journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24149039/track-2-public-health-surveillance
#41
JOURNAL ARTICLE
A Baer, Dr Olson, Js Brownstein
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2011: Emerging Health Threats Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24149038/track-1-analytics-research-methodologies
#42
JOURNAL ARTICLE
A Baer, Dr Olson, Js Brownstein
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2011: Emerging Health Threats Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24149037/editorial-international-society-for-disease-surveillance-conference-2010-enhancing-the-synergy-between-research-informatics-and-practice-in-public-health
#43
JOURNAL ARTICLE
A Baer, Dr Olson, Js Brownstein
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2011: Emerging Health Threats Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24149035/rickettsia-felis-an-emerging-flea-transmitted-human-pathogen
#44
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mohammad Yazid Abdad, John Stenos, Stephen Graves
Rickettsia felis was first recognised two decades ago and has now been described as endemic to all continents except Antarctica. The rickettsiosis caused by R. felis is known as flea-borne spotted fever or cat-flea typhus. The large number of arthropod species found to harbour R. felis and that may act as potential vectors support the view that it is a pan-global microbe. The main arthropod reservoir and vector is the cat flea, Ctenocephalides felis, yet more than 20 other species of fleas, ticks, and mites species have been reported to harbour R...
2011: Emerging Health Threats Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24149034/health-care-logistics-who-has-the-ball-during-disaster
#45
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jerry D Vanvactor
In contemporary organizations, a wide gamut of options is available for sustaining and supporting health care operations. When disaster strikes, despite having tenable plans for routine replenishment and operations, many organizations find themselves ill-prepared, ill-equipped, and without effective mechanisms in place to sustain operations during the immediate aftermath of a crisis. Health care operations can be abruptly halted due to the non-availability of supply. The purpose of this work is to add to a necessary, growing body of works related specifically to health care logistics preparedness and disaster mitigation...
2011: Emerging Health Threats Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24149033/lessons-from-the-pandemic-the-need-for-new-tools-for-risk-and-outbreak-communication
#46
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Thomas Abraham
The influenza pandemic of 2009 revealed shortcomings in the existing guidelines for risk and outbreak communication. Concepts such as building trust proved hard to achieve in practice, whereas other issues such as communicating through the internet and coping with the political fallout of disease outbreaks are not dealt with in existing guidelines. This article surveys the current guidelines and makes recommendations for additional tools and guidelines to be developed in four areas: integrating long-term behavior change models with outbreak communications; research to develop a better understanding of communicating through the internet; research to understand how to use communications to build trust; and developing guidelines and principles to understand the political nature of disease outbreaks...
2011: Emerging Health Threats Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24149031/use-of-media-and-public-domain-internet-sources-for-detection-and-assessment-of-plant-health-threats
#47
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Carla S Thomas, Noele P Nelson, Gary C Jahn, Tianchan Niu, David M Hartley
Event-based biosurveillance is a recognized approach to early warning and situational awareness of emerging health threats. In this study, we build upon previous human and animal health work to develop a new approach to plant pest and pathogen surveillance. We show that monitoring public domain electronic media for indications and warning of epidemics and associated social disruption can provide information about the emergence and progression of plant pest infestation or disease outbreak. The approach is illustrated using a case study, which describes a plant pest and pathogen epidemic in China and Vietnam from February 2006 to December 2007, and the role of ducks in contributing to zoonotic virus spread in birds and humans...
2011: Emerging Health Threats Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24149029/environmental-risk-factors-for-autism
#48
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rodney R Dietert, Janice M Dietert, Jamie C Dewitt
Autism is a devastating childhood condition that has emerged as an increasing social concern just as it has increased in prevalence in recent decades. Autism and the broader category of autism spectrum disorders are among the increasingly seen examples in which there is a fetal basis for later disease or disorder. Environmental, genetic, and epigenetic factors all play a role in determining the risk of autism and some of these effects appear to be transgenerational. Identification of the most critical windows of developmental vulnerability is paramount to understanding when and under what circumstances a child is at elevated risk for autism...
