24 results on '"Renate Vogler"'
Search Results
2. Screening of Healthy Feral Pigeons (
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Désirée, Annaheim, Barbara Renate, Vogler, Brigitte, Sigrist, Andrea, Vögtlin, Daniela, Hüssy, Christian, Breitler, Sonja, Hartnack, Christian, Grund, Jacqueline, King, Nina, Wolfrum, and Sarah, Albini
- Abstract
Pigeon paramyxovirus-1 (PPMV-1) is predominantly isolated from pigeons or doves and forms a separate group of viral strains within Avian Orthoavulavirus-1, the causative agent of Newcastle disease in poultry. Since the introduction of PPMV-1 into Europe in 1981, these strains have rapidly spread all over Europe, and are nowadays considered to be enzootic in feral and hobby pigeons (
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- 2022
3. Falcons From the United Arab Emirates Infected With
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Sandro, Stalder, Hanna, Marti, Nicole, Borel, Barbara Renate, Vogler, Theresa, Pesch, Barbara, Prähauser, Peter, Wencel, Karine, Laroucau, and Sarah, Albini
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Chlamydophila psittaci ,Animals ,United Arab Emirates ,Chlamydia ,Chlamydia Infections ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Hawks - Abstract
Chlamydiaceae are obligate intracellular bacteria with a broad host range. Several studies have found chlamydial species that are genetically intermediate between
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- 2021
4. Postmortem findings of secondary brodifacoum poisoning in a kestrel ( Falco tinnunculus )
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Hermann Ammer, Martin Sinniger, Sandro Stalder, Barbara Renate Vogler, Sarah Albini, University of Zurich, and Albini, Sarah
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General Veterinary ,biology ,business.industry ,3400 General Veterinary ,Zoology ,610 Medicine & health ,Kestrel ,biology.organism_classification ,Falco tinnunculus ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,570 Life sciences ,Medicine ,business ,Brodifacoum ,10082 Institute of Food Safety and Hygiene - Published
- 2021
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5. Low occurrence of Salmonella spp. in wild birds from a Swiss rehabilitation centre
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Barbara Renate Vogler, Kira Schmitt, Katrin Zurfluh, Prisca Mattmann, and Sarah Albini
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Serotype ,education.field_of_study ,Veterinary medicine ,Salmonella ,General Veterinary ,biology ,medicine.drug_class ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Antibiotics ,Population ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease_cause ,Salmonella enterica ,Hygiene ,medicine ,Livestock ,education ,business ,Bacteria ,media_common - Abstract
Background Salmonella are bacteria of the family Enterobacteriaceae with a wide host range. Infection in birds causes subclinical disease to mass mortality events. Wild birds may act as healthy carriers posing a hazard to livestock and humans. The present study investigated the occurrence of Salmonella in wild birds admitted to a rehabilitation centre in order to assess the exposure of the staff to this zoonotic pathogen. Methods Faecal swabs of 552 avian patients (68 species) were collected over the course of 12 months. Each sample was propagated in enrichment broth and subsequently incubated on a RAPID'Salmonella plate. Salmonella isolates were serotyped, and antimicrobial susceptibility testing was performed. Results Six Salmonella enterica subsp. enterica serovar Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium) and 1 S. Schleissheim were detected; all were pansusceptible to the antibiotics tested. Conclusion Despite the low positive rate in the tested population, the authors recommend applying protective equipment and hygiene measures when handling wild birds.
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- 2021
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6. Falcons from the United Arab Emirates infected with Chlamydia psittaci/C abortus intermediates specified as Chlamydia buteonis by Polymerase Chain Reaction
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Nicole Borel, Barbara Prähauser, Sandro Stalder, Theresa Pesch, Sarah Albini, Karine Laroucau, Hanna Marti, Barbara Renate Vogler, Peter Wencel, University of Zurich, and Stalder, Sandro
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Chlamydia psittaci ,Chlamydia ,biology ,10184 Institute of Veterinary Pathology ,Buteo ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,law.invention ,law ,23S ribosomal RNA ,3404 Small Animals ,medicine ,570 Life sciences ,Chlamydiaceae ,Small Animals ,Pathogen ,10082 Institute of Food Safety and Hygiene ,Feces ,Polymerase chain reaction - Abstract
Chlamydiaceae are obligate intracellular bacteria with a broad host range. Several studies have found chlamydial species that are genetically intermediate between Chlamydia psittaci and Chlamydia abortus in various avian species. One of these intermediate Chlamydia species, found in a red-shouldered hawk (Buteo lineatus), was recently classified as a new species Chlamydia buteonis. This newly described Chlamydia species has, so far, only been reported in hawks exhibiting clinical signs of conjunctivitis, dyspnea, and diarrhea. In the present study, fecal samples of 5 gyrfalcons (Falco rusticolus), 3 gyr/peregrine falcon hybrids (Falco rusticolus × Falco peregrinus), and 15 falcons of unknown species presented to falcon clinics on the Arabian Peninsula were shipped to the Vetsuisse Faculty, University of Zurich (Zurich, Switzerland), for examination for the presence of Chlamydiaceae. A step-wise diagnostic approach was performed to identify the chlamydial species involved. Chlamydiaceae were detected in 21/23 falcons by a family-specific real-time quantitative PCR (qPCR). Further identification with a 23S ribosomal RNA-based microarray assay and 16S conventional PCR and sequencing yielded inconclusive results, indicating the presence of an intermediate Chlamydia species. Because none of the falcons tested positive for Chlamydia psittaci by specific qPCR, all 23 samples were subjected to a Chlamydia buteonis–specific qPCR, which was positive in 16/23 samples. Detailed information regarding clinical history was available for 8 falcons admitted to a falcon clinic in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Six of those birds that were presented to the clinic because of loss of performance and poor general condition, including vomiting and diarrhea, were positive for C buteonis. In 2 birds without clinical disease signs admitted for a routine health examination, 1 was positive for C buteonis, and 1 was negative. It is yet unknown whether Chlamydia buteonis causes disease in birds, but the findings in this study indicate that Chlamydia buteonis may be an infectious pathogen in falcon species.
