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Medicine Technology

Racing To Contain Ebola 112

An anonymous reader writes "Ebola, one of the most deadly diseases known to humans, started killing people in Guinea a few months ago. There have been Ebola outbreaks in the past, but they were contained. The latest outbreak has now killed over 100 people across three countries. One of the biggest difficulties in containing an outbreak is knowing where the virus originated and how it spread. That problem is being addressed right now by experts and a host of volunteers using Open Street Map. 'Zoom in and you can see road networks and important linkages between towns and countries, where there were none before. Overlay this with victim data, and it can help explain the rapid spread. Click on the colored blobs and you will see sites of confirmed deaths, suspected cases that have been overturned, sites where Ebola testing labs have been setup or where the emergency relief teams are currently located.'"
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Racing To Contain Ebola

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  • Re:Damn English (Score:4, Informative)

    by ericloewe ( 2129490 ) on Saturday April 12, 2014 @11:09AM (#46733457)

    I wouldn't put it past him.

  • Re:Africa, eh? (Score:3, Informative)

    by houstonbofh ( 602064 ) on Saturday April 12, 2014 @11:11AM (#46733463)

    I predict a low posts count.

    The most terrifying book I have ever read is "The Hot Zone" by Richard Preston. http://www.amazon.com/Hot-Zone... [amazon.com] If this gets out and goes global, it is THE END of civilization as we know it. I suspect a few more people might be following this than normal.

  • Re:Africa, eh? (Score:4, Informative)

    by dougisfunny ( 1200171 ) on Saturday April 12, 2014 @11:32AM (#46733571)

    That's where the ancestors of everyone hail from.

  • by AndrewBuck ( 1120597 ) on Sunday April 13, 2014 @10:11AM (#46739661)

    (Full disclosure, I am one of the lead coordinators of the mapping effort discussed in the article and in my post below.)

    Yes, the OpenStreetMap project is where the mapping is being done. The map linked in the article shows outbreak information overlaid on top of the OSM database of roads and buildings. It is this underlying map data that the croudsourcing is about.

    If you go to this site [hotosm.org] you can create an OSM account and then start edititng the map immediately (think wikipedia, but for maps). You normally would edit by just going to the main OSM page and then editing the map there, the site I linked is the HOT task manager. We create areas on the task manager that need mapping done, the area is then broken up into a grid of small square tiles, and then people 'lock' a tile to work on, map all the roads and/or buildings in that tile, and finally mark the tile complete after the map has been updated. This tool was used to map all the roads and buildings in 3 large cities (Gueckedou, Macenta, and Kissidougou), where the outbreak originally started; all three of these towns were mapped completely, down to the last building, within 24 hours of HOT getting satellite imagery for them.

    Right now the focus is to find and map all the small residential areas outside of these main cities, and to draw in the main connecting roads to each village. This helps the medical teams track the spread of the disease from village to village, as well as making it easier for them to travel around to do their own work. I really encourage slashdotters to help out on these kinds of projects. The mapping tools are easy to use (the in browser iD editor especially), but the technical knowledge of the slashdot crowd makes it easy for the average ./er to learn more advanced tools like JOSM and also to help with analysis and writing code to do cool stuff with the map data. You can really help out this (and a lot of other humanitarian efforts) by doing a bit of mapping anywhere in these areas, every little bit of extra data helps.

    -AndrewBuck

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