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Infectious Disease: Influenza

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Total 16141 results found since Jan 2013.

Breastfeeding and Respiratory Antivirals: Coronavirus and Influenza
Breastfeeding Medicine, Ahead of Print.
Source: Breastfeeding Medicine - February 26, 2020 Category: Perinatology & Neonatology Authors: Philip O. Anderson Source Type: research

Association Between Influenza Vaccination During Pregnancy and Breastfeeding Duration
Breastfeeding Medicine, Ahead of Print.
Source: Breastfeeding Medicine - March 10, 2022 Category: Perinatology & Neonatology Authors: Rada Artzi-Medvedik Zelalem T. Haile Ilana R.A. Chertok Source Type: research

Breastfeeding after maternal immunisation during pregnancy: Providing immunological protection to the newborn: A review.
Abstract Vaccination during pregnancy results in an augmentation of disease specific maternal antibodies. Immunoglobulin G (IgG) is mainly transferred through the placenta during the third trimester of pregnancy, while secretory Immunoglobulin A (sIgA) is passed through breast milk. At birth, newborns are partially protected against infectious diseases by these antibodies. This review aims to provide an overview of the effect of vaccination during pregnancy on the immunological protection of the newborn by the presence of disease specific sIgA antibodies in breast milk and their possible protective function agains...
Source: Vaccine - February 12, 2014 Category: Allergy & Immunology Authors: Maertens K, De Schutter S, Braeckman T, Baerts L, Van Damme P, De Meester I, Leuridan E Tags: Vaccine Source Type: research

Travel Characteristics and Pretravel Health Care Among Pregnant or Breastfeeding U.S. Women Preparing for International Travel.
CONCLUSION: Most pregnant and breastfeeding travelers seen for pretravel health consultations traveled to destinations with high risk for vector-borne or other travel-related diseases. Destination-specific preventive interventions were frequently underused. PMID: 29112671 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Obstetrics and Gynecology - November 3, 2017 Category: OBGYN Authors: Hagmann SHF, Rao SR, LaRocque RC, Erskine S, Jentes ES, Walker AT, Barnett ED, Chen LH, Hamer DH, Ryan ET, Global TravEpiNet Consortium and the Boston Area Travel Medicine Network Tags: Obstet Gynecol Source Type: research

Association of Breastfeeding Duration with Susceptibility to Allergy, Influenza, and Methylation Status of TLR1 Gene.
Conclusions: The findings demonstrate the significance of increased breastfeeding duration for improved health outcomes at the gene level. PMID: 31454983 [PubMed - in process]
Source: Medicina (Kaunas) - August 25, 2019 Category: Universities & Medical Training Authors: Hatmal MM, Issa NN, Alshaer W, Al-Ameer HJ, Abuyaman O, Tayyem R, Hijjawi NS Tags: Medicina (Kaunas) Source Type: research

Molecules, Vol. 27, Pages 4285: High Expression Level of & alpha;2-3-Linked Sialic Acids on Salivary Glycoproteins of Breastfeeding Women May Help to Protect Them from Avian Influenza Virus Infection
Molecules, Vol. 27, Pages 4285: High Expression Level of α2-3-Linked Sialic Acids on Salivary Glycoproteins of Breastfeeding Women May Help to Protect Them from Avian Influenza Virus Infection Molecules doi: 10.3390/molecules27134285 Authors: Li Ding Yimin Cheng Wei Guo Siyue Sun Xiangqin Chen Tiantian Zhang Hongwei Cheng Jiayue Hao Yunhua Lu Xiurong Wang Zheng Li Terminal sialic acids (Sia) on soluble glycoprotein of saliva play an important role in the clearance of influenza virus. The aim of this study is to investigate the alteration of sialylation on the salivary proteins of women...
Source: Molecules - July 3, 2022 Category: Chemistry Authors: Li Ding Yimin Cheng Wei Guo Siyue Sun Xiangqin Chen Tiantian Zhang Hongwei Cheng Jiayue Hao Yunhua Lu Xiurong Wang Zheng Li Tags: Article Source Type: research

