Literature DB >> 33277266

Multi-Scale Airborne Infectious Disease Transmission.

Charles F Dillon1, Michael B Dillon2.   

Abstract

Airborne disease transmission is central to many scientific disciplines including agriculture, veterinary biosafety, medicine, and public health. Legal and regulatory standards are in place to prevent agricultural, nosocomial, and community airborne disease transmission. However, the overall importance of the airborne pathway is underappreciated, e.g.,, US National Library of Medicine's Medical Subjects Headings (MESH) thesaurus lacks an airborne disease transmission indexing term. This has practical consequences as airborne precautions to control epidemic disease spread may not be taken when airborne transmission is important, but unrecognized. Publishing clearer practical methodological guidelines for surveillance studies and disease outbreak evaluations could help address this situation.To inform future work, this paper highlights selected, well-established airborne transmission events - largely cases replicated in multiple, independently conducted scientific studies. Methodologies include field experiments, modeling, epidemiology studies, disease outbreak investigations and mitigation studies. Collectively, this literature demonstrates that airborne viruses, bacteria, and fungal pathogens have the capability to cause disease in plants, animals, and humans over multiple distances - from near range (< 5 m) to continental (> 500 km) in scale. The plausibility and implications of undetected airborne disease transmission are discussed, including the notable underreporting of disease burden for several airborne transmitted diseases.
Copyright © 2020 American Society for Microbiology.

Entities:  

Year:  2020        PMID: 33277266      PMCID: PMC7851691          DOI: 10.1128/AEM.02314-20

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol        ISSN: 0099-2240            Impact factor:   4.792


  152 in total

Review 1.  Atmospheric dispersion models and their use in the assessment of disease transmission.

Authors:  J Gloster; L Burgin; A Jones; R Sanson
Journal:  Rev Sci Tech       Date:  2011-08       Impact factor: 1.181

Review 2.  Use of dispersion modelling for Environmental Impact Assessment of biological air pollution from composting: Progress, problems and prospects.

Authors:  P Douglas; E T Hayes; W B Williams; S F Tyrrel; R P Kinnersley; K Walsh; M O'Driscoll; P J Longhurst; S J T Pollard; G H Drew
Journal:  Waste Manag       Date:  2017-09-07       Impact factor: 7.145

3.  Long distance transport of foot-and-mouth disease virus over the sea.

Authors:  J Gloster; R F Sellers; A I Donaldson
Journal:  Vet Rec       Date:  1982-01-16       Impact factor: 2.695

4.  The Efficiency of Biofilters at Mitigating Airborne MRSA from a Swine Nursery.

Authors:  D D Ferguson; T C Smith; K J Donham; S J Hoff
Journal:  J Agric Saf Health       Date:  2015-10

5.  The second of two epidemics of histoplasmosis resulting from work on the same starling roost.

Authors:  F E Tosh; I L Doto; D J D'Alessio; A A Medeiros; S L Hendricks; T D Chin
Journal:  Am Rev Respir Dis       Date:  1966-09

6.  Population structure and migration of the Tobacco Blue Mold Pathogen, Peronospora tabacina, into North America and Europe.

Authors:  Monica Blanco-Meneses; Ignazio Carbone; Jean B Ristaino
Journal:  Mol Ecol       Date:  2018-01-26       Impact factor: 6.185

Review 7.  Q fever in the Netherlands - 2007-2010: what we learned from the largest outbreak ever.

Authors:  P M Schneeberger; C Wintenberger; W van der Hoek; J P Stahl
Journal:  Med Mal Infect       Date:  2014-08-06       Impact factor: 2.152

8.  The influence of meteorology on the spread of influenza: survival analysis of an equine influenza (A/H3N8) outbreak.

Authors:  Simon M Firestone; Naomi Cogger; Michael P Ward; Jenny-Ann L M L Toribio; Barbara J Moloney; Navneet K Dhand
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-04-20       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  A study of the probable transmission routes of MERS-CoV during the first hospital outbreak in the Republic of Korea.

Authors:  S Xiao; Y Li; M Sung; J Wei; Z Yang
Journal:  Indoor Air       Date:  2017-10-23       Impact factor: 5.770

10.  Coronavirus 229E-related pneumonia in immunocompromised patients.

Authors:  Frédéric Pene; Annabelle Merlat; Astrid Vabret; Flore Rozenberg; Agnès Buzyn; François Dreyfus; Alain Cariou; François Freymuth; Pierre Lebon
Journal:  Clin Infect Dis       Date:  2003-09-08       Impact factor: 9.079

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  1 in total

1.  Regional Relative Risk, a Physics-Based Metric for Characterizing Airborne Infectious Disease Transmission.

Authors:  Michael B Dillon; Charles F Dillon
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2021-08-25       Impact factor: 4.792

  1 in total

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