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1.
Parasitology ; 140(9): 1133-7, 2013 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23714582

ABSTRACT

In 2009, a haplotype closely related to European strains of Echinococcus multilocularis was detected in a dog from the Quesnel region of British Columbia, Canada. We now report the establishment of this same haplotype in 7 coyotes (Canis latrans) trapped within 40 km of Quesnel, BC. In addition, 3 coyotes and 1 red fox (Vulpes vulpes) harboured adult cestodes morphologically compatible with that of E. multilocularis (overall prevalence 33% in 33 carnivores). None of 156 potential intermediate hosts, including 131 representatives of two highly suitable rodent species, Peromyscus maniculatus and Microtus pennsylvanicus, trapped from a region 120-210 km south of Quesnel were infected. This report confirms the establishment and local transmission of a European-type strain of E. multilocularis (the causative agent of human alveolar hydatid disease), in wildlife in a forested region of North America where this cestode had not been previously detected, with significance for public and animal health.


Subject(s)
Coyotes , Echinococcosis/veterinary , Echinococcus multilocularis/isolation & purification , Foxes , Rodent Diseases/epidemiology , Animals , Animals, Wild , British Columbia/epidemiology , Dogs , Echinococcosis/epidemiology , Echinococcosis/transmission , Echinococcus multilocularis/classification , Echinococcus multilocularis/physiology , Endemic Diseases/veterinary , Forests , Haplotypes , Humans , Prevalence , Public Health , Rodent Diseases/transmission , Rodentia
2.
J Wildl Dis ; 45(2): 272-8, 2009 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19395736

ABSTRACT

Four domestic goats (Capra hircus) that were passing first-stage dorsal-spined larvae of Muellerius capillaris were copastured on a 0.82-ha pasture for 11 mo from May 2003 to April 2004 with seven Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep (Ovis canadensis) that were not passing dorsal-spined larvae. During the 11-mo experiment, two bighorn sheep died from pneumonia caused by Mannheimia (Pasteurella) haemolytica biotype A, serotype 2. The remaining five bighorn sheep and the four domestic goats remained healthy throughout the experiment. Muellerius larvae were detected from all domestic goats on a monthly basis throughout the experiment and were first detected from all five surviving bighorn sheep approximately 5 mo after the copasturing began. Once the bighorn sheep began passing Muellerius larvae, larvae were detected in low numbers from all bighorn sheep every month thereafter for the 6 mo the goats were still in the enclosure and continued to pass larvae for more than 3 yr after the goats were removed from the experiment. Six bighorn sheep in two similar enclosures that did not contain goats did not pass Muellerius larvae before, during, or after the experimental period. Results of this experiment indicate that M. capillaris from domestic goats is capable of infecting bighorn sheep when animals are copastured together on a common range.


Subject(s)
Disease Transmission, Infectious/veterinary , Goat Diseases/transmission , Lung Diseases, Parasitic/veterinary , Sheep Diseases/transmission , Sheep, Bighorn , Animals , Animals, Domestic , Animals, Wild , Carrier State/parasitology , Carrier State/veterinary , Feces/parasitology , Female , Goats , Lung Diseases, Parasitic/transmission , Male , Parasite Egg Count/veterinary , Sheep, Bighorn/parasitology
3.
Rev Sci Tech ; 27(2): 511-28, 2008 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18819675

ABSTRACT

In North America broad-based research networks explore the interaction of vertebrates, their characteristic arrays of pathogens and emergent disease. A diversity of programmes address the impact of environmental change on animal health, zoonoses, and human health, but as yet no comprehensive framework or strategy has emerged to develop and implement policy and planning. In a regime of climate change and ecological perturbation, the need to document and understand the health, agricultural, societal and economic impact of pathogens and emerging infectious disease is urgent. An integrated and proactive planning process linking national and international resources can lead to informed predictions aboutthe impact of environmental change and can identify pathways for potential management and mitigation. An effective and comprehensive programme will have components for establishing priorities, developing primary data for faunal structure and biodiversity, a capacity for monitoring and surveillance (including scanning and targeted activities), and linkage to historical and contemporary baselines (against which to assess change) established through archival biological collections. Field and laboratory studies are also necessary to determine developmental thresholds, tolerances and tipping points for many pathogens to establish a context for recognising current constraints and future perturbation, and to explore factors that promote emergence for a variety of pathogens, vectors and pest species. Predictive modelling and risk assessment utilising a range of scenarios for climate change is a final step in this multidisciplinary process.


