Publications by authors named "A Tandoc"

To evaluate the focused surveillance of blood lead results of 20 micrograms per deciliter (µg/dL) of venous blood and higher received by the California Occupational Blood Lead Registry (Registry) because of new legislation concerning occupational lead poisoning. We used occupational blood lead results reported to the Registry from January 1, 2020, to December 31, 2021, to describe the current industries with workers having the highest levels of lead poisoning. The Registry received 239 blood lead levels (BLLs) of 20 µg/dL or higher for 151 adults with occupational lead exposure in 28 industries over the study period.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study explores the effectiveness of combining different rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) to determine dengue virus (DENV) immune status at the point of care, simplifying the diagnostic process.
  • The research involved analyzing serum from dengue patients in Indonesia and Vietnam to correlate rapid test outcomes with laboratory results, revealing a high accuracy in identifying primary and post-primary infections.
  • The findings suggest that using a combination of NS1, IgM, and IgG RDTs can accurately estimate a patient’s DENV immune status, potentially enhancing diagnosis in clinical settings where laboratory access is limited.
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Background: Stratifying dengue risk within endemic countries is crucial for allocating limited control interventions. Current methods of monitoring dengue transmission intensity rely on potentially inaccurate incidence estimates. We investigated whether incidence or alternate metrics obtained from standard, or laboratory, surveillance operations represent accurate surrogate indicators of the burden of dengue and can be used to monitor the force of infection (FOI) across urban centres.

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Zika virus (ZIKV) exposure across flavivirus-endemic countries, including the Philippines, remains largely unknown despite sporadic case reporting and environmental suitability for transmission. Using laboratory surveillance data from 2016, 997 serum samples were randomly selected from suspected dengue (DENV) case reports across the Philippines and assayed for serological markers of short-term (IgM) and long-term (IgG) ZIKV exposure. Using mixture models, we re-evaluated ZIKV IgM/G seroprevalence thresholds and used catalytic models to quantify the force of infection (attack rate, AR) from age-accumulated ZIKV exposure.

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Background: In dengue-endemic countries, targeting limited control interventions to populations at risk of severe disease could enable increased efficiency. Individuals who have had their first (primary) dengue infection are at risk of developing more severe secondary disease, thus could be targeted for disease prevention. Currently, there is no reliable algorithm for determining primary and post-primary (infection with more than one flavivirus) status from a single serum sample.

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