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Marty CicchinelliPublic Health Subject Matter Expert
What do you think the implications of TriSano® on public health could be? As someone who has worked at state, local, federal, and international levels for the last 32 years, I believe that TriSano® marks a sea change in the development of surveillance and outbreak management software. It supports a true collaborative process with application developers and local and state subject matter experts working together to create new features and functions in a rapid manner. Read More >
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Brian HatchEpidemiologist
How are you contributing to TriSano®? I have been involved with the TriSano® project for the past 20 months as a member of the core development team. My role on the development team is as a subject matter expert (SME) by bringing a local health department perspective in Epidemiology, Surveillance, Communicable Disease Investigation & Case Management, Environmental Health, and Administration to the TriSano® project. The TriSano® project has provided local health…
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Carolyn RoseNurse
How are you contributing to TriSano®? I represent Nurses, investigation and the needs of smaller local health departments. Because of our size we need an efficient and flexible solution to disease reporting and investigation as well as tracking the diseases in our county. We are trying to build TriSano® in a way that promotes the application to guiding a nurse or local health official on how to appropriately conduct an investigation.…
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David JacksonEpidemiologist
What does TriSano® mean to you? We believe TriSano® is going to allow us to track diseases better and identify unusual disease situations faster. This idea of picking up on
something days, weeks, months earlier translates to fewer illnesses, fewer hospitalizations and maybe even fewer deaths. There are systems that do what TriSano® does that cost millions off the shelf.
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Steven BedrickInformaticist
What does TriSano® mean to you? TriSano® demonstrates the power of an iterative, user-centered software design process. By focusing on the actual needs and workflows of the system’s day-to-day users, the developers have built at system that is far more likely to succeed than systems built using more traditional development methodologies. Put bluntly, a poorly-designed system that does not meet the needs of front-line public health workers will not end up…
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Pete LaceyDevelopment Manager
You have been a part of this community for over a year now, what are you most proud of? The team. With fantastic leadership from Mike and the SME's, we long ago entered the 'performing' stage of development. The core developers all share the same vision and drive. We trust in each other's ability to deliver. And even though we're spread out across the country, there is a level of camaraderie that makes working on TriSano® a joy. Heck, I'm doing it now and…
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Ed CoponyDevelopment Manager
What do you think the implications of TriSano® on public health could be? Moving from a siloed, paper based environment to a central, flexible application is a huge opportunity to simplify the lives of public health officials.
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Mike HerrickVice President
How are you contributing to TriSano®? I manage the development team, nurture the Lean / Open Source best practices process, work on automation of the build & deployments.
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Ryan BellDeveloper
What do you think the implications of TriSano® on public health could be? I think it's a game changer. Not just because it's a real open source solution to a public health problem, but because it demonstrates to the old guard that you don't need five years and an army of consultants to write public health software. That's a big deal when you're talking about users who still rely on 20 year old DOS programs to do their…
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