11 results match your criteria: "Center for Zoonoses and Environmental Microbiology[Affiliation]"

Introduction: Literacy about zoonoses can contribute people adapt their behaviour to minimize zoonotic risks. In this study, associations between sociodemographic factors and zoonotic risk-averse attitudes were explored.

Objective: To determine factors significantly associated with literacy about zoonoses across sociodemographic groups to inform targeted interventions aiming at improving awareness and zoonotic risk-avoidance behaviours.

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Legionella detection in wastewater treatment plants with increased risk for Legionella growth and emission.

J Water Health

September 2023

National Institute for Public Health and The Environment (RIVM), Centre for Infectious Disease Control, Center for Zoonoses and Environmental Microbiology, P.O. Box 1, 3720 BA, Bilthoven, The Netherlands.

Legionnaires' disease (LD) is a severe pneumonia mainly caused by the bacterium Legionella pneumophila. Although many environmental sources of LD have been described, the sources of the majority of non-outbreak LD cases have not been identified. In several outbreaks in the Netherlands, wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) were identified as the most likely source of infection.

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Article Synopsis
  • Climate change and globalization are impacting how vector-borne diseases spread, with regions like Beijing and the Netherlands needing to anticipate new health threats.
  • A study compared disease preparedness in these two regions through expert interviews and literature, highlighting their unique approaches.
  • Key differences include Beijing focusing on syndromic surveillance and mosquito control, while the Netherlands emphasizes laboratory confirmations and public education on tick safety, indicating areas for mutual learning.
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Background: A substantial proportion of echinococcosis transmission to humans via contamination of food has been assumed. However, the relative importance of food as a transmission vehicle has previously been estimated through expert opinion rather than empirical data.

Objective: To find and evaluate empirical data that could be used to estimate the source attribution of echinococcosis, in particular the proportion that is transmitted through contaminated food.

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International Commission on Trichinellosis: Recommendations on post-harvest control of in food animals.

Food Waterborne Parasitol

March 2019

National Academy of Sciences, 500 Fifth Street NW, Washington, DC 20001, United States of America.

Domestic and wild animals which consume meat are at risk of becoming infected with and therefore may pose a public health risk. Among domestic livestock, pigs are most commonly associated with infection, but human outbreaks have also resulted from consumption of horsemeat, wild boar, bear, walrus and other wild animals. For animals that are not produced under controlled management conditions and for wild animals, specific steps should be taken to prevent human exposure to .

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Making Vector-Borne Disease Surveillance Work: New Opportunities From the SDG Perspectives.

Front Vet Sci

July 2019

Eastern Caribbean Public Health Foundation, Oranjestad, Bonaire, Sint Eustatius and Saba.

Surveillance of vector-borne diseases (VBDs) exemplifies a One Health approach, which entails coordinated, collaborative, multidisciplinary, and cross-sectoral approaches to address potential or existing health risks originating at the animal-human-ecosystem interface. However, at the intervention stage of the surveillance system, it is sometimes difficult or even impossible to act. The human dimension of VBD control makes them wicked problems requiring an interdisciplinary systems approach beyond the One Health domain.

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In poultry several Chlamydia species have been detected, but Chlamydia psittaci and Chlamydia gallinacea appear to be most prevalent and important. Chlamydia psittaci is a well-known zoonosis and is considered to be a pathogen of poultry. Chlamydia gallinacea has been described more recently.

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Article Synopsis
  • * The study aimed to analyze the genetic variation and distribution of E. granulosus G1 in Europe using a large mtDNA sequence of 8274 bp, comparing it to shorter sequences previously used.
  • * Researchers sequenced 91 isolates from different hosts across seven countries and identified 83 haplotypes, indicating a complex genetic landscape and high diversity of the parasite in Europe, especially in western Asia.
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Human migration and pig/pork import in the European Union: What are the implications for Taenia solium infections?

Vet Parasitol

September 2015

Institute of Tropical Medicine, Department of Biomedical Sciences, Nationalestraat 155, 2000 Antwerp, Belgium; Ghent University, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Salisburylaan 133, 9820 Merelbeke, Belgium.

Taenia solium taeniasis/cysticercosis is a neglected zoonotic disease complex occurring primarily in developing countries. Though claimed eradicated from the European Union (EU), an increasing number of human neurocysticercosis cases is being detected. Risk factors such as human migration and movement of pigs/pork, as well as the increasing trend in pig rearing with outside access are discussed in this review.

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Molecular analysis of Baylisascaris columnaris revealed mitochondrial and nuclear polymorphisms.

Parasit Vectors

April 2013

National Institute for Public Health and Environment, RIVM, Center for Zoonoses and Environmental Microbiology, cZ&O, Antonie van Leeuwenhoeklaan 9, PO Box 1, Bilthoven 3720 BA, The Netherlands.

Background: Baylisascaris species are intestinal nematodes of skunks, raccoons, badgers, and bears belonging to the genus Ascarididae. Oral uptake of embryonated Baylisascaris sp. eggs by a wide variety of mammals and birds can lead to visceral, ocular and neurological larva migrans.

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