TY - JOUR AU - Saldanha, Raphael AU - Mosnier, Émilie AU - Barcellos, Christovam AU - Carbunar, Aurel AU - Charron, Christophe AU - Desconnets, Jean-Christophe AU - Guarmit, Basma AU - Gomes, Margarete Do Socorro Mendonça AU - Mandon, Théophile AU - Mendes, Anapaula Martins AU - Peiter, Paulo César AU - Musset, Lise AU - Sanna, Alice AU - Van Gastel, Benoît AU - Roux, Emmanuel PY - 2020 DA - 2020/9/1 TI - Contributing to Elimination of Cross-Border Malaria Through a Standardized Solution for Case Surveillance, Data Sharing, and Data Interpretation: Development of a Cross-Border Monitoring System JO - JMIR Public Health Surveill SP - e15409 VL - 6 IS - 3 KW - cross-border malaria KW - surveillance KW - data interoperability KW - data visualization KW - French Guiana KW - Brazil AB - Background: Cross-border malaria is a significant obstacle to achieving malaria control and elimination worldwide. Objective: This study aimed to build a cross-border surveillance system that can make comparable and qualified data available to all parties involved in malaria control between French Guiana and Brazil. Methods: Data reconciliation rules based on expert knowledge were defined and applied to the heterogeneous data provided by the existing malaria surveillance systems of both countries. Visualization dashboards were designed to facilitate progressive data exploration, analysis, and interpretation. Dedicated advanced open source and robust software solutions were chosen to facilitate solution sharing and reuse. Results: A database gathering the harmonized data on cross-border malaria epidemiology is updated monthly with new individual malaria cases from both countries. Online dashboards permit a progressive and user-friendly visualization of raw data and epidemiological indicators, in the form of time series, maps, and data quality indexes. The monitoring system was shown to be able to identify changes in time series that are related to control actions, as well as differentiated changes according to space and to population subgroups. Conclusions: This cross-border monitoring tool could help produce new scientific evidence on cross-border malaria dynamics, implementing cross-border cooperation for malaria control and elimination, and can be quickly adapted to other cross-border contexts. SN - 2369-2960 UR - http://publichealth.jmir.org/2020/3/e15409/ UR - https://doi.org/10.2196/15409 UR - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32663141 DO - 10.2196/15409 ID - info:doi/10.2196/15409 ER -