1. PulseNet International: Vision for the implementation of whole genome sequencing (WGS) for global food-borne disease surveillance
- Author
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Isabel Chinen, Eija Trees, Kristy A. Kubota, Peter Gerner-Smidt, Heather A. Carleton, Johanna Takkinen, Jeniffer Concepción-Acevedo, Kai Man Kam, Fwd-Next Expert Panel, Brent Gilpin, Ivo Van Walle, Celine Nadon, Anthony M. Smith, Enrique Perez, Josefina Campos, and Eva Møller Nielsen
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Foodborne infections ,Databases, Factual ,Epidemiology ,030106 microbiology ,Public Health Policy ,Biology ,Disease Outbreaks ,Foodborne Diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Virology ,Global network ,Molecular Methods ,medicine ,Humans ,Data Protection Act 1998 ,Disease burden ,Whole genome sequencing ,Whole Genome Sequencing ,Public health ,Laboratory Surveillance ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Pulsenet ,Data science ,Subtyping ,3. Good health ,Editorial ,Preparedness ,Food Microbiology ,Public Health ,Laboratories ,Genome, Bacterial ,Multilocus Sequence Typing - Abstract
FWD-NEXT Expert Panel - Portugal/INSA - Vítor Borges (Instituto Nacional de Saúde Doutor Ricardo Jorge, Lisbon, Portugal) PulseNet International is a global network dedicated to laboratory-based surveillance for food-borne diseases. The network comprises the national and regional laboratory networks of Africa, Asia Pacific, Canada, Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean, the Middle East, and the United States. The PulseNet International vision is the standardised use of whole genome sequencing (WGS) to identify and subtype food-borne bacterial pathogens worldwide, replacing traditional methods to strengthen preparedness and response, reduce global social and economic disease burden, and save lives. To meet the needs of real-time surveillance, the PulseNet International network will standardise subtyping via WGS using whole genome multilocus sequence typing (wgMLST), which delivers sufficiently high resolution and epidemiological concordance, plus unambiguous nomenclature for the purposes of surveillance. Standardised protocols, validation studies, quality control programmes, database and nomenclature development, and training should support the implementation and decentralisation of WGS. Ideally, WGS data collected for surveillance purposes should be publicly available, in real time where possible, respecting data protection policies. WGS data are suitable for surveillance and outbreak purposes and for answering scientific questions pertaining to source attribution, antimicrobial resistance, transmission patterns, and virulence, which will further enable the protection and improvement of public health with respect to food-borne disease. info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
- Published
- 2017
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