2011: Emerging Health Threats Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24149028/impact-of-open-manganese-mines-on-the-health-of-children-dwelling-in-the-surrounding-area
#49
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ykateryna D Duka, Svetlana I Ilchenko, Mykola M Kharytonov, Tetyana L Vasylyeva
INTRODUCTION: Chronic manganese (Mn) exposure is a health hazard associated with the mining and processing of Mn ores. Children living in an area with increased environmental exposure to Mn may have symptoms of chronic toxicity that are different from adults who experience occupational exposure. The aim of the study was to compare health outcomes in a pediatric population living near open Mn mines with a group of children from a reference area and then to develop and implement preventive/rehabilitation measures to protect the children in the mining region...
2011: Emerging Health Threats Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24149027/can-environmental-or-occupational-hazards-alter-the-sex-ratio-at-birth-a-systematic-review
#50
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Metrecia L Terrell, Kathleen P Hartnett, Michele Marcus
More than 100 studies have examined whether environmental or occupational exposures of parents affect the sex ratio of their offspring at birth. For this review, we searched Medline and Web of Science using the terms 'sex ratio at birth' and 'sex ratio and exposure' for all dates, and reviewed bibliographies of relevant studies to find additional articles. This review focuses on exposures that have been the subject of at least four studies including polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), dioxins, pesticides, lead and other metals, radiation, boron, and g-forces...
2011: Emerging Health Threats Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24149026/automated-detection-of-influenza-like-illness-using-clinical-surveillance-markers-at-a-department-of-veterans-affairs-medical-center
#51
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lawrence P Park, Supriya Rao, Scott A Nabity, David Abbott, Joyce Frederick, Christopher W Woods
BACKGROUND: Using demographic and clinical measures from emergency department evaluations, we developed an automated surveillance system for influenza-like illness (ILI). METHODS: We selected a random sample of patients who were seen at the Durham, NC Veterans Affairs Medical Center between May 2002 and October 2009 with fever or a respiratory ICD-9 diagnosis code and divided this into subsets for system development and validation. Comprehensive chart reviews identified patients who met a standard case definition for ILI...
2011: Emerging Health Threats Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22460398/current-research-on-public-perceptions-of-nanotechnology
#52
JOURNAL ARTICLE
J Besley
This review explores research on public perceptions of nanotechnology. It highlights a recurring emphasis on some researchers' expectations that there will be a meaningful relationship between awareness of nanotechnology and positive views about nanotechnology. The review, however, also notes that this emphasis is tacitly and explicitly rejected by a range of multivariate studies that emphasize the key roles of non-awareness variables, such as, trust, general views about science, and overall worldview. The review concludes with a discussion of likely future research directions, including the expectation that social scientists will continue to focus on nanotechnology as a unique opportunity to study how individuals assess risk in the context of relatively low levels of knowledge...
2010: Emerging Health Threats Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22460397/emerging-viral-threats-in-gabon-health-capacities-and-response-to-the-risk-of-emerging-zoonotic-diseases-in-central-africa
#53
JOURNAL ARTICLE
M Bourgarel, N Wauquier, J-P Gonzalez
Emerging infectious diseases (EID) are currently the major threat to public health worldwide and most EID events have involved zoonotic infectious agents. Central Africa in general and Gabon in particular are privileged areas for the emergence of zoonotic EIDs. Indeed, human incursions in Gabonese forests for exploitation purposes lead to intensified contacts between humans and wildlife thus generating an increased risk of emergence of zoonotic diseases. In Gabon, 51 endemic or potential endemic viral infectious diseases have been reported...
2010: Emerging Health Threats Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22460396/innovation-in-observation-a-vision-for-early-outbreak-detection
#54
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nh Fefferman, En Naumova
The emergence of new infections and resurgence of old onesFhealth threats stemming from environmental contamination or purposeful acts of bioterrorismFcall for a worldwide effort in improving early outbreak detection, with the goal of ameliorating current and future risks. In some cases, the problem of outbreak detection is logistically straightforward and mathematically easy: a single case of a disease of great concern can constitute an outbreak. However, for the vast majority of maladies, a simple analytical solution does not exist...
