Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 45
pro vyhledávání: '"J M, Cowden"'
Autor:
Goutam K. Adak, Mary E. Locking, Mary Hanson, Roland L. Salmon, Andre Charlett, Geraldine A. Willshaw, N. Launders, J. M. Cowden
Publikováno v:
Epidemiol Infect
Between December 2010 and July 2011, 252 cases of STEC O157 PT8 stx1 + 2 infection were reported in England, Scotland and Wales. This was the largest outbreak of STEC reported in England and the second largest in the UK to date. Eighty cases were hos
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::16d6a6f21bc92866ba48477a2b0a0364
https://europepmc.org/articles/PMC9507316/
https://europepmc.org/articles/PMC9507316/
Publikováno v:
Archives of Disease in Childhood. 91:245-250
Aims: To assess the effect of several measures of infant feeding on diarrhoeal disease, and whether these effects vary according to markers of social deprivation. Methods: Case-control study of diarrhoeal disease cases presenting to 34 general practi
Publikováno v:
Public Health. 116:75-80
Between 1992 and 1999, a total of 1426 general outbreaks of infectious intestinal disease reported to the Public Health Laboratory Service (PHLS) Communicable Disease Surveillance Centre (CDSC) were described as foodborne. Where the evidence base to
Publikováno v:
Epidemiology and Infection. 126:335-341
On Friday, 22 November 1996, the microbiologist at a hospital in Lanarkshire, Scotland, identified presumptive Escherichia coli O157 in faecal specimens submitted by three patients with bloody diarrhoea, and confirmed its presence in one. Over the ne
Autor:
Laura C. Rodrigues, J. G. Wheeler, D. S. Tompkins, Phillippa M. Cumberland, Jennifer A. Roberts, Paul Roderick, J. M. Cowden, Michael J. Hudson, D Sethi
Publikováno v:
Epidemiology and Infection. 126:63-70
Objective: To identify risk factors for infectious intestinal disease (IID) due to rotavirus group A in children aged under 16 years.Methods: Case-control study of cases of IID with rotavirus infection presenting to general practitioners (GPs) or occ
Publikováno v:
Epidemiology and Infection. 115:15-22
SummaryThe aetiology of sporadic campylobacter infection was investigated by means of a multicentre case-control study. During the course of the study 598 cases and their controls were interviewed.Conditional logistic regressional analysis of the dat
Autor:
L. Rodriques, R. Skinner, J. M. Cowden, B. Rowe, P. Mortimer, J. G. Wheeler, P. Roderick, Paul Sockett
Publikováno v:
Epidemiology and Infection. 114:277-288
SummaryPilot studies to test methods to determine the incidence, agents, risk factors and socioeconomic costs of infectious intestinal disease (IID) in England were carried out as recommended by the Committee on the Microbiological Safety of Food (th
Autor:
L M Browning, H Prempeh, C Little, C Houston, K Grant, J M Cowden, Collective on behalf of the United Kingdom Bot
Publikováno v:
Euro surveillance : bulletin Europeen sur les maladies transmissibles = European communicable disease bulletin. 16(49)
An investigation is currently underway to explain an outbreak of food-borne botulism in Scotland. Three children in the same family were confirmed as having botulism following consumption of a meal made with a jar of korma sauce. Residual sauce from
Autor:
D. S. Tompkins, Gillian Smith, F. J. Bolton, Louise Letley, Keith R. Neal, Greta Rait, J. M. Cowden, Paul R. Hunter, Jim McLauchlin, Sarah J. O'Brien, B. Smyth, Clarence C. Tam, Goutam K. Adak, Meirion Rhys Evans, Jim Gray, Laura C. Rodrigues
Publikováno v:
BMC Medical Research Methodology, Vol 10, Iss 1, p 39 (2010)
BMC Medical Research Methodology
BMC Medical Research Methodology
Background Infectious intestinal disease (IID), usually presenting as diarrhoea and vomiting, is frequently preventable. Though often mild and self-limiting, its commonness makes IID an important public health problem. In the mid 1990s around 1 in 5
Publikováno v:
Epidemiology and Infection. 109:389-396
SUMMARYAn outbreak ofSalmonella dublininfection occurred in England and Wales in October to December 1989. Forty-two people were affected, mainly adults, and most lived in south-east England. Microbiological and epidemiological investigations implica