Subject(s)
Communicable Disease Control/methods , Communicable Diseases, Emerging/veterinary , Greenhouse Effect , Host-Pathogen Interactions/physiology , Risk Assessment , Animals , Animals, Domestic , Animals, Wild , Artiodactyla , Biodiversity , Communicable Diseases, Emerging/epidemiology , Forecasting , Perissodactyla , Predictive Value of Tests , Sentinel Surveillance/veterinary
4.
J Wildl Dis ; 43(2): 189-205, 2007 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17495303

ABSTRACT

We describe health significance of protostrongylid parasites (Parelaphostrongylus odocoilei and Protostrongylus stilesi) and other respiratory pathogens in more than 50 naturally infected Dall's sheep (Ovis dalli dalli) from the Mackenzie Mountains, Northwest Territories (1998-2002) as well as in three Stone's sheep (O. d. stonei) experimentally infected with P. odocoilei (2000-2002). Histological lesions in the brain and distribution of P. odocoilei in the muscles of experimentally and naturally infected sheep were consistent with a previously hypothesized "central nervous system to muscle" pattern of migration for P. odocoilei. Dimensions of granulomas associated with eggs of P. odocoilei and density of protostrongylid eggs and larvae in the cranial lung correlated with intensity of larvae in feces, and all varied with season of collection. Prevalence of P. stilesi based on the presence of larvae in feces underestimated true prevalence (based on examination of lungs) in wild Dall's sheep collected in summer and fall. Similarly, counts of both types of protostrongylid larvae in feces were unreliable indicators of parasitic infection in wild Dall's sheep with concomitant bacterial pneumonia associated with Arcanobacterium pyogenes, Pasteurella sp., and Mannheimia sp. Diffuse, interstitial pneumonia due to P. odocoilei led to fatal pulmonary hemorrhage and edema after exertion in one experimentally infected Stone's sheep and one naturally infected Dall's sheep. Bacterial and verminous pneumonia associated with pathogens endemic in wild Dall's sheep in the Mackenzie Mountains caused sporadic mortalities. There was no evidence of respiratory viruses or bacterial strains associated with domestic ruminants, from which this population of wild sheep has been historically isolated.


Subject(s)
Metastrongyloidea/growth & development , Pneumonia/veterinary , Sheep Diseases/epidemiology , Strongylida Infections/veterinary , Animals , Animals, Domestic , Animals, Wild , Brain/parasitology , Brain/pathology , Feces/parasitology , Female , Larva , Lung/parasitology , Lung/pathology , Male , Muscles/parasitology , Muscles/pathology , Northwest Territories/epidemiology , Pneumonia/epidemiology , Pneumonia/pathology , Prevalence , Seasons , Sentinel Surveillance/veterinary , Sheep , Sheep Diseases/pathology , Strongylida Infections/epidemiology , Strongylida Infections/pathology
5.
Adv Parasitol ; 95: 315-493, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28131365

