9 results on '"Arnold Bosman"'
Search Results
2. Reported rates of all-cause serious adverse events following immunization with BNT-162b in 5-17-year-old children in the United States.
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Halinder S Mangat, Brady Rippon, Nikita T Reddy, Akheel A Syed, Joel M Maruthanal, Susanne Luedtke, Jyothy J Puthumana, Abhinash Srivatsa, Arnold Bosman, and Patty Kostkova
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Vaccine development against COVID-19 has mitigated severe disease. However, reports of rare but serious adverse events following immunization (sAEFI) in the young populations are fuelling parental anxiety and vaccine hesitancy. With a very early season of viral illnesses including COVID-19, respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), influenza, metapneumovirus and several others, children are facing a winter with significant respiratory illness burdens. Yet, COVID-19 vaccine and booster uptake remain sluggish due to the mistaken beliefs that children have low rates of severe COVID-19 illness as well as rare but severe complications from COVID-19 vaccine are common. In this study we examined composite sAEFI reported in association with COVID-19 vaccines in the United States (US) amongst 5-17-year-old children, to ascertain the composite reported risk associated with vaccination. Between December 13, 2020, and April 13, 2022, a total of 467,890,599 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered to individuals aged 5-65 years in the US, of which 180 million people received at least 2 doses. In association with these, a total of 177,679 AEFI were reported to the Vaccine Adverse Event reporting System (VAERS) of which 31,797 (17.9%) were serious. The rates of ED visits per 100,000 recipients were 2.56 (95% CI: 2.70-3.47) amongst 5-11-year-olds, 18.25 (17.57-18.95) amongst 12-17-year-olds and 33.74 (33.36-34.13) amongst 18-65-year olds; hospitalizations were 1.07 (95% CI 0.87-1.32) per 100,000 in 5-11-year-olds, 6.83 (6.42-7.26) in 12-17-year olds and 8.15 (7.96-8.35) in 18-65 years; life-threatening events were 0.14 (95% CI: 0.08-0.25) per 100,000 in 5-11-year olds, 1.22 (1.05-1.41) in 12-17-year-olds and 2.96 (2.85-3.08) in 18-65 year olds; and death 0.03 (95% CI 0.01-0.10) per 100,000 in 5-11 year olds, 0.08 (0.05-0.14) amongst 12-17-year olds and 0.76 (0.71-0.82) in 18-65 years age group. The results of our study from national population surveillance data demonstrate rates of reported serious AEFIs amongst 5-17-year-olds which appear to be significantly lower than in 18-65-year-olds. These low risks must be taken into account in overall recommendation of COVID-19 vaccination amongst children.
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- 2023
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3. Analyses of reported severe adverse events after immunization with SARS-CoV-2 vaccines in the United States: One year on
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Halinder S. Mangat, Anwar Musah, Susanne Luedtke, Akheel A. Syed, Boby V. Maramattom, Joel Maruthanal, Arnold Bosman, and Patty Kostkova
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COVID-19 vaccination adenovector ,mRNA ,severe adverse events following immunization ,BNT-162b2 vaccine ,mRNA-1273 vaccine ,Ad26.COV2.S ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
ObjectiveTo analyze rates of reported severe adverse events after immunization (sAEFI) attributed to SARS-CoV-2 vaccines in the United States (US) using safety surveillance data.MethodsObservational study of sAEFI reported to the vaccine adverse events reporting system (VAERS) between December 13, 2020, to December 13, 2021, and attributed to SARS-CoV-2 vaccination programs across all US states and territories. All sAEFI in conjunction with mRNA (BNT-162b2 or mRNA-1273) or adenovector (Ad26.COV2.S) vaccines were included. The 28-day crude cumulative rates for reported emergency department (ED) visits and sAEFI viz. hospitalizations, life-threatening events and deaths following SARS-CoV-2 vaccination were calculated. Incidence rate ratios (IRRs) of reported sAEFI were compared between mRNA and adenovector vaccines using generalized Poisson regression models.ResultsDuring the study period, 485 million SARS-CoV-2 vaccines doses were administered nationwide, and 88,626 sAEFI reported in VAERS. The 28-day crude cumulative reporting rates per 100,000 doses were 14.97 (95% confidence interval, 14.86–18.38) for ED visits, 5.32 (5.26–5.39) for hospitalizations, 1.72 (1.68–1.76) for life-threatening events, and 1.08 (1.05–1.11) for deaths. Females had two-fold rates for any reported AEFI compared to males, but lower adjusted IRRs for sAEFI. Cumulative rates per dose for reported sAEFI attributed to adenovector vaccine were 2–3-fold higher, and adjusted IRRs 1.5-fold higher than mRNA vaccines.ConclusionsOverall cumulative rates for reported sAEFI following SARS-CoV-2 vaccination in the US over 1 year were very low; single-dose adenovector vaccine had 1.5-fold higher adjusted rates for reported sAEFI, which may however equate with multiple-doses mRNA vaccine regimens. These data indicate absence of high risks of sAEFI following SARS-CoV-2 vaccines and support safety equipoise between mRNA and adenovector vaccines. Public health messaging of these data is critical to overcome heuristic biases. Furthermore, these data may support ongoing adenovector vaccine use, especially in low- and middle-income countries due to affordability, logistical and cold chain challenges.
