Google Flu Trends

I saw this story last week, and meant to put up a post about it, but alas it was lost in the shuf­fle.  Hav­ing sorted through said shuf­fle this morn­ing, I thought I would go ahead and put up a brief “bet­ter late than never” post anyhow.

Google.org has now added the abil­ity to track search pat­terns on the Flu.  This is extremely use­ful, as in the inter­net enabled age in which we live, many peo­ple who have flu-like symp­toms turn to Google to see what is wrong.  If an area has a large increase in search for spe­cific search terms that are asso­ci­ated with the flu, Google can assert that there might be an out­break tak­ing place.

Accord­ing to the site, this method of track­ing flu out­breaks can save weeks in deter­min­ing that an epi­demic is in process.  While this can’t elim­i­nate the risk of catch­ing the flu, it can inform cit­i­zens and med­ical pro­fes­sion­als to be more cau­tious and bet­ter pre­pared.  Who would have dreamed that search could actu­ally save lives?

We live in amaz­ing times.

Google Flu Trends

Comments

  1. Geoff D says:

    This is neat and scary all at the same time. For a great related read, check out ‘The Great Influenza.’ It doc­u­ments the spread and search for a cure to the flu out­break of the early 20th cen­tury (which some say may have killed upwards of 300 mil­lion peo­ple, or one-fifth of the pop­u­la­tion at that time). This makes the black death look pretty lame. It also makes the fact that 300 mil­lion peo­ple wouldn’t even con­sti­tute one-twentieth of today’s pop­u­la­tion scarier.

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