ABSTRACT

Alveolar echinococcosis (AE) and cystic echinococcosis (CE) are severe helminthic zoonoses. Echinococcus multilocularis (causative agent of AE) is widely distributed in the northern hemisphere where it is typically maintained in a wild animal cycle including canids as definitive hosts and rodents as intermediate hosts. The species Echinococcus granulosus, Echinococcus ortleppi, Echinococcus canadensis and Echinococcus intermedius are the causative agents of CE with a worldwide distribution and a highly variable human disease burden in the different endemic areas depending upon human behavioural risk factors, the diversity and ecology of animal host assemblages and the genetic diversity within Echinococcus species which differ in their zoonotic potential and pathogenicity. Both AE and CE are regarded as neglected zoonoses, with a higher overall burden of disease for CE due to its global distribution and high regional prevalence, but a higher pathogenicity and case fatality rate for AE, especially in Asia. Over the past two decades, numerous studies have addressed the epidemiology and distribution of these Echinococcus species worldwide, resulting in better-defined boundaries of the endemic areas. This chapter presents the global distribution of Echinococcus species and human AE and CE in maps and summarizes the global data on host assemblages, transmission, prevalence in animal definitive hosts, incidence in people and molecular epidemiology.


Subject(s)
Echinococcosis/epidemiology , Echinococcus/physiology , Global Health , Animals , Echinococcosis/parasitology , Echinococcosis/transmission , Echinococcosis, Hepatic/epidemiology , Echinococcosis, Hepatic/parasitology , Echinococcosis, Hepatic/transmission , Humans , Incidence , Molecular Epidemiology , Prevalence , Zoonoses
6.
J Parasitol ; 92(2): 298-305, 2006 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16729686

ABSTRACT

Parelaphostrongylus odocoilei is a protostrongylid parasite that has recently been recognized at several locations in sub-Arctic, but not Arctic, North America. We investigated factors that may determine the distribution of P. odocoilei, including suitable gastropod intermediate hosts, temperature requirements for larval development in gastropods, and larval emergence facilitating overwinter transmission. We collected and experimentally infected gastropods from a site in the sub-Arctic where P. odocoilei is at the northern limit of its distribution. Deroceras laeve, Catinella sp., and Euconulus cf fulvus, but not members of the Pupillidae, were suitable intermediate hosts. We describe bionomics of larvae of P. odocoilei in D. laeve and Catinella sp. Infective larvae emerged from all slugs (D. laeve) and 60% of Catinella sp. snails, and emergence from D. laeve was intensity dependent. Emerged infective larvae survived up to 6 mo under conditions approximating that of the subnivean environment. In D. laeve, there was a direct relationship between temperature and development rate of larvae of P. odocoilei. Larvae of P. odocoilei did not develop to infective stage below the theoretical threshold (8.5 C), and required a minimum of 163 degree days to complete development. These developmental parameters can be incorporated into a model to predict larval development in the field. Knowledge of the factors influencing larval bionomics provides the foundation for predicting temporal and spatial patterns of parasite distribution, abundance, and transmission.


Subject(s)
Gastropoda/parasitology , Metastrongyloidea/physiology , Animals , Animals, Wild , Disease Vectors , Ecology , Host-Parasite Interactions , Larva/physiology , Linear Models , Models, Biological , Sheep , Temperature
7.
Proc Biol Sci ; 272(1581): 2571-6, 2005 Dec 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16321777

ABSTRACT

Global climate change is altering the ecology of infectious agents and driving the emergence of disease in people, domestic animals, and wildlife. We present a novel, empirically based, predictive model for the impact of climate warming on development rates and availability of an important parasitic nematode of muskoxen in the Canadian Arctic, a region that is particularly vulnerable to climate change. Using this model, we show that warming in the Arctic may have already radically altered the transmission dynamics of this parasite, escalating infection pressure for muskoxen, and that this trend is expected to continue. This work establishes a foundation for understanding responses to climate change of other host-parasite systems, in the Arctic and globally.


