The CDC is gearing up its efforts with the approach of autumn, and the flu season, and the possibility of a resurgence of the swine flu virus.
The agency has had some good experience with this approach, Nall said. H1N1 videos on CDC.gov have gotten about 100,000 page views, but the same videos on YouTube got 2.01 million views.
People look for videos on YouTube but not necessarily on the CDC.gov site. The videos are "nothing fancy," Nall said, some are just talking heads. "It's not like they're exciting, sexy videos," she said. "We're just trying to get the content out in video format."
This philosophy of bringing information to places on the Internet where people are, rather than requiring people to come to CDC.gov, pervades the CDC's electronic strategy. Other efforts include:
Widgets and content syndication: The CDC has built widgets that people can embed on their own Web pages, providing tips on H1N1 prevention. Schools are finding it useful to embed the widgets on their own sites, to inform their constituents. Likewise, automated syndication lets a Web site publisher include the latest H1N1 information on their Web site, in a style that conforms to the look of the site, without any further update once the syndication tools are installed.
Graphical buttons: The CDC is distributing graphical
buttons reminding people to take basic health precautions, such as covering their mouths when they cough. People can embed the buttons on social networking sites, including MySpace and Facebook.
Twitter: The CDC has several Twitter feeds, with a total of 700,000 followers, for releasing health information. Popularity of the feeds increases exponentially during flu season.
E-mail: E-mail updates are available from the CDC via GovDelivery, a federal e-mail alert service. The agency has a federal employee mailing list for H1N1 alerts with more than 200,000 subscribers. It's also building tools to send alerts out to all government e-mail list subscribers, a whopping 13 million addresses.
Texting: The CDC is piloting texting health alerts.
Blogger outreach: The agency is planning to hold Webinars targeted at independent bloggers, in the hopes that they'll help get the information out when necessary. It's targeting bloggers who focus on parenting issues--aka "Mommybloggers"--as well as those who focus on health issues.
Benefits of Dark Fiber for Healthcare IT Infrastructures
This white paper outlines a dark fiber strategy that has been highly successful for many healthcare organizations. The benefits include fixed cost pricing, scalability, control and security. Read more.
NOTE: Offer valid for U.S., U.S. possessions, & Canada only.