Follow The Money To Predict The Spread Of Disease
from the contagious dept
If you're not familiar with the site Where's George?, you've been missing out. It's been around for ages, and lets people track where their money travels. Basically, people put in the serial numbers on their cash and their location -- and the site tracks where the money goes over time. There is a core group of folks who are extremely into the site, even stamping all of their money with "wheresgeorge.com" stamps to encourage people to visit the site and let them know where their money traveled to. I've visited the site a few times in the past (usually after receiving bills that had been stamped), but mostly thought of it as an amusing, quirky "time waster" website that has managed to survive for quite some time. However, some researchers realized that the data on the site actually could be quite useful, and have used it to create more accurate models of how diseases could spread through the US. I'm not sure if I should be impressed by the ingenuity of the researchers, or worried about what diseases I could get from the money in my wallet.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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The Vast Field of Epidemiology
Infectious diseases receive a disproportionate amount of media coverage, and even research dollars; but the biggest threat to mankind, which is predicted to kill at least 200 million people in the next 20 years, will be diabetes. The costs of treating diabetes is enormous; people go blind, lose their legs, get heart disease, require constant medication. A cure will not occur any time soon either; realistically, only massive government intervention will work, as it did for smoking or AIDS.
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It's the personal contact
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I was joking... though, clearly, not very well. Oh well.
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Re: The Vast Field of Epidemiology
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Re: The Vast Field of Epidemiology
The incidence (new infections) of HIV was decreasing in the U.S. for over 10 years, due to extensive public education and preventative measures. AIDS babies, which were once increasing exponentially in the 1980s and early 1990s, are very rare today. The incidence has risen again in recent years, due to lower public awareness. The same story holds true for cigarette smoking, whose rates had enjoyed declines for 30 years through extensive education campaigns, legislation, litigation, and other government-based measures. When fewer government resources have been devoted to the problem in recent years, cigarette smoking rates have risen again.
If you get an education in public health, you'll learn about the extent to which free-market economics is destructive to a society's health. (Of course, if you go to business school, you'll be brainwashed with the dogma that free-market economics solve all the world's problems.) In the laissez-faire capitalism of the 19th century, poor people were in such poor health, dying by age 30, spreading diseases, unable to work, that governments instituted public health measures for national defense purposes. Even today, one of the branches of the armed forces in the U.S. is the Public Health Service, founded when diseases were killing more American soldiers than bullets.
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Re: The Vast Field of Epidemiology
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Re: The Vast Field of Epidemiology
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Re: The Vast Field of Epidemiology
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Re: The Vast Field of Epidemiology
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ummm
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Re: The Vast Field of Epidemiology
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Re: The Vast Field of Epidemiology
So you don't mind if you, your family, your friends, your children start losing their eyesight or legs, and suddenly find out they have diabetes, when it's too late to do anything about it? Last I heard, about 1 out of 8 people in NYC have diabetes now.
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Track that!
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Re: The Vast Field of Epidemiology
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Re: The Vast Field of Epidemiology
Didn't say I am.
second, My brother died from diabetes, so this brings me to this, 1. id gladly die and let me family and many others die if it meant better health for the world, I BET MY LIFE ON IT,
How would the death of you or your brother cause "better health for the world"?
diabetes (excuse my spelling, but im typing and not looking back, so oh well) is not a historic desease, it has not been around forever, so that make me wonder what causes it,
Oh really? Are you saying we haven't known about diabetes since antiquity, and that we do not know the pathogenesis of its varities today?
poor eating habits, lack of exercise and such (fast foods and what happens after generations of man manipulated products into our system and the breakdown of our natural structure) that being said, now diabetes has progressed into or morphed or whatnot, to more types then just can be cureable by exerise, but most can, and if u dont like the answer of population control, which i do, then maybe youll like this
What if Type I diabetes is not caused by these things?
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Re: The Vast Field of Epidemiology
Didn't say I am.
second, My brother died from diabetes, so this brings me to this, 1. id gladly die and let me family and many others die if it meant better health for the world, I BET MY LIFE ON IT,
How would the death of you or your brother cause "better health for the world"?
diabetes (excuse my spelling, but im typing and not looking back, so oh well) is not a historic desease, it has not been around forever, so that make me wonder what causes it,
Oh really? Are you saying we haven't known about diabetes since antiquity, and that we do not know the pathogenesis of its varities today?
poor eating habits, lack of exercise and such (fast foods and what happens after generations of man manipulated products into our system and the breakdown of our natural structure) that being said, now diabetes has progressed into or morphed or whatnot, to more types then just can be cureable by exerise, but most can, and if u dont like the answer of population control, which i do, then maybe youll like this
What if Type I diabetes is not caused by these things?
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Re: No Subject Given
So in other words, you do not have any quantitative data on the specificity of the test, as distinct from its sensitivity; you just looked at waves on a screen to decide what it is. You don't sound like an expert on paper chemistry, either, for you would have described similar chemicals found in currency, and the ways to distinguish them. A sample size of 10 is laughable, by any scientific standard.
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So you don't mind if you, your family, your friend
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