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- 2021
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7. Occurrence of
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Sandro, Stalder, Hanna, Marti, Nicole, Borel, Konrad, Sachse, Sarah, Albini, and Barbara Renate, Vogler
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Chlamydiaceae ,crows ,C.psittaci/C.abortus intermediates ,raptors ,Article ,Switzerland - Abstract
Bacteria of the family Chlamydiaceae are globally disseminated and able to infect many bird species. So far, 11 species of Chlamydia have been detected in wild birds, and several studies found chlamydial strains classified as genetically intermediate between Chlamydia (C.) psittaci and C. abortus. Recently, a group of these intermediate strains was shown to form a separate species, i.e., C. buteonis. In the present study, 1128 samples from 341 raptors of 16 bird species and 253 corvids representing six species were examined using a stepwise diagnostic approach. Chlamydiaceae DNA was detected in 23.7% of the corvids and 5.9% of the raptors. In corvids, the most frequently detected Chlamydia species was C. psittaci of outer membrane protein A (ompA) genotype 1V, which is known to have a host preference for corvids. The most frequently detected ompA genotype in raptors was M56. Furthermore, one of the raptors harbored C. psittaci 1V, and two others carried genotype A. C. buteonis was not detected in the bird population investigated, so it remains unknown whether this species occurs in Switzerland. The infection rate of Chlamydiaceae in corvids was high compared to rates reported in other wild bird species, but neither Chlamydiaceae-positive corvids nor raptors showed overt signs of disease. Since the Chlamydiaceae of both, raptors and crows were identified as C. psittaci and all C. psittaci genotypes are considered to be zoonotic, it can be suggested that raptors and crows pose a potential hazard to the health of their handlers.
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- 2020
8. [Untitled]
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Barbara Renate Vogler, Richard K. Hoop, K Linder, Sarah Albini, and Simone Martina Meier
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General Veterinary ,Computational biology - Published
- 2017
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9. Survey on Chlamydiaceae in cloacal swabs from Swiss turkeys demonstrates absence of Chlamydia psittaci and low occurrence of Chlamydia gallinacean
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Hanna Marti, Barbara Prähauser, Prisca Mattmann, Michal Trinkler, Richard K. Hoop, Theresa Pesch, Sarah Albini, Barbara Renate Vogler, Nicole Borel, University of Zurich, Yildirim, Arda, and Vogler, Barbara Renate
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0301 basic medicine ,Veterinary medicine ,animal diseases ,Artificial Gene Amplification and Extension ,Pathology and Laboratory Medicine ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Biochemistry ,Poultry ,law.invention ,Chlamydia Infection ,0403 veterinary science ,Cloaca ,law ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Chlamydiaceae ,Gamefowl ,Chlamydia ,Polymerase chain reaction ,Chlamydia psittaci ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Eukaryota ,Agriculture ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,General Medicine ,Bacterial Pathogens ,Nucleic acids ,RNA, Ribosomal, 23S ,Infectious Diseases ,Ribosomal RNA ,Medical Microbiology ,Vertebrates ,Medicine ,Livestock ,Pathogens ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Switzerland ,Research Article ,DNA, Bacterial ,Turkeys ,Cell biology ,Cellular structures and organelles ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Science ,Sexually Transmitted Diseases ,10184 Institute of Veterinary Pathology ,Genetics and Molecular Biology ,1100 General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Chlamydiaceae Infections ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Microbiology ,Birds ,03 medical and health sciences ,1300 General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,medicine ,Animals ,Molecular Biology Techniques ,Non-coding RNA ,Molecular Biology ,Microbial Pathogens ,Feces ,10082 Institute of Food Safety and Hygiene ,Poultry Diseases ,1000 Multidisciplinary ,Bacteria ,business.industry ,Organisms ,Biology and Life Sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,030104 developmental biology ,Chlamydophila psittaci ,Fowl ,General Biochemistry ,Amniotes ,570 Life sciences ,RNA ,Flock ,business ,Ribosomes - Abstract
In Switzerland, domestic turkey meat is a niche product. Turkeys are fattened on mixed family-based farms scattered across the country, with most providing access to an uncovered outdoor pasture for the birds. Swiss fattening turkeys may therefore get infected with Chlamydiaceae via wild birds or their faeces, potentially shedding these bacteria at a later stage. The aim of the present study was to acquire baseline data about the shedding of Chlamydiaceae in clinically unremarkable Swiss fattening turkeys at slaughter, potentially exposing slaughterhouse workers to infection. In this large-scale study, 1008 cloacal swabs of Swiss turkeys out of 53 flocks from 28 different grow-out farms with uncovered outdoor pasture were collected over the course of 14 months and examined for the occurrence of Chlamydiaceae by a family-specific 23S-rRNA real-time PCR. Positive samples were further analyzed by Chlamydia psittaci (C. psittaci)-specific real-time PCR and the Arraymate DNA Microarray for species identification. All samples were negative for C. psittaci, but seven swabs out of one flock were tested positive for Chlamydia gallinacea (0.7%). Although turkeys with access to pasture may have contact with Chlamydiaceae-harbouring wild birds or their faeces, the infection rate in Swiss turkeys was shown to be low.
