about
The birth of Emerging Themes in Epidemiology: a tale of Valerie, causality and epidemiologyEpidemiology in conflict - A call to armsWhere economics and epidemics collide: migrant workers and emerging infectionsPatterns of medication use and factors associated with antibiotic use among adult fever patients at Singapore primary care clinics.Guillain-Barré syndrome and preceding infection with campylobacter, influenza and Epstein-Barr virus in the general practice research database.The association between drinking water turbidity and gastrointestinal illness: a systematic reviewMethods for determining disease burden and calibrating national surveillance data in the United Kingdom: the second study of infectious intestinal disease in the community (IID2 study).Chicken consumption and use of acid-suppressing medications as risk factors for Campylobacter enteritis, England.Burden of dengue infection and disease in a pediatric cohort in urban Sri Lanka.Effect of reminders on mitigating participation bias in a case-control study.Estimates of dengue force of infection in children in Colombo, Sri LankaThe second study of infectious intestinal disease (IID2): increased rates of recurrent diarrhoea in individuals aged 65 years and above.Migration and health: fact, fiction, art, politics.Longitudinal study of infectious intestinal disease in the UK (IID2 study): incidence in the community and presenting to general practiceNew dengue virus type 1 genotype in Colombo, Sri Lanka.Estimating the Incidence of Acute Infectious Intestinal Disease in the Community in the UK: A Retrospective Telephone SurveyDiarrheagenic pathogens in adults attending a hospital in Singapore.Economic Cost of Campylobacter, Norovirus and Rotavirus Disease in the United Kingdom.Characteristics of acute febrile illness and determinants of illness recovery among adults presenting to Singapore primary care clinicsAge-Specific Incidence Rates for Norovirus in the Community and Presenting to Primary Healthcare Facilities in the United Kingdom.Diagnosing norovirus-associated infectious intestinal disease using viral loadModelling study to estimate the health burden of foodborne diseases: cases, general practice consultations and hospitalisations in the UK, 2009.Spatiotemporal dynamics of rotavirus disease in Europe: can climate or demographic variability explain the patterns observed.Asymptomatic rotavirus infections in England: prevalence, characteristics, and risk factors.Community incidence of norovirus-associated infectious intestinal disease in England: improved estimates using viral load for norovirus diagnosis.Characterization of water and wildlife strains as a subgroup of Campylobacter jejuni using DNA microarrays.Changes in causes of acute gastroenteritis in the United Kingdom over 15 years: microbiologic findings from 2 prospective, population-based studies of infectious intestinal disease.Fortune and foreigners: toward an epidemiology of food (borne illness).Causal thinking and causal language in epidemiology: a cause by any other name is still a cause: response to Lipton and Ødegaard.Incidence of Guillain-Barré syndrome among patients with Campylobacter infection: a general practice research database study.Guillain-Barré syndrome associated with Campylobacter jejuni infection in England, 2000-2001.Annual acknowledgement of manuscript reviewers 2014.Investigating vomiting and/or bloody diarrhoea in Campylobacter jejuni infection.Estimating the burden of medically-attended norovirus gastroenteritis: modelling linked primary care and hospitalization datasets.The epidemiology and transmission of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus in the community in Singapore: study protocol for a longitudinal household study.Determinism versus stochasticism: in support of long coffee breaks.Newspeak for epidemiologists.Parental perceptions of childhood seasonal influenza vaccination in Singapore: A cross-sectional survey.Effectiveness of Masks and Respirators Against Respiratory Infections in Healthcare Workers: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.The study of infectious intestinal disease in England: what risk factors for presentation to general practice tell us about potential for selection bias in case-control studies of reported cases of diarrhoea.
P50
Q24804547-70757832-17DE-4577-8C1D-0CAD82023F1AQ24804624-CD86D4B7-19FB-4D60-9A3C-F7DAD1B606D6Q27614100-E4CB1349-9E31-4E69-A4F0-E48F9E6365B4Q30395845-AD339F7C-6787-4525-AAF4-C476B23CF9F9Q33280997-B915DBA4-600D-4C6A-A707-7CBBA86C769DQ33299939-076A2A4B-D915-4BA2-AD85-E241825060FBQ33571646-ED25A912-4A69-45B6-AE01-B8E2BDCD8E26Q33644566-9621C9FB-FFDD-4D43-B89B-0808D767B9E5Q33841059-507FB7E0-F559-4DB9-A5D5-83AE7CB20566Q33858834-C1AF35D3-3031-4E14-9817-475CFBCE1192Q34766904-81344BE1-775C-47AB-B3CD-D99AFFB5F179Q35039411-996E9B0C-DA50-4EAE-B807-4E97F232806CQ35079907-7163C5CF-FCBB-4EB8-B54F-4850294B983BQ35593118-91EBE91A-C044-4DED-93BD-2953A9D7502BQ35847184-CF0E1046-91C7-4BB2-B704-8DA99AB1FB57Q35903240-16E103E2-8AE9-4A54-9D19-277BA83DCFB0Q35907789-03A99289-D392-4E09-8857-231E9D56C5B5Q35909392-7CFE6228-3D18-49C2-ACB1-08B10EA1DE68Q36177475-A09E1335-1819-4495-8B41-730E745965F5Q36440199-8E7DC3C1-C376-4001-992F-401D80D4E895Q37233578-694E759B-B29F-442F-9DCF-293ECEFAC8A7Q37271357-79D1CB96-31F0-4B5F-9706-EA722B916EB2Q38882814-9ABFDEEA-2577-499C-BECC-E8E8FCFBB9A0Q39354048-B224CE18-E35D-4267-AE39-95C6F686B500Q39354053-91EB989A-08A2-4CB2-832B-408811B62749Q39485478-0E90A170-8E5D-419F-977A-53478CCA0BC0Q39507421-92B2C7DB-82A3-421C-8ABD-EC7ABF673E52Q39507438-A7A60A0B-8717-4313-85E2-D5B825DEF371Q39507448-C6308A29-706B-4939-8A88-54D0DD132C03Q39507456-49BE8D2E-A0EC-4A75-81EE-250104CAF647Q39507470-1A0D0B42-89FD-484C-B5CE-3C94E0789322Q39811822-7BE832BC-1DE5-444D-ABBA-339E6F9D4A28Q40479526-5918F986-AA1E-44FD-BF56-5A43BEC8234AQ41992936-D3B68AC2-6F7E-43DE-9D75-B9ECF8D18ADBQ42375068-9741F857-4853-4399-8A66-45E948694A86Q43078987-C1C6520B-002D-4353-9067-42E1C4DB02DAQ43166487-AE678D6E-A40B-4F7B-AA8C-DADB5B327AD9Q43167569-A5D5F1AF-0709-4E9D-8269-3EA7BFF8BF5CQ47579628-67A43458-CF93-4F0B-AC3C-CF1CC37165B0Q47980527-EA76C74E-4CFF-44BB-A6AD-6D0820F445C2
P50
description
onderzoeker
@nl
researcher
@en
հետազոտող
@hy
name
Clarence C Tam
@nl
Clarence C Tam
@sl
Clarence C. Tam
@en
Clarence C. Tam
@es
type
label
Clarence C Tam
@nl
Clarence C Tam
@sl
Clarence C. Tam
@en
Clarence C. Tam
@es
prefLabel
Clarence C Tam
@nl
Clarence C Tam
@sl
Clarence C. Tam
@en
Clarence C. Tam
@es
P106
P1153
7201444738
P21
P31
P496
0000-0003-1697-286X