11 results on '"Elliot, Alex J"'
Search Results
2. The Epidemiology of Chickenpox in England, 2016–2022: An Observational Study Using General Practitioner Consultations.
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Bardsley, Megan, Loveridge, Paul, Bednarska, Natalia G., Smith, Sue, Morbey, Roger A., Amirthalingam, Gayatri, Elson, William H., Bates, Chris, de Lusignan, Simon, Todkill, Daniel, and Elliot, Alex J.
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CHICKENPOX ,VARICELLA-zoster virus diseases ,GENERAL practitioners ,COVID-19 pandemic ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission - Abstract
Chickenpox is a common childhood disease caused by varicella-zoster virus (VZV). VZV vaccination is not part of the UK childhood immunisation programme, but its potential inclusion is regularly assessed. It is therefore important to understand the ongoing burden of VZV in the community to inform vaccine policy decisions. General practitioner (GP) chickenpox consultations were studied from 1 September 2016 to 9 December 2022. Over the study period, the mean weekly chickenpox consultation rate per 100,000 population in England was 3.4, with a regular peak occurring between weeks 13 and 15. Overall, rates decreased over time, from a mean weekly rate of 5.5 in 2017 to 4.2 in 2019. The highest mean weekly rates were among children aged 1–4 years. There was no typical epidemic peak during the COVID-19 pandemic, but in 2022, rates were proportionally higher among children aged < 1 year old compared to pre-pandemic years. Chickenpox GP consultation rates decreased in England, continuing a longer-term decline in the community. The COVID-19 pandemic impacted rates, likely caused by the introduction of non-pharmaceutical interventions to prevent SARS-CoV-2 transmission. The lasting impact of the interruption of typical disease transmission remains to be seen, but it is important to monitor the chickenpox burden to inform decisions on vaccine programmes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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3. Epidemiology of norovirus and viral gastroenteritis in Ontario, Canada, 2009-2014.
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Hughes, Stephanie L., Greer, Amy L., Elliot, Alex J., McEwen, Scott A., Young, Ian, and Papadopoulos, Andrew
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VIRAL gastroenteritis ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,LONG-term health care ,AGE groups ,PROVINCIAL governments - Abstract
Background: Norovirus is the most common cause of acute gastroenteritis in Canada. The illness causes great morbidity and high societal costs. The objective of this article is to describe the epidemiology of norovirus in the province of Ontario, Canada from 2009 to 2014.Methods: To assess activity of norovirus and viral gastroenteritis (VGE) in Ontario, three datasets were acquired from the provincial government: two traditional surveillance datasets (outbreak and laboratory) and syndromic surveillance data (telehealth), all spanning 2009-2014. All outbreaks, laboratory submissions and telehealth calls were first assessed for total VGE. Norovirus and norovirus-like illness totals were calculated as a proportion of VGE to estimate agent-specific activity levels. Affected institution types, sexes and age groups were also analyzed.Results: Between 2009 and 2014, 41.5% of VGE outbreaks, 63.4% of VGE laboratory submissions and 36.6% of all acute gastroenteritis-related (not restricted to viral causes) telehealth calls were attributed to norovirus and norovirus-like illness in Ontario. The most commonly affected institution type was long-term care homes and the most commonly affected age groups were younger (younger than five years) and older (older than 65 years) individuals. Females were slightly more frequently affected than males.Conclusion: Norovirus and norovirus-like illnesses were the leading cause of VGE in Ontario between 2009 and 2014. They comprised the greatest percentage of VGE when compared with all other VGE-associated viruses. Additional work is needed to determine all component costs and necessary public health actions to reduce the burden of disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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4. Syndromic surveillance: two decades experience of sustainable systems – its people not just data!
