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1.
EMHJ-Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal. 2013; 19 (supp. 1): S19-S25
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-158919

ABSTRACT

The detection of a novel coronavirus in patients from the Arabian Peninsula in late 2012 raised serious concerns of a possible international outbreak. Ministries of health of the three affected countries invited missions from the World Health Organization to participate in a review of data and capacity to detect and respond to further cases. Recommendations were made for investigations to answer critical questions about human-to human transmission and the geographic extent of the virus. Additional recommendations were made to improve surveillance capacity by acquiring the capacity to test for the virus and enhance syndromic surveillance. Available evidence continues to suggest an unknown animal reservoir for the virus with sporadic zoonotic transmission as the primary epidemiological pattern of transmission. Human-to-human transmission, while it can occur, does not appear to be sustained in the community


Subject(s)
Coronavirus Infections , Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome
2.
EMHJ-Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal. 2013; 19 (supp. 1): S55-S60
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-158924

ABSTRACT

Following the discovery in September 2012 of 2 patients, both with links to the Eastern Mediterranean Region, with serious respiratory illness due to novel coronavirus, all countries have instigated surveillance and laboratory activities to detect further cases, with intensive case contact investigations undertaken on laboratory confirmation of cases. A total of 30 cases, of whom 18 have died, and at least 3 clusters have been detected to date [1 cluster among health-care workers and another 2 clusters among family members]. To date, transmission studies have shown a low risk of onward human transmission, with clinical presentation remaining severe for the majority. Many questions remain including the zoonotic source and geographical extent of infection. Surveillance has been extended to include clusters of cases or health-care workers with severe, undiagnosed respiratory illness regardless of travel history. Environmental studies, on-going surveillance and linked case-contact investigations will provide a critical role in answering some of these issues


Subject(s)
Public Health , Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome , World Health Organization
3.
EMHJ-Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal. 2005; 11 (4): 798-804
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-156812

ABSTRACT

We used acute flaccid paralysis surveillance data collected between 1 January 2001 and 31 December 2003 from the Pakistan Polio Eradication Initiative to describe the epidemiological characteristics and disease burden of traumatic injection neuropathy among children aged under 15 years. Of the 5627 acute flaccid paralysis cases reported, 456 were identified as traumatic injection neuropathy by case review. The condition was more common in younger children who were also more likely to have persistent paralysis. We estimate that the annual incidence of traumatic injection neuropathy rate in Pakistan is 7.1 per 1 000 000 in children under 3 years old


Subject(s)
Child , Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Acute Disease , Age Distribution , Chi-Square Distribution , Child, Preschool , Clinical Competence , Cost of Illness , Epidemiologic Studies
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