Subject(s)
Global Warming , Host-Parasite Interactions/physiology , Animals , Arctic Regions , Canada , Ecosystem , Ruminants/parasitology , Seasons , Strongylida/growth & development , Strongylida/pathogenicity , Strongylida Infections/parasitology , Strongylida Infections/transmission , Strongylida Infections/veterinary
8.
J Wildl Dis ; 41(4): 669-82, 2005 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16456155

ABSTRACT

Recently, the protostrongylid nematode Parelaphostrongylus odocoilei has been reported in a new host species, thinhorn sheep (Ovis dalli). For the first time, we completed the life cycle of P. odocoilei in three Stone's sheep (O. dalli stonei) and two thinhorn hybrids (O. dalli stonei x O. dalli dalli), each infected with 200 third-stage larvae from slugs (Deroceras laeve). The prepatent period ranged from 68 days to 74 days, and shedding of first-stage larvae (L1) peaked at >10,000 L1 per gram of feces between 90 and 110 days postinfection. A total of 75, 27, and 14 adult P. odocoilei were recovered from skeletal muscles of three Stone's sheep. Starting in the prepatent period, all infected sheep lost weight and developed peripheral eosinophilia. At 2 wk before patency, two thinhorn hybrids developed neurologic signs (hind end ataxia, loss of conscious proprioception, and hyperesthesia) that resolved at patency. Eosinophilic pleocytosis and antibody to Parelaphostrongylus spp. were detected in the cerebrospinal fluid of the affected sheep, suggesting that the migration route of the "muscleworm" P. odocoilei may involve the central nervous system. Twenty days after treatment with ivermectin, neurologic signs recurred and larval shedding ceased in one infected thinhorn hybrid, whereas multiple treatments transiently suppressed but did not eliminate larval shedding in the other. During patency, two Stone's sheep with numerous eggs and larvae of P. odocoilei in the lungs died of respiratory failure following anesthesia or exertion. Parelaphostrongylus odocoilei has widespread geographic distribution, high prevalence, the possibility of causing neurologic and respiratory disease, resistance to treatment, and may constitute a significant emerging disease risk for thinhorn sheep.


Subject(s)
Antiparasitic Agents/therapeutic use , Ivermectin/therapeutic use , Metastrongyloidea , Sheep Diseases/drug therapy , Sheep Diseases/pathology , Strongylida Infections/veterinary , Animals , Animals, Wild , Drug Resistance , Feces/parasitology , Gastropoda/parasitology , Larva , Life Cycle Stages , Muscle, Skeletal/parasitology , Parasite Egg Count/veterinary , Sheep , Sheep Diseases/epidemiology , Strongylida Infections/drug therapy , Strongylida Infections/epidemiology , Strongylida Infections/pathology , Time Factors
9.
Diabetes Care ; 23(4): 455-9, 2000 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10857934

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To examine the influence of caffeine on the frequency and perception of hypoglycemia in "free-living" patients with type 1 diabetes. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: A total of 34 patients with type 1 diabetes were recruited for a prospective randomized placebo-controlled double-blind study. After a lead-in phase and while adhering to a low-caffeine diet, subjects were randomized to capsules containing either 200 mg caffeine or matched placebo with crossover at 3 months. Hypoglycemic episodes were monitored throughout with capillary blood glucose readings and a symptom questionnaire. During the study, measurements of blood pressure, middle cerebral artery blood velocity (a surrogate measure of cerebral blood flow), cognitive function (via a four-choice reaction time test), HbAlc levels, and lipid profiles were taken at the beginning and end of each phase. RESULTS: Throughout the study, no changes were evident regarding glycemic control or lipid profile. The number of symptomatic episodes was greater with caffeine (1.3 vs. 0.9 episodes/week; P < 0.03) and was associated with more intense warning symptoms (29 vs. 26 total symptom score; P < 0.05). For women, caffeine ingestion caused a modest pressor response (115 vs. 110 mmHg; P < 0.01). Four-choice reaction time improved slightly with caffeine supplementation (P < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: Ingestion of modest amounts of caffeine enhances the intensity of hypoglycemia warning symptoms in patients with type 1 diabetes without altering the prevailing standard of glycemic control or increasing the incidence of severe hypoglycemic episodes.


