848 resultados para Russian influenza
Resumo:
The Iowa Influenza Surveillance Network (IISN) was established in 2004, though surveillance has been conducted at the Iowa Department of Public Health. Schools and long-term care facilities report data weekly into a Web-based reporting system. Schools report the number of students absent due to illness and the total enrolled. Long-term care facilities report cases of influenza and vaccination status of each case. Both passively report outbreaks of illness, including influenza, to IDPH.
Resumo:
The Iowa Influenza Surveillance Network (IISN) was established in 2004, though surveillance has been conducted at the Iowa Department of Public Health. Schools and long-term care facilities report data weekly into a Web-based reporting system. Schools report the number of students absent due to illness and the total enrolled. Long-term care facilities report cases of influenza and vaccination status of each case. Both passively report outbreaks of illness, including influenza, to IDPH.
Resumo:
The Iowa Influenza Surveillance Network (IISN) was established in 2004, though surveillance has been conducted at the Iowa Department of Public Health. Schools and long-term care facilities report data weekly into a Web-based reporting system. Schools report the number of students absent due to illness and the total enrolled. Long-term care facilities report cases of influenza and vaccination status of each case. Both passively report outbreaks of illness, including influenza, to IDPH.
Resumo:
The Iowa Influenza Surveillance Network (IISN) was established in 2004, though surveillance has been conducted at the Iowa Department of Public Health. Schools and long-term care facilities report data weekly into a Web-based reporting system. Schools report the number of students absent due to illness and the total enrolled. Long-term care facilities report cases of influenza and vaccination status of each case. Both passively report outbreaks of illness, including influenza, to IDPH.
Resumo:
The Iowa Influenza Surveillance Network (IISN) was established in 2004, though surveillance has been conducted at the Iowa Department of Public Health. Schools and long-term care facilities report data weekly into a Web-based reporting system. Schools report the number of students absent due to illness and the total enrolled. Long-term care facilities report cases of influenza and vaccination status of each case. Both passively report outbreaks of illness, including influenza, to IDPH.
Resumo:
Les travaux effectués au cours de ce mémoire ont permis de développer une alternative aux vaccins présentement utilisés contre le virus de l’influenza. Nous avons utilisé la nucléoprotéine (NP) de l’influenza comme base vaccinale puisque cette protéine est conservée chez les souches d’influenza A et qu’elle possède un potentiel de protection croisée. Nous avons montré que la multimérisation de la NP grâce à un gabarit d’ARN permet d’augmenter son immunogenicité. Cette multimérisation en pseudo-nucléoparticule virale (NLP) a augmenté la réponse humorale et cellulaire spécifique à NP et l’ajout d’un adjuvant (PAL) a permis d’amplifier davantage la réponse humorale contre NP. Une dose du vaccin candidat NLP-PAL n’a pas réussi à protéger des souris contre une infection létale avec une souche homotypique d’influenza. Cependant, des résultats avec un régime de deux immunisations montrent des résultats encourageants qui permettent d’espérer une protection envers une infection virale.
Resumo:
Russian e-commerce has drawn a lot of attention in academic publications as well as in public media lately. The market is growing with a speed of rocket offering companies enormous business opportunities. However, combination of Russian culture, consumer online purchasing and decision-making process forms a subject yet completely unknown. From international online business perspective it is vital for companies to know how a culture affects consumer’s purchase decision and what are the key elements that need to be modified in order to successfully expand online operations to Russian market. Here, the main purpose is to define the key factors affecting Russian consumer’s online purchase intention. In order to answer the main research question, firstly the role of culture in purchase intention context is researched. Secondly, focus is drawn to the factors that affect online purchase intention. Lastly, it is researched how Russian culture is affecting e-commerce attributes modification. The objective is not only to expand the theoretical understanding of the subject but also to provide companies with a clear vision on how the online operations should be conducted in Russian online market. Ranganathan’s and Jha’s conceptual framework was chosen as a ground theory in this study. Here, three main categories Computer Self-Efficacy and Past Online Experience, Website Quality and Costumer Concerns form basis for the study. Various articles and academic literature supplemented this theoretical approach. Qualitative research method was adapted and the study was conducted through five expert interviews. As a conclusion it can be stated that culture forms a ground for entire purchase decision-making process in online context. Results from the interviews were grouped according to main three theoretic categories and placed with Ranganathan’s and Jha’s original framework. This formed a new theoretical framework that defines diverse factors affecting specifically Russian consumer’s online purchase intention. This study suggests that following factors need to be taking into serious consideration in Russian online context: photography style, detailed product and company information, colors, language, product variety, reviews, recommendations, strong social media presence, fast check out and minimalistic order information, counterfeit fear, cash on delivery payment, training and guidance, extensive customer service, consumers’ insecurity, inexperience, high interest for technology and their individualistic personality.
