scholarly journals Contact tracing following exposure to measles at a wedding party in the United Kingdom, October 2007

2007 ◽  
Vol 12 (48) ◽  
Author(s):  
K Paranthaman ◽  
R Balakrishnan ◽  
K Choudhury ◽  
A Sharma ◽  
A Maduma-Butshe ◽  
...  

On 22 October 2007, a case of suspected measles in an unvaccinated two-year-old was notified to Thames Valley Health Protection Unit by North East and North Central London Health Protection Unit.

1998 ◽  
Vol 9 (11) ◽  
pp. 657-660 ◽  
Author(s):  
M R Fitzgerald ◽  
D Thirlby ◽  
C A Bedford

1991 ◽  
Vol 28 (10) ◽  
pp. 1534-1540 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Henry Williams ◽  
Brian H. O'Brien

Only one specimen of a Silurian graptolite has ever been recorded from Newfoundland, and it was not identifiable below generic level. The graptolite assemblage discussed and figured here, from a sequence of turbidites on Upper Black Island, north-central Newfoundland, includes the first positively identified Silurian taxa from the province, and provides the first unequivocal evidence of Silurian oceanic sedimentation in the Dunnage Zone. The graptolite taxa include Rastrites peregrinus (Barrande), Coronograptus? sp. cf. C. gregarius (Lapworth), Monograptus austerus sequens Hutt?, Orthograptus insectiformis (Nicholson), Monograptus spp. indet., "Climacograptus"? sp., and Glyptograptus? sp. This assemblage demonstrates that the strata, previously assigned to the Middle Ordovician Lawrence Harbour Formation, are actually Aeronian (middle Llandovery) in age and that the turbidites considerably postdate both the Lawrence Harbour and Point Leamington formations of the Exploits Subzone. Furthermore, the graptolite fauna is similar to that found in coeval sediments in the United Kingdom and Scandinavia but unlike any assemblages known from elsewhere in North America. This suggests the presence of open oceanic conditions, or deep marginal basins during the Llandovery hosting graptolites with European affinities, and raises the possibility that at least part of the Iapetus Ocean was still open in central Newfoundland during Early Silurian times.


JMIRx Med ◽  
10.2196/27254 ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. e27254 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mathew Mbwogge

Background Making testing available to everyone and tracing contacts might be the gold standard to control COVID-19. Many countries including the United Kingdom have relied on the symptom-based test and trace strategy in bringing the COVID-19 pandemic under control. The effectiveness of a test and trace strategy based on symptoms has been questionable and has failed to meet testing and tracing needs. This is further exacerbated by it not being delivered at the point of care, leading to rising cases and deaths. Increases in COVID-19 cases and deaths in the United Kingdom despite performing the highest number of tests in Europe suggest that symptom-based testing and contact tracing might not be effective as a control strategy. An alternative strategy is making testing available to all. Objective The primary objective of this review was to compare mass testing and contact tracing with the conventional test and trace method in the suppression of SARS-CoV-2 infections. The secondary objective was to determine the proportion of asymptomatic COVID-19 cases reported during mass testing interventions. Methods Literature in English was searched from September through December 2020 in Google Scholar, ScienceDirect, Mendeley, and PubMed. Search terms included “mass testing,” “test and trace,” “contact tracing,” “COVID-19,” “SARS-CoV-2,” “effectiveness,” “asymptomatic,” “symptomatic,” “community screening,” “UK,” and “2020.” Search results were synthesized without meta-analysis using the direction of effect as the standardized metric and vote counting as the synthesis metric. A statistical synthesis was performed using Stata 14.2. Tabular and graphical methods were used to present findings. Results The literature search yielded 286 articles from Google Scholar, 20 from ScienceDirect, 14 from Mendeley, 27 from PubMed, and 15 through manual search. A total of 35 articles were included in the review, with a sample size of nearly 1 million participants. We found a 76.9% (10/13, 95% CI 46.2%-95.0%; P=.09) majority vote in favor of the intervention under the primary objective. The overall proportion of asymptomatic cases among those who tested positive and in the tested sample populations under the secondary objective was 40.7% (1084/2661, 95% CI 38.9%-42.6%) and 0.0% (1084/9,942,878, 95% CI 0.0%-0.0%), respectively. Conclusions There was low-level but promising evidence that mass testing and contact tracing could be more effective in bringing the virus under control and even more effective if combined with social distancing and face coverings. The conventional test and trace method should be superseded by decentralized and regular mass rapid testing and contact tracing, championed by general practitioner surgeries and low-cost community services.


