When it comes to disease surveillance and communication, we have a tendency to throw lots of stuff at the wall to see what sticks. Some things stick around (like this blog!), others things not so much… like our first attempt at WormsAndGermsMap about ten years ago. It was a good idea, but the technology wasn’t ready for it yet (at least for a low budget operation like ours). But technology advances, diseases continue to spread, and informal disease mapping can still be useful, so we’re giving it another try with the launch of our new and improved WormsAndGermsMap.

The new site lets users report disease events (cases) directly using a very simple submission page (see screenshot). The cases are then plotted on the map, randomly within a 5 km radius of the location provided (to protect privacy). The exact locations are retained on the back end of the site it case they’re needed, for example for looking more closely at a potential local outbreak.
The map can then be filtered by animal species, disease and dates. Clicking on a point provides some basic information on the case, but we also keep a bit more information on the back end of the site, and submitters can add comments in case there’s additional relevant information we should have.

There aren’t a lot of cases on the site yet (as you can see from the screenshot above) as we’re focusing on ongoing crowd reporting, but I’m also adding some data points we have that I think will be useful.
Why are we trying this again?
Because I get emails every week along the lines of “I think I’m seeing more of this disease.” I also get lots of questions about what diseases are where. I also get questions like “we saw something unusual. To whom can we report it?”
Informal, crowd-based disease reporting and mapping can help with all of these issues, but it’s important to remember that it also has lots of limitations. It’s based on what people happen to report, so it doesn’t capture all infections, or even a structured subset collected as part of a formal surveillance program. It also relies on the accuracy of the diagnosis, since we aren’t assessing the case ourselves to confirm the disease is what the submitter says it is. We also need to keep in mind that a disease that develops / is diagnosed in one area might have actually been picked up in an entirely different region (because animals travel too).
But the limitations also shouldn’t overshadow the potential educational and surveillance value. We’re not trying to say “the incidence of this disease is X in this area” or “there’s been an increase in disease in that area.” We’re just trying to help raise awareness about regional diseases risks, identify and track high risk incidents (e.g. canine influenza outbreaks), and give people a way to report unusual observations that might warrant more investigation or communication. Most of the time, an unusual observation is a typical disease acting atypically. Somethings, though, it’s the sign of something new. We can also sometimes pick up emerging issues or local clusters of disease. Ultimately, we have to interpret the data with caution, but the data can still be useful.
We’ll see if WormsAndGermsMap sticks better this time. I think there’s a need, but it’s only useful if we can get people to use it and submit cases. Time will tell.









