Free iPhone app lets you track swine flu outbreaks

A free iPhone app called “Outbreaks Near Me” is designed to help users track and report oubreaks of swine flu and other infectious diseases.

Researchers at Children’s Hospital in Boston built the application with the MIT Media Lab and with support from Google.org, the philanthropic arm of the search engine company.

The application relies on information gathered at the HealthMap Web site.

With the app, iPhone users can get information on outbreaks of a disease in their area.

They also can be notified on the device or by e-mail when new outbreaks are reported nearby or when the user enters an area where outbreaks have been reported.

There is also an option to submit an outbreak report and to add photos of situations that might have led to the spreading of a disease, according to a statement from Children’s Hospital.

The application is built upon HealthMap.org, which was started in 2006 to mine the Internet for news reports, official alerts, blogs and chats about infectious disease outbreaks. The site also relies on what it calls “curated” personal accounts, according to a statement.

Clark Freifeld, who is a co-founder of HealthMap, a Ph.D candidate at the MIT Media Lab and a research software developer at Children’s, called the reporting process for HealthMap and now the iPhone app, “grassroots, participatory epidemiology.”

HealthMap typically receives 10,000 unique visits a day, but at the peak of the swine flu outbreak last spring, visits rose to 150,000 a day.

The application gives users, for the first time, the opportunity to submit their own information about disease outbreaks, such as school closings or overcrowding at a local hospital, Freifeld said in an interview. “We don’t know exactly what we’ll get,” he said.

A hands-on review mechanism is also being developed to reject bogus information.

The hardest part of building the app, Freifeld said, was coordinating requests from the database with a user’s iPhone location based on GPS data.

Tools such as the iPhone app can be a tremendous source of information for users, helping them become more proactive in safeguarding public health.

Swine flu scams

On the flip side, though, PC users should also be vary about the proliferating H1N1-related scams and schemes cooked up by bad guys, either looking to infect your computer, steal your credit card information or sell you phony products.

Here, we detail some of the most common lines being used online lately.

Treat swine flu virus! Buy Tamiflu without a prescription

Researchers at McAfee Labs have found that a great deal of the spam ending up in inboxes lately has a subject line that offers Tamiflu, a prescription-only medication that can stop influenza from further mutating in the early stages of the virus, without a prescription.

According to McAfee Labs lead researcher Adam Wosotowsky, the link offering Tamiflu usually directs users back to an alleged Canadian pharmaceutical site that likely sells fake products.

In fact, spam that advertises websites for “Canadian pharmaceuticals” accounted for more than 70 percent of global spam volume in September, according to McAfee analysis.

In the past few weeks, fraudulent offers of so-called swine flu treatments and medications have become so widespread that the FDA and the FTC has issued warnings to consumers to avoid them. Earlier this month, the two agencies released a joint warning letter to one website offering fraudulent H1N1 flu supplements. The FDA also maintains a list of fraudulent 2009 H1N1 influenza products so consumers can check out what snake oil is being sold claiming to cure or prevent the virus.

“Products that are offered for sale with claims to diagnose, prevent, mitigate, treat or cure the 2009 H1N1 influenza virus must be carefully evaluated,” said Commissioner of Food and Drugs Margaret A. Hamburg, M.D., in a statement.

“Unless these products are proven to be safe and effective for the claims that are made, it is not known whether they will prevent the transmission of the virus or offer effective remedies against infection. Furthermore, they can make matters worse by providing consumers with a false sense of protection.”

Officials warn much of what is being offered online is fake, and even dangerous. FDA evaluation of one such product claiming to be Tamiflu revealed it was only a mixture of talc and generic Tylenol. So other than the obvious possibility of being ripped off, is the chance that the product could be dangerous.

Takeaway: The only safe and legal way to get Tamiflu is to see your doctor

Swine flu cases tripled overnight!

The subject itself us usually pretty catchy, said McAfee’s Wosotowsky. When H1N1 first made its appearance several months ago, the commonly-used line was “Obama catches swine flu!” These days, Wosotowsky is seeing spam ploys that tend to prey more on the pandemic implications of the virus, such as “Swine flu cases tripled overnight” or “Help swine flu victims.”

The “interesting news item” is just another common spam scheme criminals use to get your attention. But instead of taking users to a legitimate news story, those that click either find themselves directed back to a bogus drug site, or have malware downloaded onto their computer.

This is also a technique that has been employed on Twitter, where bad links have been shortened to obscure their origin.

Takeaway: Resist the urge to click links in emails with swine flu news. Get the latest information about H1N1 off of legitimate news sites or government sites, such as the CDC‘s, which is tracking the viruses spread and has daily updates about vaccine availability.

Searching the term ‘swine flu’ leads to fake AV sites

Now, we did just advise you to do your own searching for swine flu news, rather than trusting unsolicited emails offering you information. But when you Google “swine flu” or “H1N1,” you still need to be careful. That’s because security researchers are seeing more use of shady search engine optimization techniques, which draw users to spoof web pages where malware is downloaded.

PandaLabs, the research arm of Panda Security, recently released a quarterly report on cyber-threat activity and revealed that they have detected a major growth in the distribution of malware through such blackhat SEO techniques, which often exploiting current issues such as swine flu.

If your computer isn’t equipped with one of the many online tools that can determine if a site is risky, you can check out the site’s rating with Google safe browsing. Simply replace “mysite.com” with the site in question. IE: http://www.google.com/safebrowsing/diagnostic?site=itbusiness.ca.

Takeaway: Use care when searching for information about swine flu/H1N1. If it is not a site you recognize in the search results, you should think twice before heading there with out checking out its safety rating first.

Swine flu prevention kits! Medical grade protection!

The swine flu kits being sold online and through spam emails are not necessarily harmful, but items in them are of little use in preventing H1N1, according to FDA officials. And even if they are, most can be purchased at hardware, grocery, and drug stores.

Some of the “kits” being sold online include items such as masks, air purifiers, diagnostic tools to determine if you are infected — and even one that is hocking something called “9-1-1 Water.” The kits are being sold for $100 or more according to many search results.

But FDA officials say by buying these kits you will needlessly part with your dollars. And security researchers like Wosotowsky are quick to point out that purchasing a less-than-legitimate product probably means you are dealing with a questionable operation. Do you really want to put your credit information in the hands of a shady company?

Takeaway: The current medical advice for H1N1 flu defense is to practice thorough hand washing and avoid touching your face. And, if there is a miracle product that can prevent H1N1, you can bet you won’t be hearing about it from a spam email.

Source: Computerworld.com

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Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

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