6 results on '"Thai Pham Quang"'
Search Results
2. A dengue outbreak on a floating village at Cat Ba Island in Vietnam
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Thanh Le Viet, Trung Nguyen Vu, Kinh Nguyen Van, Marc Choisy, Hien Nguyen Tran, Juliet E. Bryant, Huong Tran Thi Kieu, Peter Horby, Thai Pham Quang, Duoc Vu Trong, Mai Le Quynh, and Heiman F. L. Wertheim
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Serotype ,Mainland China ,Adult ,Male ,Rural Population ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Veterinary medicine ,Adolescent ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Dengue virus ,medicine.disease_cause ,Dengue fever ,Disease Outbreaks ,Dengue ,Young Adult ,Spatio-Temporal Analysis ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Animals ,Cluster Analysis ,Humans ,Socioeconomics ,Child ,GeneralLiterature_REFERENCE(e.g.,dictionaries,encyclopedias,glossaries) ,Phylogeny ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Outbreak ,Dengue Virus ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,lnfectious Diseases and Global Health Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 4] ,Vietnam ,Child, Preschool ,Mainland ,Female ,Rural area ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
Background A dengue outbreak in an ecotourism destination spot in Vietnam, from September to November 2013, impacted a floating village of fishermen on the coastal island of Cat Ba. The outbreak raises questions about how tourism may impact disease spread in rural areas. Methods Epidemiological data were obtained from the Hai Phong Preventive Medical Center (PMC), including case histories and residential location from all notified dengue cases from this outbreak. All household addresses were geo-located. Knox test, a spatio-temporal analysis that enables inference dengue clustering constrained by space and time, was performed on the geocoded locations. From the plasma available from two patients, positive for Dengue serotype 3 virus (DENV3), the Envelope (E) gene was sequenced, and their genetic relationships compared to other E sequences in the region. Results Of 192 dengue cases, the odds ratio of contracting dengue infections for people living in the floating villages compared to those living on the island was 4.9 (95 % CI: 3.6-6.7). The space-time analyses on 111 geocoded dengue residences found the risk of dengue infection to be the highest within 4 days and a radius of 20 m of a given case. Of the total of ten detected clusters with an excess risk greater than 2, the cluster with the highest number of cases was in the floating village area (24 patients for a total duration of 31 days). Phylogenetic analysis revealed a high homology of the two DENV3 strains (genotype III) from Cat Ba with DENV3 viruses circulating in Hanoi in the same year (99.1 %). Conclusions Our study showed that dengue transmission is unlikely to be sustained on Cat Ba Island and that the 2013 epidemic likely originated through introduction of viruses from the mainland, potentially Hanoi. These findings suggest that prevention efforts should be focused on mainland rather than on the island. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12889-015-2235-y) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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- 2015
3. Determinants of Influenza Transmission in South East Asia: Insights from a Household Cohort Study in Vietnam.
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Cauchemez, Simon, Ferguson, Neil M., Fox, Annette, Mai, Le Quynh, Thanh, Le Thi, Thai, Pham Quang, Thoang, Dang Dinh, Duong, Tran Nhu, Minh Hoa, Le Nguyen, Tran Hien, Nguyen, and Horby, Peter
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INFLUENZA transmission ,IMMUNITY ,VIRUS disease transmission ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission ,PANDEMICS - Abstract
To guide control policies, it is important that the determinants of influenza transmission are fully characterized. Such assessment is complex because the risk of influenza infection is multifaceted and depends both on immunity acquired naturally or via vaccination and on the individual level of exposure to influenza in the community or in the household. Here, we analyse a large household cohort study conducted in 2007–2010 in Vietnam using innovative statistical methods to ascertain in an integrative framework the relative contribution of variables that influence the transmission of seasonal (H1N1, H3N2, B) and pandemic H1N1pdm09 influenza. Influenza infection was diagnosed by haemagglutination-inhibition (HI) antibody assay of paired serum samples. We used a Bayesian data augmentation Markov chain Monte Carlo strategy based on digraphs to reconstruct unobserved chains of transmission in households and estimate transmission parameters. The probability of transmission from an infected individual to another household member was 8% (95% CI, 6%, 10%) on average, and varied with pre-season titers, age and household size. Within households of size 3, the probability of transmission from an infected member to a child with low pre-season HI antibody titers was 27% (95% CI 21%–35%). High pre-season HI titers were protective against infection, with a reduction in the hazard of infection of 59% (95% CI, 44%–71%) and 87% (95% CI, 70%–96%) for intermediate (1∶20–1∶40) and high (≥1∶80) HI titers, respectively. Even after correcting for pre-season HI titers, adults had half the infection risk of children. Twenty six percent (95% CI: 21%, 30%) of infections may be attributed to household transmission. Our results highlight the importance of integrated analysis by influenza sub-type, age and pre-season HI titers in order to infer influenza transmission risks in and outside of the household. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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4. Influenza Infection Rates, Measurement Errors and the Interpretation of Paired Serology.
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Cauchemez, Simon, Horby, Peter, Fox, Annette, Mai, Le Quynh, Thanh, Le Thi, Thai, Pham Quang, Hoa, Le Nguyen Minh, Hien, Nguyen Tran, and Ferguson, Neil M.
