The CASE Framework -- A New Architecture for Participatory Research and Digital Health Surveillance
Marco Hirsch, Peter Hevesi, Paul Lukowicz

TL;DR
The paper introduces CASE, an adaptable, open-source framework for participatory research and disease surveillance that dynamically adjusts survey workflows in real time, supporting diverse applications with improved maintainability.
Contribution
It presents a novel event-driven architecture for participatory research platforms, including a major architectural overhaul to enhance usability and deployment in resource-limited settings.
Findings
Successful deployment in national disease surveillance
Supports large-scale longitudinal studies
Demonstrates scalability and versatility
Abstract
We present CASE, an open-source framework for adaptive participatory research and disease surveillance. Unlike traditional survey platforms with static branching logic, CASE uses an event-driven architecture that adjusts survey workflows in real time based on participant responses, external data, temporal conditions, and evolving participant state. This design supports everything from simple one-time questionnaires to complex longitudinal studies with sophisticated conditional logic. Built on over a decade of practical experience, CASE underwent major architectural changes in 2024. We replaced a complex microservice design with a streamlined monolithic architecture, significantly improving maintainability and deployment accessibility, particularly for institutions with limited technical resources. CASE has been successfully deployed across diverse domains, powering national disease…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFocus Groups and Qualitative Methods