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Smith, Gillian E, Elliot, Alex J, Lake, Iain, Edeghere, Obaghe, Morbey, Roger, Catchpole, Mike, Heymann, David L, Hawker, Jeremy, Ibbotson, Sue, McCloskey, Brian, Pebody, Richard, and Public Health England Real-time Syndromic Surveillance Team
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Epidemiology ,Big data ,real-time ,Telehealth ,Population health ,Review ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health care ,medicine ,Added value ,Humans ,Public Health Surveillance ,syndromic surveillance ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Public health ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Triage ,030104 developmental biology ,Infectious Diseases ,England ,Medical emergency ,business ,Psychology ,Sentinel Surveillance - Abstract
Syndromic surveillance is a form of surveillance that generates information for public health action by collecting, analysing and interpreting routine health-related data on symptoms and clinical signs reported by patients and clinicians rather than being based on microbiologically or clinically confirmed cases. In England, a suite of national real-time syndromic surveillance systems (SSS) have been developed over the last 20 years, utilising data from a variety of health care settings (a telehealth triage system, general practice and emergency departments). The real-time systems in England have been used for early detection (e.g. seasonal influenza), for situational awareness (e.g. describing the size and demographics of the impact of a heatwave) and for reassurance of lack of impact on population health of mass gatherings (e.g. the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games).We highlight the lessons learnt from running SSS, for nearly two decades, and propose questions and issues still to be addressed. We feel that syndromic surveillance is an example of the use of ‘big data’, but contend that the focus for sustainable and useful systems should be on the added value of such systems and the importance of people working together to maximise the value for the public health of syndromic surveillance services.
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- 2019
5. Emergency department use during COVID-19 as described by syndromic surveillance.
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Hughes, Helen E., Hughes, Thomas C., Morbey, Roger, Challen, Kirsty, Oliver, Isabel, Smith, Gillian E., and Elliot, Alex J.
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On 12 March 2020 the UK entered the 'delay phase' of the COVID-19 pandemic response. The Public Health England Emergency Department Syndromic Surveillance System (EDSSS) carries out daily (near real-time) public health surveillance of emergency department (ED) attendances across England. This retrospective observational analysis of EDSSS data aimed to describe changes in ED attendances during March-April 2020, and identify the attendance types with the largest impact. Type 1 ED attendances were selected from 109 EDs that reported data to EDSSS for the period 1 January 2019 to 26 April 2020. The daily numbers of attendances were plotted by age group and acuity of presentation. The 2020 'COVID-19' period (12 March 2020 to 26 April 2020) attendances were compared with the equivalent 2019 'pre-COVID-19' period (14 March 2019 to 28 April 2019): in total; by hour and day of the week; age group(<1, 1-4, 15-14, 15-44, 45-64 and 65+ years); gender; acuity; and for selected syndromic indicators(acute respiratory infection, gastroenteritis, myocardial ischaemia). Daily ED attendances up to 11 March 2020 showed regular trends, highest on a Monday and reduced in children during school holidays. From 12 March 2020 ED attendances decreased across all age groups, all acuity levels, on all days and times. Across age groups the greatest percentage reductions were seen in school age children (5-14 years). By acuity, the greatest reduction occurred in the less severe presentations. Syndromic indicators showed that the greatest reductions were in non-respiratory indicators, which fell by 44-67% during 2020 COVID-19, while acute respiratory infection was reduced by -4.4% (95% CI -9.5% to 0.6%). ED attendances in England have been particularly affected during the COVID-19 pandemic due to changes in healthcare seeking behaviour. EDSSS has enabled real-time daily monitoring of these changes, which are made publicly available to facilitate action. The EDSSS provides valuable surveillance of ED attendances in England. The flexibility of EDSSS allowed rapid development of new indicators (including COVID-19-like) and reporting methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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6. Potential added value of the new emergency care dataset to ED-based public health surveillance in England: an initial concept analysis.
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Morbey, Roger, Hughes, Helen, Smith, Gillian, Challen, Kirsty, Hughes, Thomas C., and Elliot, Alex J.
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Introduction: For the London Olympic and Paralympic Games in 2012, a sentinel ED syndromic surveillance system was established to enhance public health surveillance by obtaining data from a selected network of EDs, focusing on London. In 2017, a new national standard Emergency Care Dataset was introduced, which enabled Public Health England (PHE) to initiate the expansion of their sentinel system to national coverage. Prior to this initiative, we estimated the added value, and potential additional resource use, of an expansion of the sentinel surveillance system.Methods: The detection capabilities of the sentinel and national systems were compared using the aberration detection methods currently used by PHE. Different scenarios were used to measure the impact on health at a local, subnational and national level, including improvements to sensitivity and timeliness, along with changes in specificity.Results: The biggest added value was found to be for detecting local impacts, with an increase in sensitivity of over 80%. There were also improvements found at a national level with outbreaks being detected earlier and smaller impacts being detectable. However, the increased number of local sites will also increase the number of false alarms likely to be generated.Conclusion: We have quantified the added value of national ED syndromic surveillance systems, showing how they will enable detection of more localised events. Furthermore, national systems add value in enabling timelier public health interventions. Finally, we have highlighted areas where extra resource may be required to manage improvements in detection coverage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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7. The influence of a major sporting event upon emergency department attendances; A retrospective cross-national European study.