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- 2019
10. Antimicrobial resistant and extended-spectrum β-lactamase producing Escherichia coli in common wild bird species in Switzerland
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Prisca Mattmann, Barbara Renate Vogler, Sarah Albini, Magdalena Nüesch-Inderbinen, Katrin Zurfluh, Patrick Kindle, Roger Stephan, University of Zurich, and Nüesch-Inderbinen, Magdalena
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Genotype ,lcsh:QR1-502 ,610 Medicine & health ,Special Issue: Antimicrobial Resistance ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,lcsh:Microbiology ,beta-Lactamases ,Birds ,Feces ,Antibiotic resistance ,Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial ,medicine ,Escherichia coli ,Animals ,Carrion ,antimicrobial resistance ,wild birds ,10082 Institute of Food Safety and Hygiene ,Escherichia coli Infections ,Phylogeny ,biology ,Phylogenetic tree ,2404 Microbiology ,Original Articles ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,biology.organism_classification ,Antimicrobial ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,Carrion crow ,Multiple drug resistance ,ESBL ,570 Life sciences ,Multilocus sequence typing ,Switzerland ,Multilocus Sequence Typing ,Plasmids - Abstract
A total of 294 fecal swabs from 294 wild birds in Switzerland were cultivated for antimicrobial resistant (AMR) Escherichia coli. Samples were also subcultivated to detect E. coli with extended‐spectrum β‐lactamases (ESBL), carbapenemases, and plasmid‐mediated aminoglycoside or colistin resistance, respectively. Samples from 17 (5.8%) of the birds contained 19 AMR E. coli, whereof 26.3% were multidrug resistant. Five (1.7%) ESBL‐producing E. coli were detected. The isolates harbored bla CTX‐M‐1 (two isolated from carrion crows and from one great spotted woodpecker, respectively), bla CTX‐M‐15 (originating from a grey heron), bla CTX‐M‐55 (from a carrion crow), and bla CTX‐M‐65 (from a common blackbird). Phylogenetic analysis assigned three isolates to commensal phylogroups A and B1, one to extraintestinal pathogenic group B2, and one to phylogroup F. Multilocus sequence typing identified sequence types (STs) that have been found previously in ESBL E. coli in wild birds (ST58, ST205, ST540). One isolate harboring bla CTX‐M‐55 was assigned to the recently emerged fluoroquinolone‐resistant, extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli clone ST1193. Wild birds have the potential to disperse AMR, including clinically important resistance genes, from anthropogenic‐influenced habitats to diverse areas, including vulnerable natural environments such as surface waters or mountain regions., Of 294 fecal samples from resident and short‐distance migratory wild birds, 5.8% contained antimicrobial resistant (AMR) Escherichia coli. Moreover, 1.7% of the samples yielded E. coli producing the extended‐spectrum β‐lactamases CTX‐M‐1, CTX‐M‐15, CTX‐M‐55, or CTX‐M‐65. Wild birds have the potential to disperse AMR bacteria from anthropogenic‐influenced habitats to diverse areas, including vulnerable natural environments such as surface waters or mountain regions.
