Literature DB >> 23402136

Development of an influenza virologic risk assessment tool.

Susan C Trock1, Stephen A Burke, Nancy J Cox.   

Abstract

Influenza pandemics pose a continuous risk to human and animal health and may engender food security issues worldwide. As novel influenza A virus infections in humans are identified, pandemic preparedness strategies necessarily involve decisions regarding which viruses should be included for further studies and mitigation efforts. Resource and time limitations dictate that viruses determined to pose the greatest risk to public or animal health should be selected for further research to fill information gaps and, potentially, for development of vaccine candidates that could be put in libraries, manufactured and stockpiled, or even administered to protect susceptible populations of animals or people. A need exists to apply an objective, science-based risk assessment to the process of evaluating influenza viruses. During the past year, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention began developing a tool to evaluate influenza A viruses that are not circulating in the human population but pose a pandemic risk. The objective is to offer a standardized set of considerations to be applied when evaluating prepandemic viruses. The tool under consideration is a simple, additive model, based on multiattribute decision analysis. The model includes elements that address the properties of the virus itself and population attributes, considers both veterinary and human findings, and integrates both laboratory and field observations. Additionally, each element is assigned a weight such that all elements are not considered of equal importance within the model.

Entities:  

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23402136     DOI: 10.1637/10204-041412-ResNote.1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Avian Dis        ISSN: 0005-2086            Impact factor:   1.577


  18 in total

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3.  Avian influenza surveillance in Central and West Africa, 2010-2014.

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Journal:  Epidemiol Infect       Date:  2014-12-22       Impact factor: 4.434

Review 4.  Ferreting Out Influenza Virus Pathogenicity and Transmissibility: Past and Future Risk Assessments in the Ferret Model.

Authors:  Jessica A Belser; Joanna A Pulit-Penaloza; Taronna R Maines
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5.  Development of Framework for Assessing Influenza Virus Pandemic Risk.

Authors:  Susan C Trock; Stephen A Burke; Nancy J Cox
Journal:  Emerg Infect Dis       Date:  2015-08       Impact factor: 6.883

6.  Human infection with avian influenza A H7N9 virus: an assessment of clinical severity.

Authors:  Hongjie Yu; Benjamin J Cowling; Luzhao Feng; Eric H Y Lau; Qiaohong Liao; Tim K Tsang; Zhibin Peng; Peng Wu; Fengfeng Liu; Vicky J Fang; Honglong Zhang; Ming Li; Lingjia Zeng; Zhen Xu; Zhongjie Li; Huiming Luo; Qun Li; Zijian Feng; Bin Cao; Weizhong Yang; Joseph T Wu; Yu Wang; Gabriel M Leung
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7.  Ethical alternatives to experiments with novel potential pandemic pathogens.

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8.  Improving pandemic influenza risk assessment.

Authors:  Colin A Russell; Peter M Kasson; Ruben O Donis; Steven Riley; John Dunbar; Andrew Rambaut; Jason Asher; Stephen Burke; C Todd Davis; Rebecca J Garten; Sandrasegaram Gnanakaran; Simon I Hay; Sander Herfst; Nicola S Lewis; James O Lloyd-Smith; Catherine A Macken; Sebastian Maurer-Stroh; Elizabeth Neuhaus; Colin R Parrish; Kim M Pepin; Samuel S Shepard; David L Smith; David L Suarez; Susan C Trock; Marc-Alain Widdowson; Dylan B George; Marc Lipsitch; Jesse D Bloom
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2014-10-16       Impact factor: 8.140

9.  Understanding small Chinese cities as COVID-19 hotspots with an urban epidemic hazard index.

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Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-07-19       Impact factor: 4.379

10.  The global antigenic diversity of swine influenza A viruses.

Authors:  Nicola S Lewis; Colin A Russell; Pinky Langat; Tavis K Anderson; Kathryn Berger; Filip Bielejec; David F Burke; Gytis Dudas; Judith M Fonville; Ron Am Fouchier; Paul Kellam; Bjorn F Koel; Philippe Lemey; Tung Nguyen; Bundit Nuansrichy; Js Malik Peiris; Takehiko Saito; Gaelle Simon; Eugene Skepner; Nobuhiro Takemae; Richard J Webby; Kristien Van Reeth; Sharon M Brookes; Lars Larsen; Simon J Watson; Ian H Brown; Amy L Vincent
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2016-04-15       Impact factor: 8.140

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