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Hughes, Helen E., Colón-González, Felipe J., Fouillet, Anne, Elliot, Alex J., Caserio-Schonemann, Céline, Hughes, Thomas C., Gallagher, Naomh, Morbey, Roger A., Smith, Gillian E., Thomas, Daniel Rh., and Lake, Iain R.
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EMERGENCY medical services ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,SPORTS events ,PUBLIC health ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Major sporting events may influence attendance levels at hospital emergency departments (ED). Previous research has focussed on the impact of single games, or wins/losses for specific teams/countries, limiting wider generalisations. Here we explore the impact of the Euro 2016 football championships on ED attendances across four participating nations (England, France, Northern Ireland, Wales), using a single methodology. Match days were found to have no significant impact upon daily ED attendances levels. Focussing upon hourly attendances, ED attendances across all countries in the four hour pre-match period were statistically significantly lower than would be expected (OR 0.97, 95% CI 0.94–0.99) and further reduced during matches (OR 0.94, 95% CI 0.91–0.97). In the 4 hour post-match period there was no significant increase in attendances (OR 1.01, 95% CI 0.99–1.04). However, these impacts were highly variable between individual matches: for example in the 4 hour period following the final, involving France, the number of ED attendances in France increased significantly (OR 1.27, 95% CI 1.13–1.42). Overall our results indicate relatively small impacts of major sporting events upon ED attendances. The heterogeneity observed makes it difficult for health providers to predict how major sporting events may affect ED attendances but supports the future development of compatible systems in different countries to support cross-border public health surveillance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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8. RCGP Research and Surveillance Centre Annual Report 2014-2015: disparities in presentations to primary care.
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de Lusignan, Simon, Correa, Ana, Pathirannehelage, Sameera, Byford, Rachel, Yonova, Ivelina, Elliot, Alex J., Lamagni, Theresa, Amirthalingam, Gayatri, Pebody, Richard, Smith, Gillian, Jones, Simon, and Rafi, Imran
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PUBLIC health surveillance ,PRIMARY care ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,RESPIRATORY diseases ,MANAGEMENT of medical records ,GENERAL practitioners ,STATISTICS on Black people ,INFLUENZA epidemiology ,ASIANS ,COMMON cold ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,ETHNIC groups ,FAMILY medicine ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HEALTH status indicators ,HERPES zoster ,MEDICAL societies ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,OTITIS media ,PNEUMONIA ,PRIMARY health care ,SCARLATINA ,SEASONS ,SEX distribution ,WHITE people ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,DISEASE incidence ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
Background: The Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP) Research and Surveillance Centre (RSC) comprises over 100 general practices in England, with a population of around 1 million, providing a public health surveillance system for England and data for research.Aim: To demonstrate the scope of data with the RCGP Annual Report 2014-2015 (May 2014 to April 2015) by describing disparities in the presentation of six common conditions included in the report.Design and Setting: This is a report of respiratory and communicable disease incidence from a primary care sentinel network in England.Method: Incidence rates and demographic profiles are described for common cold, acute otitis media, pneumonia, influenza-like illness, herpes zoster, and scarlet fever. The impact of age, sex, ethnicity, and deprivation on the diagnosis of each condition is explored using a multivariate logistic regression.Results: With the exception of herpes zoster, all conditions followed a seasonal pattern. Apart from pneumonia and scarlet fever, the odds of presenting with any of the selected conditions were greater for females (P<0.001). Older people had a greater probability of a pneumonia diagnosis (≥75 years, odds ratio [OR] 6.37; P<0.001). Common cold and influenza-like illness were more likely in people from ethnic minorities than white people, while the converse was true for acute otitis media and herpes zoster. There were higher odds of acute otitis media and herpes zoster diagnosis among the less deprived (least deprived quintile, OR 1.32 and 1.48, respectively; P<0.001).Conclusion: The RCGP RSC database provides insight into the content and range of GP workload and provides insight into current public health concerns. Further research is needed to explore these disparities in presentation to primary care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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9. Assessing the use of hospital staff influenza-like absence (ILA) for enhancing hospital preparedness and national surveillance.