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- 2019
11. EVOLvINC: EValuating knOwLedge INtegration Capacity in multistakeholder governance
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Janina Schirmer, Martin Hitziger, Alexander Lux, Maurizio Aragrande, John Berezowski, Sabine Hoffmann, Markus A. Palenberg, Mieghan Bruce, Massimo Canali, Ina Richter, Christian Pohl, Carmenza Robledo Abad, Simon R. Rüegg, Robert H. Salerno, Victor J. Del Rio Vilas, Sara Savić, Barbara Renate Vogler, Hans Keune, Miroslav Radeski, Gilberto Igrejas, LAQV@REQUIMTE, University of Zurich, and Martin Hitziger, Maurizio Aragrande, John A. Berezowski, Massimo Canali, Victor Del Rio Vilas, Sabine Hoffmann, Gilberto Igrejas, Hans Keune, Alexandra Lux, Mieghan Bruce, Markus A. Palenberg, Christian Pohl, Miroslav Radeski, Ina Richter, Carmenza Robledo Abad, Robert H. Salerno, Sara Savic, Janina Schirmer, Barbara R. Vogler, Simon R. Rüegg
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0106 biological sciences ,Process management ,Knowledge integration ,QH301-705.5 ,Computer science ,Process (engineering) ,Best practice ,610 Medicine & health ,Collective action ,01 natural sciences ,Process evaluation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Biology (General) ,10599 Chair in Veterinary Epidemiology ,Policy cycle ,Adaptation (computer science) ,Biology ,QH540-549.5 ,10082 Institute of Food Safety and Hygiene ,Adaptive capacity ,630 Agriculture ,Ecology ,transdisciplinarity ,Corporate governance ,Capacity building ,010601 ecology ,Transdisciplinarity ,Chemistry ,multistakeholder governance ,570 Life sciences ,biology ,Human medicine ,2303 Ecology ,Multistakeholder governance ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Research and policy processes in many fields, such as sustainability and health, are increasingly relying on transdisciplinary cooperation among a multitude of governmental, nongovernmental, and private actors from local to global levels. In the absence of hierarchical chains of command, multistakeholder governance may accommodate conflicting or diverse interests and facilitate collective action, but its effectiveness depends on its capacity to integrate systems, transformation, and target knowledge. Approaches to foster such governance are nascent and quickly evolving, and methodological standards to facilitate comparison and learning from best practice are needed. However, there is currently no evaluation approach that (i) comprehensively assesses the capacity for knowledge integration in multistakeholder governance, (ii) draws on the best available knowledge that is being developed in various fields, and (iii) combines a systematic and transferable methodological design with pragmatic feasibility. We brought together 20 experts from institutions in nine countries, all working on evaluation approaches for collaborative science–policy initiatives. In a synthesis process that included a 2-day workshop and follow-up work among a core group of participants, we developed a tool for evaluating knowledge integration capacity in multistakeholder governance (EVOLvINC). Its 23 indicators incorporate previously defined criteria and components of transdisciplinary evaluations into a single, comprehensive framework that operationalizes the capacity for integrating systems, target, and transformation knowledge during an initiative’s (a) design and planning processes at the policy formulation stage, (b) organization and working processes at the implementation stage, and (c) sharing and learning processes at the evaluation stage of the policy cycle. EVOLvINC is (i) implemented through a questionnaire, (ii) builds on established indicators where possible, (iii) offers a consistent and transparent semiquantitative scoring and aggregation algorithm, and (iv) uses spider diagrams for visualizing results. The tool builds on experience and expertise from both the northern and southern hemispheres and was empirically validated with seven science–policy initiatives in six African and Asian countries. As a generalized framework, EVOLvINC thus enables a structured reflection on the capacity of multistakeholder governance processes to foster knowledge integration. Its emphasis on dialog and exploration allows adaptation to contextual specificities, highlights relative strengths and weaknesses, and suggests avenues for shaping multistakeholder governance toward mutual learning, capacity building, and strengthened networks. The validation suggests that the adaptive capacity of multistakeholder governance could be best enhanced by considering systems characteristics at the policy formulation stage and fostering adaptive and generic learning at the evaluation stage of the policy cycle., Ecology and Society, 24 (2), ISSN:1708-3087
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- 2019
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12. Resource-Effective Serosurveillance for the Detection of West Nile Virus in Switzerland Using Abattoir Samples of Free-Range Laying Hens
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Barbara Renate Vogler, Ute Ziegler, Sonja Hartnack, Andrea Vögtlin, Sarah Albini, Davide Lelli, Richard K. Hoop, University of Zurich, and Vogler, Barbara Renate
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competitive ELISA ,viruses ,610 Medicine & health ,Mosquito Vectors ,Disease Vectors ,medicine.disease_cause ,Newcastle disease ,Microbiology ,Virus ,Seroepidemiologic Studies ,Virology ,Culex pipiens ,medicine ,Animals ,Organ donation ,10599 Chair in Veterinary Epidemiology ,10082 Institute of Food Safety and Hygiene ,biology ,630 Agriculture ,Bird Diseases ,Transmission (medicine) ,2404 Microbiology ,sentinel chickens ,virus diseases ,2725 Infectious Diseases ,biology.organism_classification ,Monitoring program ,Influenza A virus subtype H5N1 ,Infectious Diseases ,Vector (epidemiology) ,2406 Virology ,surveillance ,570 Life sciences ,Female ,Chickens ,West Nile virus ,West Nile Fever ,Switzerland - Abstract
West Nile virus (WNV) is an important zoonotic pathogen maintained in a natural transmission cycle between mosquitoes and birds as reservoir hosts. In dead-end hosts, such as humans, infection may result in fatal neurologic disease translating into disease and death-related suffering and increased health care costs. In humans, WNV may also be transmitted through blood transfusions and organ transplants. WNV is not present in Switzerland yet, but competent vector species (especially Culex pipiens and Aedes japonicus) are prevalent and an introduction of the virus, likely through wild birds, is expected at any time. Therefore, it is important for Switzerland to be prepared and establish a surveillance system for WNV to initiate increased prevention activities, such as the screening of blood and organ donations and public education activities in case virus circulation is detected. The long-term goal of these surveillance measures would be a reduced infection rate in humans resulting in less suffering and reduced health care costs. To provide the basis for a pragmatic and resource-effective WNV surveillance program, this study used aliquots of serum samples of free-range laying hens taken at the abattoir and collected in the frame of the ongoing Swiss Avian Influenza and Newcastle Disease monitoring program for a 2-year period. All 961 aliquots were analyzed using a commercial competitive WNV enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The study allowed to set up sampling and laboratory routines as a basis for future WNV surveillance activities. At this stage there is no evidence for circulation of WNV in Switzerland.
