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		<title>Pesquisa | Influenza A (H1N1): id:mdl-21886792</title>
		<link>http://pesquisa.bvsalud.org:80/h1n1/index.php</link>
		<description>A Biblioteca Virtual em Saúde é visualizada como a base distribuída do conhecimento científico e técnico em saúde registrado, organizado e armazenado em formato eletrônico nos países da Região, acessíveis de forma universal na Internet de modo compatível com as bases internacionais. </description>

				
					
					
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				<title>Influenza and pneumonia mortality in 66 large cities in the United States in years surrounding the 1918 pandemic.</title>
				<author><![CDATA[Acuna-Soto R; Viboud C; Chowell G]]></author>

									<link>http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3158768/?tool=pubmed</link>				
							    
			    
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                 <![CDATA[
                 		MEDLINE	
                     Autor(es): Acuna-Soto R; Viboud C; Chowell G
                     <p>Fonte: PLoS One;6(8): e23467, 2011. </p>
                                              <p>The 1918 influenza pandemic was a major epidemiological event of the twentieth century resulting in at least twenty million deaths worldwide; however, despite its historical, epidemiological, and biological relevance, it remains poorly understood. Here we examine the relationship between annual pneumonia and influenza death rates in the pre-pandemic (1910-17) and pandemic (1918-20) periods and the scaling of mortality with latitude, longitude and population size, using data from 66 large cities of the United States. The mean pre-pandemic pneumonia death rates were highly associated with pneumonia death rates during the pandemic period (Spearman Ïâ=â0.64-0.72; P<0.001). By contrast, there was a weak correlation between pre-pandemic and pandemic influenza mortality rates. Pneumonia mortality rates partially explained influenza mortality rates in 1918 (Ïâ=â0.34, Pâ=â0.005) but not during any other year. Pneumonia death counts followed a linear relationship with population size in all study years, suggesting that pneumonia death rates were homogeneous across the range of population sizes studied. By contrast, influenza death counts followed a power law relationship with a scaling exponent of â¼0.81 (95%CI: 0.71, 0.91) in 1918, suggesting that smaller cities experienced worst outcomes during the pandemic. A linear relationship was observed for all other years. Our study suggests that mortality associated with the 1918-20 influenza pandemic was in part predetermined by pre-pandemic pneumonia death rates in 66 large US cities, perhaps through the impact of the physical and social structure of each city. Smaller cities suffered a disproportionately high per capita influenza mortality burden than larger ones in 1918, while city size did not affect pneumonia mortality rates in the pre-pandemic and pandemic periods.</p>
                                          <p>
                         Assunto(s):
                         Cidades/estatística &amp; dados numéricos; Influenza Humana/história; Influenza Humana/mortalidade; Pandemias/estatística &amp; dados numéricos; Pneumonia/mortalidade; História do Século XX; Humanos; Influenza Humana/complicações; Pneumonia/complicações; Densidade Demográfica; Valor Preditivo dos Testes; Estatísticas não Paramétricas; Fatores de Tempo; Estados Unidos/epidemiologia
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