category: IT / Internet / E-mailAlso Included In: Infectious Diseases / Bacteria / Viruses Article Date: 20 Feb 2013 You can now be a disease detective at home with the CDC's free iPad App "Solve the Outbreak". According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), new disease outbreaks occur on a daily basis, and its detectives are "on the front lines", working twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week to protect people nationwide. When an outbreak occurs, the CDC sends out disease detectives to determine how they started, how dangerous they are, and whether they are contagious. They also gather further data which help health authorities, doctors, nurses and other healthcare professionals know what to do to deal with it and stop it from spreading. According to the CDC, with Solve the Outbreak, an iPad app, you get to do the same! The CDC says that in this "interactive, engaging app", the player decides:
Work your way up from Trainee to Disease DetectiveThe application has a scoring system which rewards you according to how well you answer, and how rapidly you save lives.The player starts off as a Trainee. As you solve cases you are awarded badges and get promoted, until you become a Disease Detective, the top rank. ![]() "Save the Outbreak", an iPad app, where you can become a disease detective "Solve the Outbreak" - great for teens, young adults and all public health nerdsThe CDC describes the application as ideal for "teenagers, young adults and public health nerds of all ages". It is an ideal way of taking the study of epidemiology out into the field - outside the classroom.With Solve the Outbreak you will:
"The goal is to use new technology to provide an engaging, interactive way for users to learn how CDC solves outbreaks, thereby increasing general knowledge about real-life public health issues. This application allows us to illustrate the challenges of solving outbreaks and how our disease detectives work on the front lines to save lives and protect people 24/7." Carol Crawford, branch chief, CDC's Electronic Media Branch, described the app as a fantastic learning tool for mystery lovers, public health enthusiasts, young adults, teens and science teachers. At the moment the application has three scenarios. The CDC says it plans to add new outbreak cases. The Epidemic Intelligence Service (EIS)The EIS program was set up by the CDC in the early 1950s. It employs some of the country's most gifted scientists, doctors, veterinarians and health professionals. They undergo a 2-year on-the-job training program in epidemiology.Apart from working in public health surveillance and scientific research, EIS officers are on stand-by to fly anywhere in the USA at a moment's notice. Sometimes they are asked to travel overseas to investigate mysterious disease outbreaks, man-made and natural disasters, and other emergencies. EIS officers are also known as "Disease Detectives". Dr. Frieden said: "The public no longer have to experience an outbreak investigation through fictional Hollywood films like Contagion. Users can now get their own first-hand experience of being a disease detective through this new application." You can download "Solve the Outbreak" from iTunes store. Written by Christian Nordqvist Copyright: MediLexicon International Ltd Original article posted on Medical News Today. Articles not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today Medical News Today publishes the latest health news and health videos for consumers and health professionals. It has a searchable archive of over 100,000 health news articles. < back to medical news
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