Publications by authors named "E C Strain"

Context: The genomic surveillance of foodborne pathogens in the United States has grown exponentially in the past decade, grounded in a powerful combination of novel sequencing technologies, bioinformatic approaches, data-sharing networks, and metadata harmonization efforts. This practice report examines recent advances in genomic epidemiology as applied to food safety programs and delineates State, Tribal, Local, and Territorial infrastructure necessary for continued life-saving improvements in public health.

Program: National databases of foodborne pathogen genomes, along with data sharing and evaluation networks such as GenomeTrakr and PulseNet, have transformed how connections are made among isolates and how root causes of outbreaks are determined, allowing much more timely interventions to protect public health.

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Objective: Illicitly manufactured fentanyl has largely replaced heroin throughout the United States. Characteristics of fentanyl-specific withdrawal are not well understood compared to traditional opioid withdrawal. This study examines opioid withdrawal severity among 2 cohorts of study participants who underwent identical morphine stabilization procedures before and after fentanyl was introduced to the local drug market.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Whole-genome sequencing helps public health agencies link food poisoning cases to the same source of contamination, but most cases are sporadic and often go uninvestigated.
  • - Researchers analyze specific bacterial pathogens by looking at small mutations in their DNA to understand patterns in contamination events and infection susceptibility, particularly highlighting that younger age groups are more vulnerable.
  • - Many contamination episodes last a long time, with 50% of cases linked to clusters persisting for nearly 3 years, often involving contaminated food that affects people across multiple states, rather than just issues with infant formula.
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Nutrients introduced to the environment by finfish aquaculture pose environmental risks, which can be mitigated by robust environmental monitoring. Biological communities in soft sediments are good indicators of aquaculture derived environmental changes. Traditionally, monitoring programs have visually surveyed macrofauna communities.

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