Subject(s)
Caffeine/pharmacology , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1/physiopathology , Hypoglycemia/epidemiology , Hypoglycemia/physiopathology , Perception/drug effects , Adult , Blood Glucose/analysis , Blood Pressure/drug effects , Cerebrovascular Circulation , Cognition/drug effects , Cross-Over Studies , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1/blood , Double-Blind Method , Female , Heart Rate/drug effects , Humans , Hypoglycemia/psychology , Male , Placebos , Sex Characteristics , Surveys and Questionnaires
10.
J Natl Med Assoc ; 80(1): 41-8, 1988 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3339643

ABSTRACT

Recent reports indicate that violence toward others is a major public health problem in the black community; however, there are very few empirical studies that delineate the severity of the problem. In an effort to add to the meager data on violence in the black community, the authors compiled the results of a victimization screening form obtained from a black outpatient psychiatric population. Recommendations are made that black psychiatric populations be screened for histories of victimization, as victimization is common in this population group and will have a significant impact on treatment.


Subject(s)
Black or African American/psychology , Community Mental Health Services , Crime , Mass Screening/methods , Outpatients/psychology , Patients/psychology , Violence , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Female , Humans , Male
11.
J Natl Med Assoc ; 80(3): 289-94, 1988 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3351970

ABSTRACT

An hypothesis is proposed that there exists a subgroup of African-American hypertensive patients whose hypertension could have been prevented by the early detection and treatment of easily recognizable symptoms that signal the initiation of the pathophysiologic processes that lead to essential hypertension.A pilot study of 31 patients with elevated blood pressure revealed that 41.9 percent had isolated sleep paralysis, 35.5 percent had panic attacks, and 9.7 percent had panic disorder. These proposed hyperadrenergic phenomena may be related to the development of hypertension in certain individuals.


Subject(s)
Anxiety Disorders/complications , Hypertension/etiology , Sleep Wake Disorders/complications , Adult , Black People , Female , Humans , Hypertension/ethnology , Male , Middle Aged , Panic
12.
J Natl Med Assoc ; 81(3): 246-52, 1989 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2709427

ABSTRACT

A sample of 54 adult psychiatric outpatients, previously identified as victims of sexual or physical assault, were interviewed regarding their childhood and adult victimization experiences. Patients were questioned about the nature of the assaults, their relationship to the perpetrator(s), the number of assaults suffered in each relationship, and whether the assault(s) occurred before or after the onset of their mental illness. Eighty percent of the sample had experienced major physical assault as an adult and 59% had experienced major physical assault as a child; 37% and 31%, respectively, reported major sexual assault as a child and as an adult. Women were more likely than men to report physical and sexual assault as an adult and sexual assault as a child. Childhood assault most often occurred before the onset of the patient's mental illness; whereas, adult sexual assault for women and physical and sexual assault for men was as likely to occur after the onset of the psychiatric disorder, suggesting an increased vulnerability to victimization for the adult mentally ill.


Subject(s)
Black or African American , Mental Disorders , Rape , Violence , Adult , Aged , Chicago , Child , Child Abuse, Sexual , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Outpatients
13.
J Natl Med Assoc ; 80(8): 853-60, 1988 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3246699

ABSTRACT

Recent reports indicate that violence toward others is a major public health problem in the black community; however, there are few empirical studies that delineate the severity of the problem. The authors have compiled the results of a victimization screening form obtained from a poor outpatient medical population. These results are compared with a similar survey performed on a poor outpatient psychiatric population. Recommendations are made that poor medical populations should be screened for histories of victimization, because early identification of patients at risk may reduce their chances of future victimization.


Subject(s)
Black or African American , Crime , Outpatients , Patients , Poverty , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Ambulatory Care Facilities , Chicago , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Hispanic or Latino , Humans , Male , Mental Disorders/psychology , Middle Aged , Violence
14.
J Natl Med Assoc ; 82(8): 557-64, 1990 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2395175

ABSTRACT

Twenty-eight head-injured psychiatrically ill patients were compared in terms of compliance with psychiatric treatment and hostility levels to a matched control group of 28 non-head-injured psychiatrically ill patients attending a community mental health clinic. Results indicated that the two groups did not differ in treatment compliance. However, the head-injured group had significantly less rapport with their therapists. Hostility measures revealed that male head-injured patients scored significantly higher on the assaultive scale; and the severity of the head injury correlated positively with levels of hostility and with reported problems at school.


