Abstract
In 1995, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention granted a Cooperative Agreement Program award to the Infectious Diseases Society of America to develop a provider-based emerging infections sentinel network, the Emerging Infections Network (EIN). Over the past 17 years, the EIN has evolved into a flexible, nationwide network with membership representing a broad cross-section of infectious disease physicians. The EIN has an active electronic mail conference (listserv) that facilitates communication among infectious disease providers and the public health community, and also sends members periodic queries (short surveys on infectious disease topics) that have addressed numerous topics relevant to both clinical infectious diseases and public health practice. The article reviews how the various functions of EIN contribute to clinical care and public health, identifies opportunities to further link clinical medicine and public health, and describes future directions for the EIN. Oxford University Press on behalf of the Infectious Diseases Society of America 2014.
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CITATION STYLE
Pillai, S. K., Beekmann, S. E., Santibanez, S., & Polgreen, P. M. (2014, April 1). Infectious diseases society of America emerging infections network: Bridging the gap between clinical infectious diseases and public health. Clinical Infectious Diseases. Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/cit932
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