BackgroundHealth-related customers of InstantAtlas include multi-national agencies, national health departments, state health departments, regional and local public health authorities. This software has been adopted as a solution of choice by health agencies in the UK, US, Germany, Netherlands, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Chile and Argentina. Within US State Departments of Health it is being deployed in areas like BRFSS, Infectious Diseases, Maternal/Child Health, Vital Statistics, Cancer Registries and Injury Health. Departments of Health in twenty two US States are now using InstantAtlas. InstantAtlas is a tool being used by health analysts, researchers, statisticians, epidemiologists, data managers and GIS experts to disseminate public health statistics and indicators where there is a need to communicate geographic patterns and trends to a wider audience. They are creating outputs aimed at a wide spectrum of end-users from specialist 'experts' to 'lay users'. Further details and examples |
Example ReportsWorld Health Organisation, Global Health Observatory (GHO) National Cancer Intelligence Network (NCIN) CAWT Outcomes for Children Project Institute of Nutrition of Central America and Panama - (INCAP) National Institute for Health and Welfare Finland Australian Early Development Index US Influenza Vaccination Coverage Report by the CDC National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases - See report H1N1 Pandemic regional update reports, Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) Cancer Mortality Rates, Cancer Registry North Rhine-Westphalia (Germany) Compendium of Clinical & Health Indicators, National Centre for Health Development Outcomes, UK Public Health Reporting Demo VideoSee how easy it is to create an InstantAtlas report |
Customer SpotlightInterview with the Dr Dawn Emerick, Executive Director | Health Planning Council of Northeast Florida Stories who may also be interested in Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation The Institute for Health Policy, School of Public Health, University of Texas Public Health Webinars |