Subject(s)
Craniocerebral Trauma/complications , Hostility , Mental Disorders/complications , Outpatients/psychology , Patient Compliance , Patients/psychology , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Interview, Psychological , Male , Middle Aged , Professional-Patient Relations , Surveys and Questionnaires
15.
Psychiatry ; 56(1): 46-54, 1993 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8488212

ABSTRACT

This report summarizes a program of study on African-American children and violence conducted by a comprehensive community mental health center on the southside of Chicago. The research, which looked at exposure to violence, self-reports of aggression, and possible interventions, grew out of: (1) an awareness of the enormous amount of familial and extrafamilial violence in the black community; (2) clinical experiences that indicated that victimization and covictimization (i.e., victimization of close others) were often significant factors in the lives of the mentally ill; (3) a growing uneasiness, and indeed curiosity, over the extent to which children were witnessing these events and the impact of this witnessing, particularly on their own levels of aggression; and (4) a belief that the integrity of the black community was being threatened by the violence and that solutions must be sought.


Subject(s)
Black or African American/psychology , Personality Development , Social Environment , Urban Population , Violence , Chicago , Child , Child Abuse/complications , Child Abuse/prevention & control , Child Abuse/psychology , Child Abuse, Sexual/complications , Child Abuse, Sexual/prevention & control , Child Abuse, Sexual/psychology , Female , Homicide/prevention & control , Homicide/psychology , Hospitalization , Humans , Male , Mental Disorders/prevention & control , Mental Disorders/psychology
16.
J Wildl Dis ; 37(4): 761-74, 2001 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11763740

ABSTRACT

Biodiversity survey and inventory have resulted in new information on the distribution of Protostrongylidae in Dall's sheep (Ovis dalli dalli) from the Northwest Territories (NT, Canada) and from Alaska (AK, USA). In 1998, Parelaphostrongylus odocoilei adults were found for the first time in the skeletal muscles of Dall's sheep in the Mackenzie Mountains (NT). Adult P. odocoilei were associated with petechial and ecchymotic hemorrhages and localized myositis; eggs and larvae in the lungs were associated with diffuse granulomatous pneumonia. Experimental infections of the slugs Deroceras laeve and Deroceras reticulatum with dorsal-spined first-stage larvae assumed to be P. odocoilei, from ground-collected feces from Dall's sheep in the Mackenzie Mountains, yielded third-stage larvae by at least 28 (in D. laeve) and 48 (in D. reticulatum) days post-infection. Third-stage larvae emerged from D. laeve between days 19 and 46 post-infection and emergence occurred both at room temperature and at 10 to 12 C. Protostrongylus stilesi were definitively identified from the lungs of Dall's sheep collected in the Mackenzie Mountains, NT in 1998. Specimens collected from sheep in the Mackenzie Mountains, NT in 1971-72, and the Alaska Range, AK in 1972 were also confirmed as P. stilesi. Lung pathology associated with adults, eggs, and larvae of P. stilesi was similar to that described in bighorn sheep (Ovis canadensis). Concurrent infections with P. odocoilei and P. stilesi in a single host have not been previously reported.


