Publications by authors named "S Gubbins"

Epizootic haemorrhagic disease virus (EHDV) is an arbovirus transmitted by biting midges that has recently emerged in Europe. Here, the basic reproduction ratio ( ) was used to quantify the transmission of EHDV and its dependence on temperature for cattle and deer. Using data from the published literature the parameters needed to calculate were estimated with Bayesian methods to incorporate uncertainty in the calculations.

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Multiple transboundary animal diseases (TADs) circulate in Plateau State, Nigeria, where livestock keeping is common and contributes to both the physical and socio-economic well-being of a large proportion of the population. In this study, we explored the potential for environmental sampling to detect viruses causing TADs circulating in the region. Electrostatic dust cloths were used to swab areas of the environment likely to have contact with secretions and excretions from infected animals.

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Current influenza vaccines are strain-specific and require frequent updates to combat new strains, making a broadly protective influenza vaccine (BPIV) highly desirable. A promising strategy is to induce T-cell responses against internal proteins conserved across influenza strains. In this study, pH1N1 pre-exposed pigs were immunized by aerosol using viral vectored vaccines (ChAdOx2 and MVA) expressing matrix (M1) and nucleoprotein (NP).

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Article Synopsis
  • Rift Valley fever (RVF) is a disease found in Africa and now in some parts of the Arabian Peninsula, affecting both animals and humans.
  • It causes serious problems like livestock deaths, which can hurt local food supplies and people's incomes, especially for farmers who depend on their animals.
  • The review also talks about challenges people face in getting vaccines, especially women, and points out that we need more information about how RVF affects different groups of people.
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AbstractInfectious disease dynamics operate across biological scales: pathogens replicate within hosts but transmit among populations. Functional changes in the pathogen-host interaction thus generate cascading effects across organizational scales. We investigated within-host dynamics and among-host transmission of three strains (SAT-1, -2, -3) of foot-and-mouth disease viruses (FMDVs) in their wildlife host, African buffalo.

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