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- 2019
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13. Integrated approaches to health
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Cristina Rojo Gimeno, Barbara Haesler, Ana Coelho, Massimo Canali, Barbara Renate Vogler, Chiara Frazzoli, Patrícia Poeta, Tine Hald, Laura Cornelsen, Elena Boriani, Simon Rüegg, and Mijalche Santa
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Ecosystem health ,One Health ,Transdisciplinarity ,Political science ,Integrated systems ,Environmental planning ,World health - Published
- 2018
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14. Application of the Pareto principle to identify and address drug-therapy safety issues
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Andrius Patapovas, Renke Maas, Thomas Bürkle, Anja Sonst, Barbara Pfistermeister, Nina Hartmann, Fabian Müller, Harald Dormann, Melanie Kirchner, Bettina Plank-Kiegele, and Renate Vogler
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Drug ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Prescription Drugs ,Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Psychological intervention ,Drug Prescriptions ,Patient safety ,Pharmacotherapy ,Germany ,Humans ,Medication Errors ,Medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,In patient ,media_common ,Pharmacology ,business.industry ,Pareto principle ,General Medicine ,Emergency department ,Models, Theoretical ,medicine.disease ,Regional hospital ,Emergency medicine ,Medical emergency ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,Pharmacy Service, Hospital ,business - Abstract
Adverse drug events (ADE) and medication errors (ME) are common causes of morbidity in patients presenting at emergency departments (ED). Recognition of ADE as being drug related and prevention of ME are key to enhancing pharmacotherapy safety in ED. We assessed the applicability of the Pareto principle (∼80 % of effects result from 20 % of causes) to address locally relevant problems of drug therapy. In 752 cases consecutively admitted to the nontraumatic ED of a major regional hospital, ADE, ME, contributing drugs, preventability, and detection rates of ADE by ED staff were investigated. Symptoms, errors, and drugs were sorted by frequency in order to apply the Pareto principle. In total, 242 ADE were observed, and 148 (61.2 %) were assessed as preventable. ADE contributed to 110 inpatient hospitalizations. The ten most frequent symptoms were causally involved in 88 (80.0 %) inpatient hospitalizations. Only 45 (18.6 %) ADE were recognized as drug-related problems until discharge from the ED. A limited set of 33 drugs accounted for 184 (76.0 %) ADE; ME contributed to 57 ADE. Frequency-based listing of ADE, ME, and drugs involved allowed identification of the most relevant problems and development of easily to implement safety measures, such as wall and pocket charts. The Pareto principle provides a method for identifying the locally most relevant ADE, ME, and involved drugs. This permits subsequent development of interventions to increase patient safety in the ED admission process that best suit local needs.
