Back to Search
Start Over
The Surveillance for Enteric Fever in Asia Project (SEAP), Severe Typhoid Fever Surveillance in Africa (SETA), Surveillance of Enteric Fever in India (SEFI), and Strategic Typhoid Alliance Across Africa and Asia (STRATAA) Population-based Enteric Fever Studies: a review of methodological similarities and differences
- Source :
- Clinical infectious diseases, 71(2), S102-S110. Oxford University Press, Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America, Clinical Infectious Diseases: An Official Publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America, Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America, vol 71, iss Suppl 2, S110, S102, Clinical Infectious Diseases, vol 71, iss Suppl 2
- Publication Year :
- 2020
- Publisher :
- Oxford University Press, 2020.
-
Abstract
- Building on previous multicountry surveillance studies of typhoid and others salmonelloses such as the Diseases of the Most Impoverished program and the Typhoid Surveillance in Africa Project, several ongoing blood culture surveillance studies are generating important data about incidence, severity, transmission, and clinical features of invasive Salmonella infections in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. These studies are also characterizing drug resistance patterns in their respective study sites. Each study answers a different set of research questions and employs slightly different methodologies, and the geographies under surveillance differ in size, population density, physician practices, access to healthcare facilities, and access to microbiologically safe water and improved sanitation. These differences in part reflect the heterogeneity of the epidemiology of invasive salmonellosis globally, and thus enable generation of data that are useful to policymakers in decision-making for the introduction of typhoid conjugate vaccines (TCVs). Moreover, each study is evaluating the large-scale deployment of TCVs, and may ultimately be used to assess post-introduction vaccine impact. The data generated by these studies will also be used to refine global disease burden estimates. It is important to ensure that lessons learned from these studies not only inform vaccination policy, but also are incorporated into sustainable, low-cost, integrated vaccine-preventable disease surveillance systems. ispartof: CLINICAL INFECTIOUS DISEASES vol:71 issue:Suppl 2 pages:S102-S110 ispartof: location:United States status: published
- Subjects :
- PROTOCOL
IMPACT
CHILDREN
Supplement Articles
blood culture
Medical and Health Sciences
Salmonella Typhi
DISEASE
Epidemiology
Health care
Medicine
2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment
11 Medical and Health Sciences
Disease surveillance
SALMONELLA-TYPHI
Transmission (medicine)
Biological Sciences
Foodborne Illness
Infectious Diseases
AcademicSubjects/MED00290
3.4 Vaccines
BURDEN
Infection
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Typhoid fever
Microbiology (medical)
medicine.medical_specialty
Asia
Immunology
India
Microbiology
Blood culture
Vaccine Related
Rare Diseases
Clinical Research
Environmental health
Biodefense
Humans
Improved sanitation
Typhoid Fever
Disease burden
Africa South of the Sahara
enteric fever surveillance
Science & Technology
business.industry
Prevention
Typhoid-Paratyphoid Vaccines
06 Biological Sciences
EFFICACY
medicine.disease
PHASE-III
Enteric fever surveillance
Emerging Infectious Diseases
Vaccination policy
Measuring the Global Burden of Enteric Fever
POLYSACCHARIDE CONJUGATE VACCINE
Immunization
business
Digestive Diseases
2.4 Surveillance and distribution
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 10584838
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Clinical infectious diseases, 71(2), S102-S110. Oxford University Press, Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America, Clinical Infectious Diseases: An Official Publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America, Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America, vol 71, iss Suppl 2, S110, S102, Clinical Infectious Diseases, vol 71, iss Suppl 2
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....ba5f6a5a2479414e5413ca71283bbbad
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/ciaa367