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- 2022
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4. Expertise for the future: learning and training in the area of food safety risk assessment
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Arnold Bosman, Paul Brent, Pier Sandro Cocconcelli, Gráinne Conole, Dominique Gombert, Andreas Hensel, Dimitra Kardassi, Wolfgang Kneifel, Stylianos Koulouris, Amadeu M. V. M. Soares, and Johanna Zilliacus
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E‐learning ,massive open online courses ,open educational resources ,risk assessment ,food safety ,exchange of staff ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 ,Chemical technology ,TP1-1185 - Abstract
Abstract EFSA depends on a system of scientific panels, working groups and the expertise of its staff to perform its role in providing high‐quality scientific opinions through food safety risk assessment. The centralisation of the evaluation at the EU level not only intends to increase efficiency, but also may represent a challenge with regard to maintaining and developing expertise in the areas of food, feed, plant, animal and environmental risk assessment. The food risk assessment requires a multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary approach: excellence in relevant fields of science is a prerequisite, although knowledge of the full risk analysis process, the EU food law, consumer behaviour, international relations and skills in risk communication is also needed. To handle future challenges regarding food safety risk assessment in an ever‐changing and increasingly complex environment, the appropriate expertise needs to be identified and a model of specialised and continuous training is required. The state of the art and the future of education in risk assessment are presented. The following issues are put forward in this special issue: new technologies implemented in risk assessment training; current developments in higher education and training on food safety risk assessment and regulatory science in the EU and worldwide; challenges in training on general risk assessment, food safety risk assessment and environmental risk assessment; best practices and techniques; future developments in capacity building for risk assessment training; and the increased need for training of professionals.
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- 2016
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5. Automated, Laboratory-based System Using the Internet for Disease Outbreak Detection, the Netherlands
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Marc-Alain Widdowson, Arnold Bosman, Edward van Straten, Mark Tinga, Sandra Chaves, Liesbeth van Eerden, and Wilfred van Pelt
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Disease outbreaks ,algorithms ,Internet ,laboratories ,data collection ,the Netherlands ,Medicine ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Rapid detection of outbreaks is recognized as crucial for effective control measures and has particular relevance with the recently increased concern about bioterrorism. Automated analysis of electronically collected laboratory data can result in rapid detection of widespread outbreaks or outbreaks of pathogens with common signs and symptoms. In the Netherlands, an automated outbreak detection system for all types of pathogens has been developed within an existing electronic laboratory-based surveillance system called ISIS. Features include the use of a flexible algorithm for daily analysis of data and presentation of signals on the Internet for interpretation by health professionals. By 2006, the outbreak detection system will analyze laboratory-reported data on all pathogens and will cover 35% of the Dutch population.
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- 2003
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6. A Large Outbreak of Legionnaires’ Disease at a Flower Show, the Netherlands, 1999
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Jeroen W. Den Boer, Ed P.F. Yzerman, Joop Schellekens, Kamilla D. Lettinga, Hendriek C. Boshuizen, Jim E. Van Steenbergen, Arnold Bosman, Susan Van den Hof, Hans A. Van Vliet, Marcel F. Peeters, Ruud J. Van Ketel, Peter Speelman, Jacob L. Kool, and Marina A.E. Conyn Van Spaendonck
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Legionnaires’ disease ,outbreaks ,environmental microbiology ,pulsed-field gel electrophoresis ,case-control studies ,cohort studies ,Medicine ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
In 1999, an outbreak of Legionnaires' disease affected many visitors to a flower show in the Netherlands. To identify the source of the outbreak, we performed an environmental investigation, as well as a case-control study among visitors and a serologic cohort study among exhibitors to measure exposure to possible sources. Of 77,061 visitors, 188 became ill (133 confirmed and 55 probable cases), for an attack rate of 0.23% for visitors and 0.61% for exhibitors. Two whirlpool spas in halls 3 and 4 of the exhibition and a sprinkler in hall 8 were culture positive for Legionella pneumophila. One of three genotypes found in both whirlpool spas was identical to the isolates from 28 of 29 culture-positive patients. Persons who paused at the whirlpool spa in hall 3 were at increased risk for becoming ill. This study illustrates that whirlpool spas may be an important health hazard if disinfection fails.