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- 2014
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15. Chlamydiaceae in wild, feral and domestic pigeons in Switzerland and insight into population dynamics by Chlamydia psittaci multilocus sequence typing
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Nicole Borel, Martina Jelocnik, Barbara Renate Vogler, Prisca Mattmann, Hanna Marti, Sarah Albini, University of Zurich, and Yildirim, Arda
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Population Dynamics ,Artificial Gene Amplification and Extension ,Pathology and Laboratory Medicine ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Biochemistry ,Chlamydia Infection ,law.invention ,law ,RNA, Ribosomal, 16S ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Chlamydiaceae ,Chlamydia ,Phylogeny ,Polymerase chain reaction ,Chlamydia psittaci ,education.field_of_study ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Eukaryota ,food and beverages ,hemic and immune systems ,General Medicine ,Psittacosis ,Bacterial Pathogens ,Nucleic acids ,Infectious Diseases ,Ribosomal RNA ,Medical Microbiology ,Animals, Domestic ,Vertebrates ,Medicine ,Pigeons ,Pathogens ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Switzerland ,psychological phenomena and processes ,Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins ,Research Article ,DNA, Bacterial ,Cell biology ,Cellular structures and organelles ,Science ,Animal Types ,Population ,Sexually Transmitted Diseases ,10184 Institute of Veterinary Pathology ,Zoology ,Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Animals, Wild ,chemical and pharmacologic phenomena ,1100 General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Microbiology ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Birds ,1300 General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,23S ribosomal RNA ,medicine ,Animals ,Domestic Animals ,Columbidae ,Molecular Biology Techniques ,Non-coding RNA ,education ,Microbial Pathogens ,Molecular Biology ,10082 Institute of Food Safety and Hygiene ,1000 Multidisciplinary ,Bacteria ,Bird Diseases ,Organisms ,Biology and Life Sciences ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Chlamydophila psittaci ,General Biochemistry ,Amniotes ,570 Life sciences ,RNA ,Multilocus sequence typing ,Ribosomes ,Multilocus Sequence Typing - Abstract
Feral pigeons, common wood pigeons and Eurasian collared doves are the most common representatives of the Columbidae family in Switzerland and are mostly present in highly populated, urban areas. Pigeons may carry various members of the obligate intracellular Chlamydiaceae family, particularly Chlamydia (C.) psittaci, a known zoonotic agent, and C. avium. The objective of the study was to identify the infection rates of common free-roaming pigeons for different Chlamydia species with the overall aim to assess the risk pigeons pose to public health. In this study, 431 pigeons (323 feral pigeons, 34 domestic pigeons, 39 Eurasian collared doves, 35 common wood pigeons) from several geographic locations in Switzerland were investigated for the presence of Chlamydiaceae. Samples consisted of pooled choanal-cloacal swabs (n = 174), liver samples (n = 52), and paired swab and liver samples from 205 pigeons (n = 410). All 636 samples were screened using a Chlamydiaceae family-specific 23S rRNA real-time PCR (qPCR). Subsequent species identification was performed by DNA-microarray assay, sequencing of a 16S rRNA gene fragment and a C. psittaci specific qPCR. In total, 73 of the 431 pigeons tested positive for Chlamydiaceae, of which 68 were positive for C. psittaci, four were C. avium-positive and one pigeon was co-infected with C. avium and C. psittaci. The highest infection rates were detected in feral (64/323) and domestic pigeons (5/34). Common wood pigeons (2/35) and Eurasian collared doves (2/39) revealed lower infection rates. Additionally, multilocus sequence typing of twelve selected C. psittaci-positive samples revealed closely related sequence types (ST) between and within different Swiss cities. Furthermore, liver and corresponding swab samples from the same bird were colonized by the same ST. Considering the high infection rates of C. psittaci in domestic and feral pigeons, close or frequent contact to these birds poses a human health risk.
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- 2019
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16. Medication safety and knowledge-based functions: a stepwise approach against information overload
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Harald Dormann, Hans-Ulrich Prokosch, Melanie Kirchner, Barbara Pfistermeister, Bettina Plank-Kiegele, Andrius Patapovas, Renate Vogler, Brita Sedlmayr, Fabian Müller, Renke Maas, Manfred Criegee-Rieck, Anja Sonst, and Thomas Bürkle
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Pharmacology ,Decision support system ,business.industry ,Psychological intervention ,Information quality ,medicine.disease ,Information overload ,Intervention (counseling) ,Electronic prescribing ,Medication therapy management ,Medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Technology acceptance model ,Medical emergency ,business - Abstract
Aims The aim was to improve medication safety in an emergency department (ED) by enhancing the integration and presentation of safety information for drug therapy. Methods Based on an evaluation of safety of drug therapy issues in the ED and a review of computer-assisted intervention technologies we redesigned an electronic case sheet and implemented computer-assisted interventions into the routine work flow. We devised a four step system of alerts, and facilitated access to different levels of drug information. System use was analyzed over a period of 6 months. In addition, physicians answered a survey based on the technology acceptance model TAM2. Results The new application was implemented in an informal manner to avoid work flow disruption. Log files demonstrated that step I, ‘valid indication’ was utilized for 3% of the recorded drugs and step II ‘tooltip for well-known drug risks’ for 48% of the drugs. In the questionnaire, the computer-assisted interventions were rated better than previous paper based measures (checklists, posters) with regard to usefulness, support of work and information quality. Conclusion A stepwise assisting intervention received positive user acceptance. Some intervention steps have been seldom used, others quite often. We think that we were able to avoid over-alerting and work flow intrusion in a critical ED environment.