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RESPIRATORY infections ,VIRUS diseases ,INFLUENZA ,MEDICAL microbiology ,SEROLOGY - Abstract
Serological studies are the gold standard method to estimate influenza infection attack rates (ARs) in human populations. In a common protocol, blood samples are collected before and after the epidemic in a cohort of individuals; and a rise in haemagglutination-inhibition (HI) antibody titers during the epidemic is considered as a marker of infection. Because of inherent measurement errors, a 2-fold rise is usually considered as insufficient evidence for infection and seroconversion is therefore typically defined as a 4-fold rise or more. Here, we revisit this widely accepted 70-year old criterion. We develop a Markov chain Monte Carlo data augmentation model to quantify measurement errors and reconstruct the distribution of latent true serological status in a Vietnamese 3-year serological cohort, in which replicate measurements were available. We estimate that the 1-sided probability of a 2-fold error is 9.3% (95% Credible Interval, CI: 3.3%, 17.6%) when antibody titer is below 10 but is 20.2% (95% CI: 15.9%, 24.0%) otherwise. After correction for measurement errors, we find that the proportion of individuals with 2-fold rises in antibody titers was too large to be explained by measurement errors alone. Estimates of ARs vary greatly depending on whether those individuals are included in the definition of the infected population. A simulation study shows that our method is unbiased. The 4-fold rise case definition is relevant when aiming at a specific diagnostic for individual cases, but the justification is less obvious when the objective is to estimate ARs. In particular, it may lead to large underestimates of ARs. Determining which biological phenomenon contributes most to 2-fold rises in antibody titers is essential to assess bias with the traditional case definition and offer improved estimates of influenza ARs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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5. The Epidemiology of Interpandemic and Pandemic Influenza in Vietnam, 2007–2010.
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Horby, Peter, Mai, Le Quynh, Fox, Annette, Thai, Pham Quang, Thi Thu Yen, Nguyen, Thanh, Le Thi, Le Khanh Hang, Nguyen, Duong, Tran Nhu, Thoang, Dang Dinh, Farrar, Jeremy, Wolbers, Marcel, and Hien, Nguyen Tran
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AGE distribution ,BLOOD testing ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,EPIDEMICS ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,IMMUNIZATION ,INFLUENZA ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MEDICAL protocols ,POLYMERASE chain reaction ,POPULATION geography ,PUBLIC health surveillance ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SCHOOL health services ,SEASONS ,DISEASE relapse ,DATA analysis ,INFLUENZA A virus ,SEROPREVALENCE ,REVERSE transcriptase polymerase chain reaction ,H1N1 influenza ,INFLUENZA B virus ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Prospective community-based studies have provided fundamental insights into the epidemiology of influenza in temperate regions, but few comparable studies have been undertaken in the tropics. The authors conducted prospective influenza surveillance and intermittent seroprevalence surveys in a household-based cohort in Vietnam between December 2007 and April 2010, resulting in 1,793 person-seasons of influenza surveillance. Age- and sex-standardized estimates of the risk of acquiring any influenza infection per season in persons 5 years of age or older were 21.1% (95% confidence interval: 17.4, 24.7) in season 1, 26.4% (95% confidence interval: 22.6, 30.2) in season 2, and 17.0% (95% confidence interval: 13.6, 20.4) in season 3. Some individuals experienced multiple episodes of infection with different influenza types/subtypes in the same season (n = 27) or reinfection with the same subtype in different seasons (n = 22). The highest risk of influenza infection was in persons 5–9 years old, in whom the risk of influenza infection per season was 41.8%. Although the highest infection risk was in school-aged children, there were important heterogeneities in the age of infection by subtype and season. These heterogeneities could influence the impact of school closure and childhood vaccination on influenza transmission in tropical areas, such as Vietnam. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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6. Epidemiology and etiology of influenza-like-illness in households in Vietnam; it’s not all about the kids!
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Nguyen, Diep Ngoc Thi, Mai, Le Quynh, Bryant, Juliet E., Hang, Nguyen Le Khanh, Hoa, Le Nguyen Minh, Nadjm, Behzad, Thai, Pham Quang, Duong, Tran Nhu, Anh, Dang Duc, Horby, Peter, van Doorn, H. Rogier, Wertheim, Heiman F.L., and Fox, Annette
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EPIDEMIOLOGY , *ETIOLOGY of diseases , *INFLUENZA , *REVERSE transcriptase polymerase chain reaction , *RHINOVIRUSES , *ENTEROVIRUSES - Abstract
Background Household studies provide opportunities to understand influenza-like-illness (ILI) transmission, but data from (sub)tropical developing countries are scarce. Objective To determine the viral etiology and epidemiology of ILI in households. Study design ILI was detected by active case finding amongst a cohort of 263 northern Vietnam households between 2008 and 2013. Health workers collected nose and throat swabs for virus detection by multiplex real-time RT-PCR. Results ILI was detected at least once in 219 (23.7%) of 945 household members. 271 (62.3%) of 435 nose/throat swabs were positive for at least one of the 15 viruses tested. Six viruses predominated amongst positive swabs: Rhinovirus (28%), Influenza virus (17%), Coronavirus (8%), Enterovirus (5%), Respiratory syncytial virus (3%), Metapneumovirus virus (2.5%) and Parainfluenza virus 3 (1.8%). There was no clear seasonality, but 78% of episodes occurred in Winter/Spring for Influenza compared to 32% for Rhinovirus. Participants, on average, suffered 0.49 ILI, and 0.29 virus-positive ILI episodes, with no significant effects of gender, age, or household size. In contrast to US and Australian community studies, the frequency of ILI decreased as the number of household members aged below 5 years increased (p = 0.006). Conclusion The findings indicate the need for tailored ILI control strategies, and for better understanding of how local childcare practices and seasonality may influence transmission and the role of children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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