Public health informatics
Informatics applied to populations, not just patients — surveillance, registries, reporting and response. The systems that let a health department see an outbreak before it becomes a crisis.
In one line
Public health informatics applies information and technology to the health of populations: detecting and tracking disease, running immunisation and disease registries, and moving data between clinical care and public health so a threat is seen early and acted on fast.
The core systems
Notifiable-disease reporting (a lab result or diagnosis triggers a report to the health department), electronic case reporting (eCR) from the EHR, immunisation registries, syndromic surveillance (emergency-department patterns), and disease/outcome registries (cancer, cardiac, birth defects). Most of this moves as HL7 messages and FHIR.
Where the analytics live
Turning those feeds into signal is epidemiology: incidence and prevalence, outbreak detection, and diagnostic-test performance. Public health informatics is the plumbing; epidemiology is the interpretation — you need both.
The India context
India's population-scale programmes — immunisation (Co-WIN-style certificates), notifiable disease surveillance (IDSP/IHIP), and the ABDM data rails — are public health informatics at national scale, where standards and consent design decide whether data can flow safely.
Watch for — data that arrives too late to matter
Surveillance is only useful if it is timely and complete. Manual, batched, or non-standard reporting means the outbreak is visible only after it has spread. The whole discipline pushes toward automated, standards-based, near-real-time flow from care to public health.