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- 2013
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17. Outbreak of highly pathogenic avian influenza H5N8 in November 2016 in wild birds in Switzerland
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Richard K. Hoop, Daniela Hüssy, Brigitte Sigrist, Barbara Renate Vogler, Sarah Albini, Simone Martina Meier, Martin A. Hofmann, Sandra Renzullo, University of Zurich, and Meier, Simone Martina
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040301 veterinary sciences ,Highly pathogenic ,3400 General Veterinary ,Zoology ,Animals, Wild ,010501 environmental sciences ,Biology ,Disease distribution ,medicine.disease_cause ,01 natural sciences ,Disease Outbreaks ,0403 veterinary science ,Birds ,medicine ,Influenza A virus ,Animals ,Influenza A Virus, H5N8 Subtype ,10082 Institute of Food Safety and Hygiene ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,General Veterinary ,Outbreak ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Influenza A virus subtype H5N1 ,Influenza in Birds ,570 Life sciences ,biology ,Flock ,Switzerland - Published
- 2017
18. Intentional methomyl-poisoning of peregrine falcons (Falco peregrinus) in Switzerland
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Martin Sinniger, Richard K. Hoop, Barbara Renate Vogler, Sarah Albini, University of Zurich, and Vogler, Barbara Renate
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Peregrinus ,Geography ,1105 Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,2308 Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Methomyl poisoning ,Wildlife ,Zoology ,570 Life sciences ,biology ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,10082 Institute of Food Safety and Hygiene ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,2309 Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
The present report describes two proven cases of illegal poisoning of peregrine falcons in the city of Zurich, Switzerland. Both animals died in their eyries after capturing and feeding on a methomyl-laced pigeon. Both eyries are surveillanced by cameras, and the death of one falcon was broadcasted live on the Internet. The city game warden had noticed the disappearance of a brooding female from an artificial eyrie in 2009 and had found five dead falcons at plucking posts or artificial eyries between 2009 and 2013. Owing to these reports in combination with reports on the disappearance of at least eight pairs of peregrine falcons from traditionally used nesting sites in north-western Switzerland since the 1980s, the authors presume that there may be a high number of unreported cases of illegal killing of peregrine falcons in Switzerland. They suggest an increased surveillance, and a coordinated collection of data on wildlife crime may aid the prosecution of perpetrators.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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19. Comparison of fluid types for resuscitation in acute hemorrhagic shock and evaluation of gastric luminal and transcutaneous Pco2 in Leghorn chickens
- Author
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Judith Howard, Jean-Michel Hatt, Barbara Renate Vogler, Daryl Codron, Olga Martin-Jurado, Hanspeter W. Steinmetz, Morena B. Wernick, and Rainer Vogt
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Male ,Resuscitation ,business.industry ,Stomach ,Blood volume ,General Medicine ,Carbon Dioxide ,Shock, Hemorrhagic ,Blood pressure ,Shock (circulatory) ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,Arterial blood ,Animals ,Fluid Therapy ,Female ,Hemoglobin ,medicine.symptom ,Small Animals ,business ,Blood Gas Monitoring, Transcutaneous ,Chickens ,Autotransfusion ,Hetastarch - Abstract
The objective of this study was to compare the effects of 3 different fluid types for resuscitation after experimentally induced hemorrhagic shock in anesthetized chickens and to evaluate partial pressures of carbon dioxide measured in arterial blood (Paco2), with a transcutaneous monitor (TcPco2), with a gastric intraluminal monitor (GiPco2), and by end tidal measurements (Etco2) under stable conditions and after induced hemorrhagic shock. Hemorrhagic shock was induced in 40 white leghorn chickens by removing 50% of blood volume by phlebotomy under general anesthesia. Birds were divided into 4 groups: untreated (control group) and treated with intravenous hetastarch (haes group), with a hemoglobin-based oxygen carrier (hemospan group), or by autotransfusion (blood group). Respiratory rates, heart rates, and systolic arterial blood pressure (SAP) were compared at 8 time points (baseline [T0]; at the loss of 10% [T10%], 20% [T20%], 30% [T30%], 40% [T40%], and 50% [T50%] of blood volume; at the end of resuscitation [RES]; and at the end of anesthesia [END]). Packed cell volume (PCV) and blood hemoglobin content were compared at 6 time points (T0, T50%, RES, and 1, 3, and 7 days after induced hemorrhagic shock). Measurements of Paco2, TcPco2, GiPco2, and Etco2 were evaluated at 2 time points (T0 and T50%), and venous lactic acid concentrations were evaluated at 3 time points (T0, T50%, and END). No significant differences were found in mortality, respiratory rate, heart rate, PCV, or hemoglobin values among the 4 groups. Birds given fluid resuscitation had significantly higher SAPs after fluid administration than did birds in the control group. In all groups, PCV and hemoglobin concentrations began to rise by day 3 after phlebotomy, and baseline values were reached 7 days after blood removal. At T0, TcPco2 did not differ significantly from Paco2, but GiPco2 and Etco2 differed significantly from Paco2. After hemorrhagic shock, GiPco2 and TcPco2 differed significantly from Paco2. The TcPco2 or GiPco2 values did not differ significantly at any time point in birds that survived or died in any of the groups and across all groups. These results showed no difference in mortality in leghorn chickens treated with fluid resuscitation after hemorrhagic shock and that the PCV and hemoglobin concentrations increased by 3 days after acute hemorrhage with or without treatment. The different CO2 measurements document changes in CO2-values consistent with poor perfusion and may prove useful for serial evaluation of responses to shock and shock treatment.
