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Zoonoses and Public Health,Volume 65, Issue 2, Page i-iii, March 2018. (Source: Zoonoses and Public Health)
Source: Zoonoses and Public Health - February 12, 2018 Category: Infectious Diseases Source Type: research

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Zoonoses and Public Health,Volume 65, Issue 2, Page 227-229, March 2018. (Source: Zoonoses and Public Health)
Source: Zoonoses and Public Health - February 12, 2018 Category: Infectious Diseases Source Type: research

Lyme disease surveillance in the United States: Looking for ways to cut the Gordian knot
Summary Current surveillance methods have been useful to document geographic expansion of Lyme disease in the United States and to monitor the increasing incidence of this major public health problem. Nevertheless, these approaches are resource‐intensive, generate results that are difficult to compare across jurisdictions, and measure less than the total burden of disease. By adopting more efficient methods, resources could be diverted instead to education of at‐risk populations and new approaches to prevention. In this special issue of Zoonoses and Public Health, seven articles are presented that either evaluate tradi...
Source: Zoonoses and Public Health - February 12, 2018 Category: Infectious Diseases Authors: M. L. Cartter, R. Lynfield, K. A. Feldman, S. A. Hook, A. F. Hinckley Tags: OPINION Source Type: research

Issue Information
(Source: Zoonoses and Public Health)
Source: Zoonoses and Public Health - February 12, 2018 Category: Infectious Diseases Tags: ISSUE INFORMATION Source Type: research

Phenotype diffusion and one health: A proposed framework for investigating the plurality of obesity epidemics across many species
Summary We propose the idea of “phenotype diffusion,” which is a rapid convergence of an observed trait in some human and animal populations. The words phenotype and diffusion both imply observations independent of mechanism as phenotypes are observed traits with multiple possible genetic mechanisms and diffusion is an observed state of being widely distributed. Recognizing shared changes in phenotype in multiple species does not by itself reveal a particular mechanism such as a shared exposure, shared adaptive need, particular stochastic process or a transmission pathway. Instead, identifying phenotype diffusion sugge...
Source: Zoonoses and Public Health - February 12, 2018 Category: Infectious Diseases Authors: J. D. Voss, M. S. Goodson, J. C. Leon Tags: REVIEW ARTICLE Source Type: research

Zoonotic disease transmission associated with feral cats in a metropolitan area: A geospatial analysis
Zoonoses and Public Health,Volume 65, Issue 4, Page 412-419, June 2018. (Source: Zoonoses and Public Health)
Source: Zoonoses and Public Health - February 8, 2018 Category: Infectious Diseases Authors: S. J. Taetzsch , A. S. Bertke , K. R. Gruszynski Source Type: research

Characterization of rabies post ‐exposure prophylaxis in a region of the eastern Amazon, state of Pará, Brazil, between 2000 and 2014
Zoonoses and Public Health,Volume 65, Issue 4, Page 395-403, June 2018. (Source: Zoonoses and Public Health)
Source: Zoonoses and Public Health - February 8, 2018 Category: Infectious Diseases Authors: N. S. De Paula , E. A. Saraiva , I. M. Ara újo , K. K. G. Nascimento , D. A. Xavier , K. S. Santos , E. M. N. Abreu , R. J. P. S. Guimãraes , I. Abel Source Type: research

Zoonotic disease transmission associated with feral cats in a metropolitan area: A geospatial analysis
Zoonoses and Public Health, EarlyView. (Source: Zoonoses and Public Health)
Source: Zoonoses and Public Health - February 8, 2018 Category: Infectious Diseases Source Type: research

Characterization of rabies post ‐exposure prophylaxis in a region of the eastern Amazon, state of Pará, Brazil, between 2000 and 2014
Zoonoses and Public Health, EarlyView. (Source: Zoonoses and Public Health)
Source: Zoonoses and Public Health - February 8, 2018 Category: Infectious Diseases Source Type: research

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Zoonoses and Public Health, Ahead of Print. (Source: Zoonoses and Public Health)
Source: Zoonoses and Public Health - February 8, 2018 Category: Infectious Diseases Source Type: research

Zoonotic disease transmission associated with feral cats in a metropolitan area: A geospatial analysis
This study examined the potential for feral cats and human territories to overlap in the Richmond metropolitan area of Central Virginia. Feral cats (n = 275) were trapped for monthly trap‐neuter‐release (TNR) clinics from July to November 2016. A geographic information system (GIS) was used to map feral cat trapping locations, elementary and preschools, public parks, and community gardens, and to evaluate the potential for cat interaction with these areas, presuming a maximum habitat radius of 0.44 miles. We found that 8.0% of feral cats in the Richmond metropolitan area had potential to range onto public elementary...
Source: Zoonoses and Public Health - February 8, 2018 Category: Infectious Diseases Authors: S. J. Taetzsch, A. S. Bertke, K. R. Gruszynski Tags: ORIGINAL ARTICLE Source Type: research

Exploring an alternative approach to Lyme disease surveillance in Maryland
Zoonoses and Public Health,Volume 65, Issue 2, Page 254-259, March 2018. (Source: Zoonoses and Public Health)
Source: Zoonoses and Public Health - February 6, 2018 Category: Infectious Diseases Source Type: research

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Zoonoses and Public Health,Volume 65, Issue 2, Page 254-259, March 2018. (Source: Zoonoses and Public Health)
Source: Zoonoses and Public Health - February 6, 2018 Category: Infectious Diseases Source Type: research