Subject(s)
Metastrongyloidea/isolation & purification , Sheep Diseases/epidemiology , Strongylida Infections/veterinary , Alaska/epidemiology , Animals , Animals, Wild , Ecosystem , Feces/parasitology , Female , Immunohistochemistry , Larva , Lung/parasitology , Lung/pathology , Muscle, Skeletal/parasitology , Muscle, Skeletal/pathology , Northwest Territories/epidemiology , Parasite Egg Count/veterinary , Sheep , Sheep Diseases/parasitology , Sheep Diseases/pathology , Strongylida Infections/epidemiology , Strongylida Infections/pathology
17.
19.
Parasitology ; 132(Pt 3): 387-401, 2006 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16332289

ABSTRACT

We describe the epidemiology of the protostrongylid parasites Parelaphostrongylus odocoilei and Protostrongylus stilesi in Dall's sheep (Ovis dalli dalli) from the Mackenzie Mountains, Northwest Territories, Canada (65 degrees N; 128 degrees W). Peak numbers of 1st-stage larvae of both parasites were shed by Dall's sheep on their winter range from March until May. In larval development experiments in the Mackenzie Mountains, peak numbers of infective 3rd-stage larvae of P. odocoilei were available in gastropod intermediate hosts in August-September. For both protostrongylids, the majority of transmission likely occurs on the winter range, with infection of gastropods when they emerge from hibernation in spring, and infection of Dall's sheep upon their return in fall. We validated a degree-day model for temperature-dependent development of larval P. odocoilei in gastropods, and applied degree-day models to describe and predict spatial and temporal patterns in development of P. odocoilei and P. stilesi in northern North America. Temperature-dependent larval development may currently limit northward range expansion of P. odocoilei into naïve populations of Dall's sheep in the Arctic, but climate warming may soon eliminate such constraints. In Subarctic regions where both P. odocoilei and P. stilesi are endemic, the length of the parasite 'growing season' (when temperatures were above the threshold for larval development) and amount of warming available for parasite development has increased over the last 50 years. Further climate warming and extension of the seasonal window for transmission may lead to amplification of parasite populations and disease outbreaks in host populations.


Subject(s)
Climate , Ecosystem , Metastrongyloidea/growth & development , Sheep Diseases/epidemiology , Sheep Diseases/parasitology , Strongylida Infections/veterinary , Animals , Disease Vectors , Feces/parasitology , Gastropoda/parasitology , Larva/growth & development , Metastrongyloidea/isolation & purification , Models, Biological , Northwest Territories/epidemiology , Prevalence , Seasons , Sheep , Strongylida Infections/epidemiology , Strongylida Infections/parasitology , Temperature , Time Factors
20.
Hosp Community Psychiatry ; 45(2): 142-6, 1994 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8168793

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: This study explored whether emergency rooms in a metropolitan county had standard procedures or offered services that address the needs of victims of interpersonal violence. METHODS: Fifty hospital emergency rooms (75 percent of the facilities eligible to participate in the survey) responded to a 55-item questionnaire about their handling of victims of interpersonal violence. RESULTS: Emergency rooms generally relied on patient self-reports to determine whether a patient is a victim of violence. Standard operating procedures for reporting cases to state agencies and referrals for additional services were most likely to exist for areas in which hospitals' response is mandated by law, such as sexual assault and child abuse. In addition, three-fourths of the hospitals had procedures for dealing with elder abuse, an area in which reporting is strongly encouraged. Most direct services received by victims were not specifically targeted to them but were services offered to the general emergency room population. The most frequent referrals were to rape advocacy groups and battered women's groups. CONCLUSIONS: The hospitals were most likely to respond to victims in areas in which their actions were mandated by law, such as sexual assault and child abuse, or strongly recommended, such as elder abuse. The majority of emergency rooms do not conduct adequate epidemiological surveillance of injuries resulting from interpersonal violence. Protocols, services, and referrals for victims of family violence, peer violence, and other forms of interpersonal violence should be mandated by law or by standards of treatment.


Subject(s)
Emergency Service, Hospital , Patient Care Team , Violence , Wounds and Injuries/psychology , Adult , Aged , Child , Child Abuse/prevention & control , Child Abuse/psychology , Elder Abuse/prevention & control , Elder Abuse/psychology , Female , Health Services Needs and Demand , Humans , Illinois , Male , Rape/psychology , Social Environment , Spouse Abuse/prevention & control , Spouse Abuse/psychology , Wounds and Injuries/rehabilitation
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