- Published
- 2013
20. Adverse Drug Events in Older Patients Admitted as an Emergency
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Harald Dormann, Fabian Müller, Thomas Bürkle, Renke Maas, Bettina Plank-Kiegele, Anja Sonst, Andrius Patapovas, Renate Vogler, Melanie Kirchner, Barbara Pfistermeister, and Nina Hartmann
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Drug ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,MEDLINE ,Beers Criteria ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Pharmacotherapy ,Older patients ,Emergency medical services ,Medicine ,Multiple morbidities ,business ,Risk assessment ,Intensive care medicine ,media_common - Abstract
The number and proportion of emergency admissions of elderly patients with multiple morbidities and correspondingly extensive medication plans has been increasing continuously in recent years (1, 2). Adverse drug events (ADEs) are common reasons for treatment, but are often not recognized as such (1, 3– 6). Adverse drug events are caused by either conventional adverse drug reactions (ADRs) (7) or medication errors (MEs) (6) that lead to clinical symptoms. Overall, greater attention to drug therapy safety seems to be necessary in elderly patients. To identify and prevent risks more easily, lists of potentially inappropriate medications (PIMs) for elderly patients have been developed on the basis of expert consensus. Well-known examples are the Beers list (8), the STOPP and START criteria (9), and, since 2010 in Germany, the PRISCUS list (10, 11). It is assumed that these potentially inappropriate medications are associated with an increased risk of ADEs in elderly patients. Current studies, however, indicate that PIMs are responsible for only a relatively small percentage of ADEs in elderly patients (1, 12, 13). Moreover, in the international literature on PIMs a substantial percentage of drugs and cases were excluded from analyses, and no distinction was made between MEs and ADRs (1, 14). This raises the question of the extent to which errors caused by methodological shortcomings when data on ADEs were collated led to database bias, causing the potential number of PIMs to be underestimated. There are currently no studies available on the occurrence of such events in acute clinical care for drugs on the PRISCUS list. This study therefore aimed to investigate the effects of PIMs on elderly patients admitted as emergency cases regarding ADEs, involving and not involving MEs.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Anaesthesia in captive raccoons (Procyon lotor) during seasonal obesity
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Barbara Renate Vogler, Elias, K., Steiner-Valentin, K. H. S., and University of Zurich
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10253 Department of Small Animals ,630 Agriculture ,570 Life sciences ,biology - Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Gonadal activity in male and female captive fossas (Cryptoprocta ferox) during the mating season
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Martin Dehnhard, Thomas B. Hildebrandt, B Blevins, Frank Goeritz, and Barbara Renate Vogler
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Eupleridae ,Time Factors ,Fossa ,Metabolite ,Physiology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Sexual Behavior, Animal ,Endocrinology ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,Testis ,medicine ,Seasonal breeder ,Animals ,Feces ,Testosterone ,biology ,Ovary ,biology.organism_classification ,chemistry ,Dihydrotestosterone ,Gestation ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Animals, Zoo ,Female ,Seasons ,Biotechnology ,medicine.drug ,Hormone - Abstract
Contents The fossa is an endangered, mongoose-like carnivore species endemic to Madagascar with a breeding season (BS) in the southern hemisphere spring. For the present study, faecal samples of captive fossas were collected for over 1 year for five males and four non-pregnant females, and for two pregnant animals during the reproductive period. The goal was to assess gonadal activity using non-invasive hormone measurements of faecal testosterone (T) and gestagen metabolites using assays previously established in our laboratory and further validated in this study. All study animals were housed in northern hemisphere zoos. In males, the seasonal T metabolite profile revealed a peak in spring (March). High performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) analysis was used to characterize the faecal hormone metabolite composition. The highest immunoreactivity was detected in the position of dihydrotestosterone, whereas native T was not detected. In the two pregnant females, gestagen metabolite concentrations increased 4–9 days after the initial matings and remained elevated throughout gestation with concentrations dramatically higher than those of the non-pregnant females during the BS. In these females, gestagen metabolite analyses did not reveal a seasonal pattern similar to the males. The HPLC-analysis revealed that the major proportion of immunoreactivity was associated with an unknown metabolite, whereas native progesterone was undetectable. The seasonal hormone pattern of male fossas gives proof of the reproductive seasonality of this species. The elevated 5α-pregnan-3β-ol-20-one levels in pregnant animals allows for the characterization of pregnancy in the fossa based on analysis of faecal steroid metabolite concentrations.
- Published
- 2009
23. Gender Specific Expression of Volatiles in Captive Fossas (Cryptoprocta ferox) During the Mating Season
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Thomas B. Hildebrandt, Martin Dehnhard, Barbara Renate Vogler, and Frank Goeritz
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Volatile substance ,Ecology ,Seasonal breeder ,Biology ,Tail region ,Cryptoprocta - Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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24. PP024—Adverse drug events and medication errors related to psychotropic drugs in patients presenting at an emergency department
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Renke Maas, Florian Meier, H. Dormann, Andrius Patapovas, Barbara Pfistermeister, Fabian Müller, Bettina Plank-Kiegele, Thomas Bürkle, Oliver Schöffski, Renate Vogler, and Anja Sonst
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Drug ,Pharmacology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Emergency department ,medicine.disease ,Emergency medicine ,medicine ,In patient ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Medical emergency ,business ,media_common - Full Text
- View/download PDF
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