Directly transmitted infections diseases: control by vaccination.
about
Modeling infectious disease dynamics in the complex landscape of global healthViral kinetic modeling: state of the artModelling the Dynamics of Post-Vaccination Immunity Rate in a Population of Sahelian Sheep after a Vaccination Campaign against Peste des Petits Ruminants VirusDistribution of immunity to pertussis in the population of England and WalesAge-related changes in the rate of disease transmission: implications for the design of vaccination programmesVaccination against rubella and measles: quantitative investigations of different policiesStructure in the variability of the basic reproductive number (R0) for Zika epidemics in the Pacific islandsAn assessment of spatial clustering of leukaemias and lymphomas among young people in New ZealandExtracting key information from historical data to quantify the transmission dynamics of smallpoxCharacterizing the reproduction number of epidemics with early subexponential growth dynamics.Targeting vaccination against novel infections: risk, age and spatial structure for pandemic influenza in Great BritainThe impact of new technologies on vaccine development.Controlling malaria: competition, seasonality and 'slingshotting' transgenic mosquitoes into natural populations.Infectious disease, shifting climates, and opportunistic predators: cumulative factors potentially impacting wild salmon declinesAn optimal cost effectiveness study on Zimbabwe cholera seasonal data from 2008-2011.A simulation analysis to characterize the dynamics of vaccinating behaviour on contact networks.Seventy-five years of estimating the force of infection from current status data.Estimating the duration of pertussis immunity using epidemiological signatures.Waning Immunity Is Associated with Periodic Large Outbreaks of Mumps: A Mathematical Modeling Study of Scottish Data.Resolving the impact of waiting time distributions on the persistence of measlesThe geography of measles vaccination in the African Great Lakes region.Host adaptation and the emergence of infectious disease: the Salmonella paradigm.Heterogeneous host susceptibility enhances prevalence of mixed-genotype micro-parasite infections.Measles in children who have malignant disease.Modelling Marek's disease virus (MDV) infection: parameter estimates for mortality rate and infectiousnessImmunization rates at the school entry in 2012.Population modeling of influenza A/H1N1 virus kinetics and symptom dynamicsEmpirical and theoretical evidence for herd size as a risk factor for swine diseases.New York State's two-dose schedule for measles immunizationOptimal vaccination in a stochastic epidemic model of two non-interacting populations.Emerging vaccine informatics.Quest for life-long protection by vaccinationDemographic buffering: titrating the effects of birth rate and imperfect immunity on epidemic dynamics.Childhood leukaemia and poliomyelitis in relation to military encampments in England and Wales in the period of national military service, 1950-63Rural population mixing and childhood leukaemia: effects of the North Sea oil industry in Scotland, including the area near Dounreay nuclear site.Flexible epidemiological model for estimates and short-term projections in generalised HIV/AIDS epidemics.Characterizing the transmission potential of zoonotic infections from minor outbreaksTwice vaccinated recipients are better protected against epidemic measles than are single dose recipients of measles containing vaccineEpidemiological game-theory dynamics of chickenpox vaccination in the USA and Israel.The role of vaccination coverage, individual behaviors, and the public health response in the control of measles epidemics: an agent-based simulation for California.
P2860
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P2860
Directly transmitted infections diseases: control by vaccination.
description
1982 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
1982年の論文
@ja
1982年学术文章
@wuu
1982年学术文章
@zh
1982年学术文章
@zh-cn
1982年学术文章
@zh-hans
1982年学术文章
@zh-my
1982年学术文章
@zh-sg
1982年學術文章
@yue
1982年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
Directly transmitted infections diseases: control by vaccination.
@en
Directly transmitted infections diseases: control by vaccination.
@nl
type
label
Directly transmitted infections diseases: control by vaccination.
@en
Directly transmitted infections diseases: control by vaccination.
@nl
prefLabel
Directly transmitted infections diseases: control by vaccination.
@en
Directly transmitted infections diseases: control by vaccination.
@nl
P356
P1433
P1476
Directly transmitted infections diseases: control by vaccination.
@en
P2093
P304
P356
10.1126/SCIENCE.7063839
P407
P577
1982-02-01T00:00:00Z