Resumo:
BackgroundAvian influenza viruses (AIVs) are found worldwide in numerous bird species, causing significant disease in gallinaceous poultry and occasionally other species. Surveillance of wild bird reservoirs provides an opportunity to add to the understanding of the epidemiology of AIVs. MethodsThis study examined key findings from the National Avian Influenza Wild Bird Surveillance Program over a 5-year period (July 2007-June 2012), the main source of information on AIVs circulating in Australia. ResultsThe overall proportion of birds that tested positive for influenza A via PCR was 1.90.1%, with evidence of widespread exposure of Australian wild birds to most low pathogenic avian influenza (LPAI) subtypes (H1-13, H16). LPAI H5 subtypes were found to be dominant and widespread during this 5-year period. ConclusionGiven Australia's isolation, both geographically and ecologically, it is important for Australia not to assume that the epidemiology of AIV from other geographic regions applies here. Despite all previous highly pathogenic avian influenza outbreaks in Australian poultry being attributed to H7 subtypes, widespread detection of H5 subtypes in wild birds may represent an ongoing risk to the Australian poultry industry.
Resumo:
Résumé: Chaque année, les épidémies saisonnières d’influenza causent de 3 à 5 millions de cas sévères de maladie, entraînant entre 250 000 et 500 000 décès mondialement. Seulement deux classes d’antiviraux sont actuellement commercialisées pour traiter cette infection respiratoire : les inhibiteurs de la neuraminidase, tels que l’oseltamivir (Tamiflu) et les inhibiteurs du canal ionique M2 (adamantanes). Toutefois, leur utilisation est limitée par l’apparition rapide de résistance virale. Il est donc d’un grand intérêt de développer de nouvelles stratégies thérapeutiques pour le traitement de l’influenza. Le virus influenza dépend de l’activation de sa protéine de surface hémagglutinine (HA) pour être infectieux. L’activation a lieu par clivage protéolytique au sein d’une séquence d’acides aminés conservée. Ce clivage doit être effectué par une enzyme de l’hôte, étant donné que le génome du virus ne code pour aucune protéase. Pour les virus infectant l’humain, plusieurs études ont montré le potentiel de protéases à sérine transmembranaires de type II (TTSP) à promouvoir la réplication virale : TMPRSS2, TMPRSS4, HAT, MSPL, Desc1 et matriptase, identifiée récemment par notre équipe (Beaulieu, Gravel et al., 2013), activent l’HA des virus influenza A (principalement H1N1 et H3N2). Toutefois, il existe peu d’information sur le clivage de l’HA des virus influenza B, et seulement TMPRSS2 et HAT ont été identifiées comme étant capables d’activer ce type de virus. Les travaux de ce projet de maîtrise visaient à identifier d’autres TTSP pouvant activer l’HA de l’influenza B. L’efficacité de clivage par la matriptase, hepsine, HAT et Desc1 a été étudiée et comparée entre ces TTSP. Ces quatre protéases s’avèrent capables de cliver l’HA de l’influenza B in vitro. Cependant, seul le clivage par matriptase, hepsine et HAT promeut la réplication virale. De plus, ces TTSP peuvent aussi supporter la réplication de virus influenza A. Ainsi, l’utilisation d’un inhibiteur de TTSP, développé en collaboration avec notre laboratoire, permet de bloquer significativement la réplication virale dans les cellules épithéliales bronchiques humaines Calu-3. Cet inhibiteur se lie de façon covalente et lentement réversible au site actif de la TTSP par un mécanisme slow tight-binding. Puisque cet inhibiteur cible une composante de la cellule hôte, et non une protéine virale, il n’entraîne pas le développement de résistance après 15 passages des virus en présence de l’inhibiteur dans les cellules Calu-3. L’inhibition des TTSP activatrices d’HA dans le système respiratoire humain représente donc une nouvelle stratégie thérapeutique pouvant mener au développement d’antiviraux efficaces contre l’influenza.