Viruses, Vol. 13, Pages 1199: SARS-CoV-2 Vaccine Willingness among Pregnant and Breastfeeding Women during the First Pandemic Wave: A Cross-Sectional Study in Switzerland
anchaud Léo Pomar As pregnant women are at high risk of severe SARS-CoV-2 infection and COVID-19 vaccines are available in Switzerland, this study aimed to assess the willingness of Swiss pregnant and breastfeeding women to become vaccinated. Through a cross-sectional online study conducted after the first pandemic wave, vaccination practices and willingness to become vaccinated against SARS-CoV-2 if a vaccine was available were evaluated through binary, multi-choice, and open-ended questions. Factors associated with vaccine willingness were evaluated through univariable and multivariable analysis. A total of 1551 w...
Source: Viruses - June 22, 2021 Category: Virology Authors: Sarah Stuckelberger Guillaume Favre Michael Ceulemans Hedvig Nordeng Eva Gerbier Valentine Lambelet Milos Stojanov Ursula Winterfeld David Baud Alice Panchaud L éo Pomar Tags: Article Source Type: research

Evolution of a Search: The Use of Dynamic Twitter Searches During Superstorm Sandy
Conclusion The most important lesson learned from Superstorm Sandy was the need for a dynamic and flexible monitoring process and strategy to understand and respond quickly to health needs in the areas impacted by Superstorm Sandy. Search strategies should change as frequently as the unfolding event. The inability to adapt to a changing situation ensures stale and stagnant terminology and search results. Twitter lists and Boolean searches should be used together to maximize situational awareness. The most important information comes from the impacted population, whether news, local government or local citizens. These are t...
Source: PLOS Currents Disasters - September 26, 2014 Category: Global & Universal Authors: Sara Harris Smith Source Type: research

Randomized trial comparing the safety and antibody responses to live attenuated versus inactivated influenza vaccine when administered to breastfeeding women.
CONCLUSIONS: Breast milk and serum antibody responses were higher for IIV compared to LAIV. LAIV and IIV were safe for nursing women but there was one (1%) possible transmission of LAIV to an infant. This study suggests that IIV may be the preferred vaccine for nursing mothers. PMID: 29961606 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Vaccine - June 28, 2018 Category: Allergy & Immunology Authors: Brady RC, Jackson LA, Frey SE, Shane AL, Walter EB, Swamy GK, Schlaudecker EP, Szefer E, Wolff M, McNeal MM, Bernstein DI, Steinhoff MC Tags: Vaccine Source Type: research

Influenza Vaccine Associated with the Gene Expression of T Cell Surface Markers in Human Milk
Breastfeeding Medicine, Ahead of Print.
Source: Breastfeeding Medicine - December 3, 2021 Category: Perinatology & Neonatology Authors: Veronique Demers-Mathieu Ciera DaPra Elena Medo Source Type: research

Estimating Influenza Outbreaks Using Both Search Engine Query Data and Social Media Data in South Korea
Conclusions: These results demonstrate the feasibility of using search queries to enhance influenza surveillance in South Korea. In addition, an approach for query selection using social media data seems ideal for supporting influenza surveillance based on search query data.
Source: Journal of Medical Internet Research - July 3, 2016 Category: Journals (General) Authors: Hyekyung WooYoungtae ChoEunyoung ShimJong-Koo LeeChang-Gun LeeSeong Hwan Kim Source Type: research

Using web search queries to monitor influenza-like illness: an exploratory retrospective analysis, Netherlands, 2017/18 influenza season
This study demonstrates the feasibility of accurate, real-time ILI incidence predictions in the Netherlands using Google search query data.
Source: Eurosurveillance - May 28, 2020 Category: Infectious Diseases Authors: Paul P Schneider, Christel JAW van Gool, Peter Spreeuwenberg, Mari ëtte Hooiveld, Gé A Donker, David J Barnett and John Paget Source Type: research

Scoping Review on Search Queries and Social Media for Disease Surveillance: A Chronology of Innovation
Conclusions: The use of search queries and social media for disease surveillance are relatively recent phenomena (first reported in 2006). Both the tools themselves and the methodologies for exploiting them are evolving over time. While their accuracy, speed, and cost compare favorably with existing surveillance systems, the primary challenge is to refine the data signal by reducing surrounding noise. Further developments in digital disease surveillance have the potential to improve sensitivity and specificity, passively through advances in machine learning and actively through engagement of users. Adoption, even as suppor...
Source: Journal of Medical Internet Research - July 18, 2013 Category: Journals (General) Authors: Theresa Marie BernardoAndrijana RajicIan YoungKatie RobiadekMai T PhamJulie A Funk Source Type: research

Methods Using Social Media and Search Queries to Predict Infectious Disease Outbreaks.
Conclusions: This prediction method could be the core engine for implementing a (near-) real-time digital surveillance system. A digital surveillance system that uses Internet resources has enormous potential to monitor disease outbreaks in the early phase. PMID: 29181246 [PubMed]
Source: Healthcare Informatics Research - November 29, 2017 Category: Information Technology Tags: Healthc Inform Res Source Type: research