2010: Emerging Health Threats Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22460395/risks-associated-with-melamine-and-related-triazine-contamination-of-food
#55
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Re Baynes, Je Riviere
Recent adulteration of milk products with melamine (ME) in several countries caused adverse health effects and even deaths in infants. Earlier, in 2007, contamination of pet food with ME and its related contaminants was associated with many clinical cases of canine and feline nephrotoxicity, and in some cases mortality. ME is a triazine compound that is often detected with other triazine analogs such as cyanuric acid. As is the custom in some livestock operations, the contaminated pet food was mixed with feed intended for the swine and poultry industry...
2010: Emerging Health Threats Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22460394/road-manslaughter-or-just-the-cost-of-progress
#56
JOURNAL ARTICLE
L Mooren, R Grzebieta
Much to the frustration of road safety researchers, practitioners, and advocates, road deaths and injuries have not been widely accepted as a major public health threat. Currently, road trauma is one of the biggest killers and causes of serious and disabling injuries in the world. Although there has been considerable research on the causes of road injury and ways of mitigating the problem, there is still reluctance to systematically and sufficiently do what can be done to reduce this problem globally. This paper takes a historical review of the road trauma problem and responses to it...
2010: Emerging Health Threats Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22460393/landscape-of-international-event-based-biosurveillance
#57
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dm Hartley, Np Nelson, R Walters, R Arthur, R Yangarber, L Madoff, Jp Linge, A Mawudeku, N Collier, Js Brownstein, G Thinus, N Lightfoot
Event-based biosurveillance is a scientific discipline in which diverse sources of data, many of which are available from the Internet, are characterized prospectively to provide information on infectious disease events. Biosurveillance complements traditional public health surveillance to provide both early warning of infectious disease events and situational awareness. The Global Health Security Action Group of the Global Health Security Initiative is developing a biosurveillance capability that integrates and leverages component systems from member nations...
2010: Emerging Health Threats Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22460392/human-rhinovirus-c-a-newly-discovered-human-rhinovirus-species
#58
JOURNAL ARTICLE
S K P Lau, C C Y Yip, P C Y Woo, K-Y Yuen
Although often ignored, human rhinoviruses (HRVs) are the most frequent causes of respiratory tract infections (RTIs). A group of closely related novel rhinoviruses have recently been discovered. Based on their unique phylogenetic position and distinct genomic features, they are classified as a separate species, HRV-C. After their discovery, HRV-C viruses have been detected in patients worldwide, with a reported prevalence of 1.4-30.9% among tested specimens. This suggests that the species contribute to a significant proportion of RTIs that were unrecognized in the past...
2010: Emerging Health Threats Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22460391/ecological-approaches-to-informing-public-health-policy-and-risk-assessments-on-emerging-vector-borne-zoonoses
#59
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jm Medlock, Lj Jameson
Pathogens associated with vector-borne zoonoses occur in enzootic cycles within nature. They are driven by a combination of vertebrate host and invertebrate vector population dynamics, which in turn respond to changes in environmental stimuli. Human involvement in these cycles, and hence the occurrence of human disease, is often to act as incidental host. From a public health perspective our ability to better predict human outbreaks of these diseases and prepare intervention and mitigation strategies relies on understanding the natural cycle of pathogen transmission...
2010: Emerging Health Threats Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22460290/successful-control-of-vancomycin-resistant-enterococcus-faecium-outbreak-in-a-neurosurgical-unit-at-non-endemic-region
#60
JOURNAL ARTICLE
V C C Cheng, J F W Chan, J W M Tai, Y Y Ho, I W S Li, K K W To, P L Ho, K Y Yuen
Vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) have emerged in many parts of the world, but have only been reported sporadically in Hong Kong. We report an outbreak of vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium (VREfm) in a neurosurgical unit at a tertiary teaching hospital between 3 March and 3 April 2009 in Hong Kong. During the outbreak investigation, clinical samples from 193 (91.5%) of 211 patients who had stayed in the neurosurgical unit and 506 environmental samples were screened for VREfm. Besides the index case, another 3 (1...
2009: Emerging Health Threats Journal
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