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Drumright, Lydia N., Frost, Simon D. W., Elliot, Alex J., Catchpole, Mike, Pebody, Richard G., Atkins, Mark, Harrison, John, Parker, Penny, and Holmes, Alison H.
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INFLUENZA research ,EMERGENCY management ,EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research ,PRIMARY care ,ALGORITHM research - Abstract
Background: Early warning and robust estimation of influenza burden are critical to inform hospital preparedness and operational, treatment, and vaccination policies. Methods to enhance influenza-like illness (ILI) surveillance are regularly reviewed. We investigated the use of hospital staff 'influenza-like absences' (hospital staff-ILA), i.e. absence attributed to colds and influenza, to improve capture of influenza dynamics and provide resilience for hospitals. Methods: Numbers and rates of hospital staff-ILA were compared to regional surveillance data on ILI primary-care presentations (15-64 years) and to counts of laboratory confirmed cases among hospitalised patients from April 2008 to April 2013 inclusive. Analyses were used to determine comparability of the ILI and hospital-ILA and how systems compared in early warning and estimating the burden of disease. Results: Among 20,021 reported hospital-ILA and 4661 community ILI cases, correlations in counts were high and consistency in illness measurements was observed. In time series analyses, both hospital-ILA and ILI showed similar timing of the seasonal component. Hospital-ILA data often commenced and peaked earlier than ILI according to a Bayesian prospective alarm algorithm. Hospital-ILA rates were more comparable to model-based estimates of 'true' influenza burden than ILI. Conclusions: Hospital-ILA appears to have the potential to be a robust, yet simple syndromic surveillance method that could be used to enhance estimates of disease burden and early warning, and assist with local hospital preparedness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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10. Epidemiology of respiratory syncytial virus in children younger than 5 years in England during the COVID-19 pandemic, measured by laboratory, clinical, and syndromic surveillance: a retrospective observational study.
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Bardsley, Megan, Morbey, Roger A, Hughes, Helen E, Beck, Charles R, Watson, Conall H, Zhao, Hongxin, Ellis, Joanna, Smith, Gillian E, and Elliot, Alex J
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RESPIRATORY syncytial virus , *COUGH , *COVID-19 pandemic , *ACUTE flaccid paralysis , *RESPIRATORY infections , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *TELEPHONES - Abstract
Seasonal epidemics of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) cause a clinically significant burden of disease among young children. Non-pharmaceutical interventions targeted at SARS-CoV-2 have affected the activity of other respiratory pathogens. We describe changes in the epidemiology of RSV among children younger than 5 years in England since 2020. Surveillance data on RSV infections, comprising laboratory-confirmed cases, proportion of positive tests, hospital admissions for RSV-attributable illness, and syndromic indicators for RSV-associated disease (emergency department attendances for acute bronchitis or bronchiolitis, non-emergency health advice telephone service [NHS 111] calls for cough, general practitioner [GP] in-hours consultations for respiratory tract infections, and GP out-of-hours contacts for acute bronchitis or bronchiolitis) were analysed from Dec 29, 2014 to March 13, 2022, for children younger than 5 years. Data were extracted from national laboratory, clinical, and syndromic surveillance systems. Time-series analyses using generalised linear models were used to estimate the effect of non-pharmaceutical interventions targeting SARS-CoV-2 on RSV indicators, with absolute and relative changes calculated by comparing observed and predicted values. RSV-associated activity was reduced for all RSV indicators during winter 2020–21 in England, with 10 280 (relative change –99·5% [95% prediction interval –100·0 to –99·1]) fewer laboratory-confirmed cases, 22·2 (–99·6%) percentage points lower test positivity, 92 530 (–80·8% [–80·9 to –80·8]) fewer hospital admissions, 96 672 (–73·7% [–73·7 to –73·7]) fewer NHS 111 calls, 