Author(s):  
Nicola Livingstone

This chapter is a study of the ways in which property development elites use particular techniques and technologies of representation to create development real estate markets in the United Kingdom. It compares the construction of post-Brexit vote narratives of investment landscapes and opportunities in London and the North-East. London's real estate market is considered the leading destination for global capital flows into commercial real estate in the United Kingdom, and therefore it becomes the centrepiece of an evolving socio-technical system. The chapter specifically looks at the media narratives disseminated by real estate market agents in the aftermath of the Brexit referendum in London. It does so in order to question the role of media exposure and private consultancy firms and reflects on the way specialist expert knowledge is publicly disseminated to directly shape public opinion and, indirectly, real estate decision-making.


Author(s):  
Mathew Mbwogge

BACKGROUND Making testing available to everyone and tracing contacts might be the gold standard to control COVID-19. Many countries including the United Kingdom have relied on the symptom-based test and trace strategy in bringing the COVID-19 pandemic under control. The effectiveness of a test and trace strategy based on symptoms has been questionable and has failed to meet testing and tracing needs. This is further exacerbated by it not being delivered at the point of care, leading to rising cases and deaths. Increases in COVID-19 cases and deaths in the United Kingdom despite performing the highest number of tests in Europe suggest that symptom-based testing and contact tracing might not be effective as a control strategy. An alternative strategy is making testing available to all. OBJECTIVE The primary objective of this review was to compare mass testing and contact tracing with the conventional test and trace method in the suppression of SARS-CoV-2 infections. The secondary objective was to determine the proportion of asymptomatic COVID-19 cases reported during mass testing interventions. METHODS Literature in English was searched from September through December 2020 in Google Scholar, ScienceDirect, Mendeley, and PubMed. Search terms included “mass testing,” “test and trace,” “contact tracing,” “COVID-19,” “SARS-CoV-2,” “effectiveness,” “asymptomatic,” “symptomatic,” “community screening,” “UK,” and “2020.” Search results were synthesized without meta-analysis using the direction of effect as the standardized metric and vote counting as the synthesis metric. A statistical synthesis was performed using Stata 14.2. Tabular and graphical methods were used to present findings. RESULTS The literature search yielded 286 articles from Google Scholar, 20 from ScienceDirect, 14 from Mendeley, 27 from PubMed, and 15 through manual search. A total of 35 articles were included in the review, with a sample size of nearly 1 million participants. We found a 76.9% (10/13, 95% CI 46.2%-95.0%; <i>P</i>=.09) majority vote in favor of the intervention under the primary objective. The overall proportion of asymptomatic cases among those who tested positive and in the tested sample populations under the secondary objective was 40.7% (1084/2661, 95% CI 38.9%-42.6%) and 0.0% (1084/9,942,878, 95% CI 0.0%-0.0%), respectively. CONCLUSIONS There was low-level but promising evidence that mass testing and contact tracing could be more effective in bringing the virus under control and even more effective if combined with social distancing and face coverings. The conventional test and trace method should be superseded by decentralized and regular mass rapid testing and contact tracing, championed by general practitioner surgeries and low-cost community services.


2017 ◽  
Vol 87 (6) ◽  
pp. 860-864 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lorna Ingoe ◽  
Norah Phipps ◽  
Gary Armstrong ◽  
Arvind Rajagopal ◽  
Farzan Kamali ◽  
...  

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