[HTML] from plos.orgCC Whalen, S Zalwango, A Chiunda, LS Malone… - PloS one, 2011 - dx.plos.org Tuberculosis is an ancient disease that continues to threaten individual and public health today, especially in sub-Saharan Africa. Current surveillance systems describe general risk of tuberculosis in a population but do not characterize the risk to an individual following ... Cited by 1 - Related articles - Cached - All 5 versions
[PDF] from eurosurveillance.orgD Carcione, CM Giele, L Goggin… - …, 2011 - eurosurveillance.org Understanding household transmission of the pan- demic influenza A(H1N1)2009 virus, including risk fac- tors for transmission, is important for refining public health strategies to reduce the burden of the disease. During the influenza season of 2009 we investigated transmission of the ... Cited by 3 - Related articles - View as HTML - All 4 versions
C Fraser, DAT Cummings… - American Journal of …, 2011 - Oxford Univ Press ... The yellow diamonds show the attackrate for each household size (the overall attackrate was 24.7%), while the open triangles show the secondaryattackrate (ie, the attackrate for remaining persons after the introduction of 1 infected case); the overall mean was 32.5%. ... Related articles
[PDF] from biomedcentral.comR Savage, M Whelan, I Johnson, E Rea… - BMC Public …, 2011 - biomedcentral.com ... co-primary case and excluded from secondaryattackrate calculations. Symptomatic contacts with an onset date preceding the ... the primary case were excluded in serial interval and secondaryattackrate calculations. To test ... Cited by 1 - Related articles - All 6 versions
TJ Doyle… - Epidemiology and Infection, 2011 - Cambridge Univ Press ... Of 87 exposed household contacts who did not attend camp, only three instances of probable transmission were observed, for a household secondaryattackrate of 3·5%. All secondary cases occurred in households where the ill camp attendee returned home 1 day after onset ... Cited by 4 - Related articles - All 3 versions