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- 2002
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7. The Challenges of Implementing Healthcare Technology and Innovation Across Europe and Beyond
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Patty Kostkova, Umair A. Shah, Heli Laarmann, Arnold Bosman, Clayton Hamilton, Caroline E Wood, and Rodolphe Thiébaut
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Public health ,Interoperability ,Health technology ,International health ,Public administration ,Digital health ,Political science ,Health care ,medicine ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,Mandate ,European union ,business ,media_common - Abstract
Public Health in the European Union is mainly a formal competence of the Member States. EU Treaties and Regulations have given EU gradually more mandate in past decades on issues of surveillance, epidemic intelligence, early warning and cross-border response coordination. In this context, sharing timely information on public health threats (fast and slow) to inform interventions at national and EU level, remains of great added value for all Member States. This depends on common standards, compatibility and interoperability of information systems. In this session, panellists will share their experience and recent digital health developments from the perspective of regional, national and international public health and discuss this in the light of developments in digital technology.
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- 2019
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8. FEMwiki
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Vladimir Prikazsky, Patty Kostkova, and Arnold Bosman
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World Wide Web ,On the fly ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Content sharing ,Medical information ,Content creation ,Personal wiki ,Crowdsourcing ,business ,Software versioning ,Professional community - Abstract
Highly specialized professional communities of practice (CoP) inevitably need to operate across geographically dispersed area - members frequently need to interact and share professional content. Crowdsourcing using wiki platforms provides a novel way for a professional community to share ideas and collaborate on content creation, curation, maintenance and sharing. This is the aim of the Field Epidemiological Manual wiki (FEMwiki) project enabling online collaborative content sharing and interaction for field epidemiologists around a growing training wiki resource. However, while user contributions are the driving force for content creation, any medical information resource needs to keep editorial control and quality assurance. This requirement is typically in conflict with community-driven Web 2.0 content creation. However, to maximize the opportunities for the network of epidemiologists actively editing the wiki content while keeping quality and editorial control, a novel structure was developed to encourage crowdsourcing -- a support for dual versioning for each wiki page enabling maintenance of expertreviewed pages in parallel with user-updated versions, and a clear navigation between the related versions. Secondly, the training wiki content needs to be organized in a semantically-enhanced taxonomical navigation structure enabling domain experts to find information on a growing site easily. This also provides an ideal opportunity for crowdsourcing. We developed a user-editable collaborative interface crowdsourcing the taxonomy live maintenance to the community of field epidemiologists by embedding the taxonomy in a training wiki platform and generating the semantic navigation hierarchy on the fly. Launched in 2010, FEMwiki is a real world service supporting field epidemiologists in Europe and worldwide. The crowdsourcing success was evaluated by assessing the number and type of changes made by the professional network of epidemiologists over several months and demonstrated that crowdsourcing encourages user to edit existing and create new content and also leads to expansion of the domain taxonomy.
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- 2015
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9. Lack of H5N1 Avian Influenza Transmission to Hospital Employees, Hanoi, 2004
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Peter Horby, Sofia Boqvist, Rodger Doran, Valerie Delpech, and Arnold Bosman
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Microbiology (medical) ,Adult ,Male ,animal structures ,Infectious Disease Transmission, Patient-to-Professional ,Adolescent ,Epidemiology ,Cross-sectional study ,Health Personnel ,animal diseases ,Blotting, Western ,lcsh:Medicine ,medicine.disease_cause ,Antibodies, Viral ,seroepidemiologic study ,lcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseases ,Avian Influenza A Virus ,Neutralization Tests ,Seroepidemiologic Studies ,Environmental health ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Health care ,Influenza, Human ,Influenza A virus ,medicine ,Seroprevalence ,Humans ,lcsh:RC109-216 ,Avian influenza A virus ,Child ,Influenza A Virus, H5N1 Subtype ,business.industry ,Transmission (medicine) ,Research ,lcsh:R ,virus diseases ,Middle Aged ,Influenza A virus subtype H5N1 ,humanities ,Infectious Diseases ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Vietnam ,Child, Preschool ,Immunology ,patient- to-professional disease transmission ,Female ,business - Abstract
A seroprevalence study found no transmission of avian influenza H5N1 viruses from patients to hospital employees in Vietnam, 2004., To establish whether human-to-human transmission of influenza A H5N1 occurred in the healthcare setting in Vietnam, we conducted a cross-sectional seroprevalence survey among hospital employees exposed to 4 confirmed and 1 probable H5N1 case-patients or their clinical specimens. Eighty-three (95.4%) of 87 eligible employees completed a questionnaire and provided a serum sample, which was tested for antibodies to influenza A H5N1. Ninety-five percent reported exposure to >1 H5N1 case-patients; 59 (72.0%) reported symptoms, and 2 (2.4%) fulfilled the definition for a possible H5N1 secondary case-patient. No study participants had detectable antibodies to influenza A H5N1. The data suggest that the H5N1 viruses responsible for human cases in Vietnam in January 2004 are not readily transmitted from person to person. However, influenza viruses are genetically variable, and transmissibility is difficult to predict. Therefore, persons providing care for H5N1 patients should continue to take measures to protect themselves.
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- 2005
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