6 results match your criteria: "1301 Michael Hooker Research Center[Affiliation]"

Antibiotic Resistance in Recreational Waters: State of the Science.

Int J Environ Res Public Health

October 2020

ICF, LLC, 9300 Lee Highway, Fairfax, VA 22031, USA.

Ambient recreational waters can act as both recipients and natural reservoirs for antimicrobial resistant (AMR) bacteria and antimicrobial resistant genes (ARGs), where they may persist and replicate. Contact with AMR bacteria and ARGs potentially puts recreators at risk, which can thus decrease their ability to fight infections. A variety of point and nonpoint sources, including contaminated wastewater effluents, runoff from animal feeding operations, and sewer overflow events, can contribute to environmental loading of AMR bacteria and ARGs.

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The challenge of achieving safely managed drinking water supply on San Cristobal island, Galápagos.

Int J Hyg Environ Health

July 2020

Universidad San Francisco de Quito, Colegio de Ciencias e Ingenierías, Instituto Biosfera, Diego de Robles y Vía Interoceánica, Quito, Ecuador; Galapagos Science Center, Universidad San Francisco de Quito and University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, San Cristobal, Galapagos, Ecuador. Electronic address:

Achievement of United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 6.1 centers on the availability of a safely managed drinking water source for all. However, meeting the criteria for this goal is challenging on island systems and elsewhere with limited freshwater supplies.

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Equivalence of influenza A virus RNA recovery from nasal swabs when lysing the swab and storage medium versus storage medium alone.

J Virol Methods

June 2015

Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1301 Michael Hooker Research Center, 135 Dauer Drive, CB #7431, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA.

Surveillance of healthy individuals at high risk for zoonotic influenza A transmission is important for tracking trends in influenza A epidemiology. Practical measurement methods that maximize viral recovery and produce low variability are essential when low viral loads are expected. For this study, lysing both a nasal swab and its storage medium was compared to lysing the storage medium alone to determine which method results in greater influenza A virus recovery.

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Recommendations following a multi-laboratory comparison of microbial source tracking methods.

Water Res

November 2013

Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina, 1301 Michael Hooker Research Center, 135 Dauer Drive, Campus Box #7431, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA. Electronic address:

Microbial source tracking (MST) methods were evaluated in the Source Identification Protocol Project (SIPP), in which 27 laboratories compared methods to identify host sources of fecal pollution from blinded water samples containing either one or two different fecal types collected from California. This paper details lessons learned from the SIPP study and makes recommendations to further advance the field of MST. Overall, results from the SIPP study demonstrated that methods are available that can correctly identify whether particular host sources including humans, cows and birds have contributed to contamination in a body of water.

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Identification of Staphylococcus aureus from enriched nasal swabs within 24 h is improved with use of multiple culture media.

J Med Microbiol

September 2013

Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1301 Michael Hooker Research Center, 135 Dauer Drive, CB 7431, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA.

Nasal carriage of Staphylococcus aureus is commonly evaluated via culture-based methods. We found that parallel use of two media, Baird-Parker and CHROMagar™ Staph aureus, increased detection of S. aureus from a healthy population by 29 %.

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Characterization of nonpoint source microbial contamination in an urbanizing watershed serving as a municipal water supply.

Water Res

November 2012

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, 1301 Michael Hooker Research Center, 135 Dauer Drive, Campus Box 7431, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7431, USA.

Inland watersheds in the southeastern United States are transitioning from agricultural and forested land uses to urban and exurban uses at a rate greater than the national average. This study sampled creeks representing a variety of land use factors in a rapidly urbanizing watershed that also serves as a drinking water supply. Samples were collected bimonthly under dry-weather conditions and four times during each of three storm events and assessed for microbial indicators of water quality.

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