Resumo:
How have cooperative airspace arrangements contributed to cooperation and discord in the Euro-Atlantic region? This study analyzes the role of three sets of airspace arrangements developed by Euro-Atlantic states since the end of the Cold War—(1) cooperative aerial surveillance of military activity, (2) exchange of air situational data, and (3) joint engagement of theater air and missile threats—in political-military relations among neighbors and within the region. These arrangements provide insights into the integration of Central and Eastern European states into Western security institutions, and the current discord that centers on the conflict in Ukraine and Russia’s place in regional security. The study highlights the role of airspace incidents as contributors to conflict escalation and identifies opportunities for transparency- and confidence-building measures to improve U.S./NATO-Russian relations. The study recommends strengthening the Open Skies Treaty in order to facilitate the resolution of conflicts and improve region-wide military transparency. It notes that political-military arrangements for engaging theater air and missile threats created by NATO and Russia over the last twenty years are currently postured in a way that divides the region and inhibits mutual security. In turn, the U.S.-led Regional Airspace Initiatives that facilitated the exchange of air situational data between NATO and then-NATO-aspirants such as Poland and the Baltic states, offer a useful precedent for improving air sovereignty and promoting information sharing to reduce the fear of war among participating states. Thus, projects like NATO’s Air Situational Data Exchange and the NATO-Russia Council Cooperative Airspace Initiative—if extended to the exchange of data about military aircraft—have the potential to buttress deterrence and contribute to conflict prevention. The study concludes that documenting the evolution of airspace arrangements since the end of the Cold War contributes to understanding of the conflicting narratives put forward by Russia, the West, and the states “in-between” with respect to reasons for the current state of regional security. The long-term project of developing a zone of stable peace in the Euro-Atlantic must begin with the difficult task of building inclusive security institutions to accommodate the concerns of all regional actors.
Resumo:
The EuroEVA study aimed to estimate the 2015-16 end of season influenza vaccine effectiveness for all population and for the influenza vaccination target group. The presented results resulted from implementation of the study during 2015/2016 season.
Resumo:
This report was prepared as part of the Project “Monitoring Influenza vaccine effectiveness during influenza seasons and pandemics in the European Union” and describes the results obtained in Portugal under the Protocol Agreement celebrated between EpiConcept SARL, Paris and National Health Institute Dr. Ricardo Jorge, Lisbon. Data and activities related to the individuals 65 years and more were funded by European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement no 634446.
Resumo:
Mortality in the north hemisphere is higher in winter than in summer seasons, due to the influenza epidemics as well as cold temperatures. Portuguese influenza surveillance comprises clinical and laboratorial notifications of Influenza-like Illness (ILI) attended in the primary health care units and emergency rooms. Without information on specific cause of deaths in real time, estimation of influenza impact has been accessed using Portuguese Daily Mortality Monitoring System (VDM), that covers all cause mortality of Portuguese population. The aim of this study was to provide excess mortality, potentially associated to Influenza each season (between 2007/08 and 2014/15).
Resumo:
In Portugal there is no severe acute respiratory infection surveillance system in place. Estimation of influenza burden has been accessed using hospital discharge database that covers the mainland Portuguese population. The objective of this study was to estimate the excess of pneumonia or influenza (P&I) hospitalizations during influenza epidemics from seasons 1998-99 to 2014-15 in mainland Portugal.