2924 (–88·8% [–90·4 to –87·2]) fewer out-of-hours GP contacts, 91 304 (–89·9% [–90·0 to –89·9]) in-hours GP consultations, and 27 486 (–85·3% [–85·4 to –85·2]) fewer emergency department attendances for children younger than 5 years compared with predicted values based on winter seasons before the COVID-19 pandemic. An unprecedented summer surge of RSV activity occurred in 2021, including 11 255 (1258·3% [1178·3 to 1345·8]) extra laboratory-confirmed cases, 11·6 percentage points (527·3%) higher test positivity, 7604 (10·7% [10·7 to 10·8]) additional hospital admissions, 84 425 (124·8% [124·7 to 124·9]) more calls to NHS 111, 409 (39·0% [36·6 to 41·8]) more out-of-hours GP contacts, and 9789 (84·9% [84·5 to 85·4]) more emergency department attendances compared with the predicted values, although there were 21 805 (–34·1% [–34·1 to –34·0]) fewer in-hours GP consultations than expected. Most indicators were also lower than expected in winter 2021–22, although to a lesser extent than in winter 2020–21. The extraordinary absence of RSV during winter 2020–21 probably resulted in a cohort of young children without natural immunity to RSV, thereby raising the potential for increased RSV incidence, out-of-season activity, and health-service pressures when measures to restrict SARS-CoV-2 transmission were relaxed. None. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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11. Resurgence of scarlet fever in England, 2014-16: a population-based surveillance study.
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Lamagni, Theresa, Guy, Rebecca, Chand, Meera, Henderson, Katherine L, Chalker, Victoria, Lewis, James, Saliba, Vanessa, Elliot, Alex J, Smith, Gillian E, Rushton, Stephen, Sheridan, Elizabeth A, Ramsay, Mary, and Johnson, Alan P
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SCARLATINA , *DISEASE incidence , *PUBLIC health surveillance , *HOSPITAL admission & discharge , *DISEASE complications , *COMMUNICABLE disease epidemiology , *BACTERIAL antigens , *CARRIER proteins , *COMPARATIVE studies , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *HOSPITAL care , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MEMBRANE proteins , *PHARYNX , *RESEARCH , *STREPTOCOCCUS , *EVALUATION research - Abstract
Background: After decades of decreasing scarlet fever incidence, a dramatic increase was seen in England beginning in 2014. Investigations were launched to assess clinical and epidemiological patterns and identify potential causes.Methods: In this population-based surveillance study, we analysed statutory scarlet fever notifications held by Public Health England from 1911 to 2016 in England and Wales to identify periods of sudden escalation of scarlet fever. Characteristics of cases and outbreaks in England including frequency of complications and hospital admissions were assessed and compared with the pre-upsurge period. Isolates from throat swabs were obtained and were emm typed.Findings: Data were retrieved for our analysis between Jan 1, 1911, and Dec 31, 2016. Population rates of scarlet fever increased by a factor of three between 2013 and 2014 from 8·2 to 27·2 per 100 000 (rate ratio [RR] 3·34, 95% CI 3·23-3·45; p<0·0001); further increases were observed in 2015 (30·6 per 100 000) and in 2016 (33·2 per 100 000), which reached the highest number of cases (19 206) and rate of scarlet fever notifcation since 1967. The median age of cases in 2014 was 4 years (IQR 3-7) with an incidence of 186 per 100 000 children under age 10 years. All parts of England saw an increase in incidence, with 620 outbreaks reported in 2016. Hospital admissions for scarlet fever increased by 97% between 2013 and 2016; one in 40 cases were admitted for management of the condition or potential complications. Analysis of strains (n=303) identified a diversity of emm types with emm3 (43%), emm12 (15%), emm1 (11%), and emm4 (9%) being the most common. Longitudinal analysis identified 4-yearly periodicity in population incidence of scarlet fever but of consistently lower magnitude than the current escalation.Interpretation: England is experiencing an unprecedented rise in scarlet fever with the highest incidence for nearly 50 years. Reasons for this escalation are unclear and identifying these remains a public health priority.Funding: None. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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