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Gordon Freymann, Director of the office of health indicators for
planning at the Department of Public Health, stan0sd with Wade
Sellers, district health director for Northwest Georgia Public
Health District after accepting the Sellers-McCroan Award. |
Gordon Freymann, M.P.H., Director of the office of health indicators for
planning at the Department of Public Health, was awarded the Sellers-McCroan
Award at the Georgia Public Health Association Awards Luncheon on April 13.
Freymann conceived, brought to fruition, and has steadily maintained and
improved the Georgia Online Analytical Information System, more
affectionately known as OASIS. This user-friendly web-based resource brings
epidemiology and population data into the hands of users as revealing health
information. Numerous query, charting and mapping tools, populated with the
user's choice of data, are available at the click of a mouse 24 hours a day.
The tool is used by reporters, students, researchers, grant writers, public
health offices, community planners, interested citizens and more. In a
typical month, there are more than 35,000 uses of the system. That's more
than 200 users per work day hours and more than 3 uses per minute. For every
work day hour, five maps are completed through OASIS.
The tool has allowed users easy access to public health data that would have
been delayed or denied due to staffing shortages if data retrieval was still
dependent on staff programmers, statisticians and support personnel. Without
Freymann's leadership, the department would need a total of 230 people
working eight-hour days to cover the work accomplished through OASIS. Money
saved through the automation of data retrieval has allowed the tool to be
continuously enhanced and improved.
The high-quality and ease of use of OASIS has helped to enhance the brand
and reputation of the Division of Public Health for years and now does the
same for the Department of Public Health.
"It's a tremendous honor for me and all of us in the Office of Health
Indicators for Planning to receive the Sellers-McCroan award," Freymann told
PHWEEK. "It represents a lot of hard work and dedication that went into
making quality data easily accessible to more people for local health
decision-making, as well as help fortify a data-driven culture where public
health decisions are based on quality data."
-Story by Wade Sellers, M.D., M.P.H., district health director for
Northwest Georgia Public Health District and Kimberly Stringer, DPH
Communications