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Improved Diagnosis and Care for Rare Diseases through Implementation of Precision Public Health Framework

Authors :
Michael Brudno
Victoria Hedley
Anne Hawkins
Anand Vasudevan
Cynthia J. Tifft
Ruxandra Draghia-Akli
Christopher P. Austin
Stephen C. Groft
Paul Lasko
Nigel G. Laing
Hedwig Verhoef
Iiro Eerola
Tudor Groza
Cathy Kiraly-Borri
Lyn Schofield
Melissa A. Haendel
Trinity Mahede
John S. Mattick
Stephanie Broley
Hugh Dawkins
Rachel Thompson
Yann Le Cam
Jack Goldblatt
Peter N. Robinson
Kate Bushby
Nicholas Pachter
Kenjiro Kosaki
Caroline E. Walker
Daria Julkowska
Gareth Baynam
Domenica Taruscio
Hanns Lochmüller
Marcel E. Dinger
Manuel Posada de la Paz
Caron Molster
Annie Olry
William A. Gahl
Jennie Slee
Sharron Townshend
Andreas Zankl
Fowzan S. Alkuraya
Fiona Haslam McKenzie
Faye L. Bowman
Makoto Suematsu
Tarun Weeramanthri
Ken Ishii
Takeya Adachi
Petra Kaufmann
Kym M. Boycott
Mark M. Davis
Kym Mina
Karla J. Lister
John Beilby
Irene Norstedt
Marc Hanauer
Tony Roscioli
Ana Rath
Mark J. Cowley
Sharon F. Terry
Source :
Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology ISBN: 9783319671420
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Springer International Publishing, 2017.

Abstract

Public health relies on technologies to produce and analyse data, as well as effectively develop and implement policies and practices. An example is the public health practice of epidemiology, which relies on computational technology to monitor the health status of populations, identify disadvantaged or at risk population groups and thereby inform health policy and priority setting. Critical to achieving health improvements for the underserved population of people living with rare diseases is early diagnosis and best care. In the rare diseases field, the vast majority of diseases are caused by destructive but previously difficult to identify protein-coding gene mutations. The reduction in cost of genetic testing and advances in the clinical use of genome sequencing, data science and imaging are converging to provide more precise understandings of the ‘person-time-place’ triad. That is: who is affected (people); when the disease is occurring (time); and where the disease is occurring (place). Consequently we are witnessing a paradigm shift in public health policy and practice towards ‘precision public health’.

Details

ISBN :
978-3-319-67142-0
ISBNs :
9783319671420
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology ISBN: 9783319671420
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........bc69c63b74f6c84288a5ae96442e6df7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-67144-4_4