The hardware and bandwidth for this mirror is donated by dogado GmbH, the Webhosting and Full Service-Cloud Provider. Check out our Wordpress Tutorial.
If you wish to report a bug, or if you are interested in having us mirror your free-software or open-source project, please feel free to contact us at mirror[@]dogado.de.

surveil: Public health surveillance

The surveil R package provides time series models for routine public health surveillance tasks: model time trends in mortality or disease incidence rates to make inferences about levels of risk, cumulative and period percent change, age-standardized rates, and health inequalities.

surveil is an interface to Stan, a state-of-the-art platform for Bayesian inference. For analysis of spatial health data see the geostan R package.

Installation

surveil is available on CRAN; install from R using:

install.packages("surveil")

Vignettes

Review the package vignettes to get started:

Also see the online documentation.

Usage

Model time series data of mortality or disease incidence by loading the surveil package into R together with disease surveillance data. Tables exported from CDC WONDER are automatically in the correct format.

library(surveil)
library(knitr)
data(cancer)

kable(head(cancer), 
      booktabs = TRUE,
      caption = "Table 1. A glimpse of cancer surveillance data")
Year Age Count Population
1999 <1 866 3708753
1999 1-4 2959 14991152
1999 5-9 2226 20146188
1999 10-14 2447 19742631
1999 15-19 3875 19585857
1999 20-24 5969 18148795

Model trends in risk and easily view functions of risk estimates, such as cumulative percent change:

fit <- stan_rw(data = cancer,
               time = Year, 
               group = Age,
           cores = 4 # multi-core processing for speed
           )

fit_apc <- apc(fit)
plot(fit_apc, cumulative = TRUE)

Cumulative percent change in US cancer incidence by age group

These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.
Health stats visible at Monitor.