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1 ations typically not included in trials, and public health surveillance.
2  and feasible IMI case prediction models for public health surveillance.
3 hics guidance for the wastewater approach to public health surveillance.
4 ogens is critical for clinical diagnosis and public health surveillance.
5 aluable insights for clinical management and public health surveillance.
6 e, which remains the most widespread form of public health surveillance.
7 ew, specifically addressed ethical issues in public health surveillance.
8 der applications in clinical diagnostics and public health surveillance.
9 athogen detection for clinical diagnosis and public health surveillance.
10 ture tightly focused on ethics applicable to public health surveillance.
11 ry viral diagnostics, infection control, and public health surveillance.
12 latforms and their role in clinical care and public health surveillance.
13 ntial to inform patient treatment and enable public health surveillance.
14 y, informing hospital-specific policies, and public health surveillance.
15 gnosis and management of tuberculosis and in public health surveillance.
16 al of flies as proxies for environmental and public health surveillance.
17 inically deployed surveys may hold value for public health surveillance.
18  toxins in various matrices is essential for public health surveillance.
19                       It is time to shake up public health surveillance.
20 ammals and underscore the need for continued public health surveillance.
21 he utility of form CMS-2728 for research and public health surveillance.
22 ates (US) as collected under the auspices of public health surveillance.
23 er been comprehensively validated for use in public health surveillance.
24 on identifying novel data sources to enhance public health surveillance.
25  infections and assist infection control and public health surveillance.
26 me is fundamental to biomedical research and public health surveillance.
27 ving the comprehensiveness and timeliness of public health surveillance.
28 edia- and Internet-based data collection for public health surveillance.
29  Dental settings are a valuable location for public health surveillance.
30  making it a scalable solution for real-time public health surveillance.
31 g that it is a promising tool for supporting public-health surveillance.
32                          Multipliers from US public health surveillance accounted for factors includi
33 -CM) codes have been proposed as a method of public health surveillance and are widely used in public
34 hancing access to HIV-1 prevention and care, public health surveillance and control programmes should
35 r research and a robust resource for malaria public health surveillance and control.
36 s to cholera outbreaks, ultimately improving public health surveillance and disease control globally.
37  referenced data, enhances WBE precision for public health surveillance and environmental risk assess
38        These models will aid in establishing public health surveillance and guide strategic vaccinati
39                                              Public health surveillance and health care delivery syst
40 dvantage of our unique access to Connecticut public health surveillance and hospital data and our dir
41  here can provide actionable information for public health surveillance and intervention decisions.
42 COVID-19) testing is a critical component of public health surveillance and pandemic control, especia
43 lth care-associated infections indicate that public health surveillance and prevention activities sho
44 shows the importance of advanced planning of public health surveillance and response at these religio
45 e cannot eliminate all of the uncertainty in public health surveillance and subsequent decision-makin
46 netic diversity of L1, with implications for public health surveillance and TB control.
47 ts highlight the need for more investment in public health surveillance and ultimately, assays that a
48 l in achieving the best clinical management, public health surveillance, and control outcomes.
49 l treatment, advances in health research and public health surveillance, and modern security techniqu
50 ine use of sequencing in clinical diagnoses, public health surveillance, and population genetics stud
51  treatment interventions, overdose reversal, public health surveillance, and research.
52 area-based socioeconomic measures in routine public health surveillance, and to reinforce policies an
53 anding the causes of infant mortality shapes public health, surveillance, and research investments.
54           Patient data were acquired through public health surveillance as part of National Notifiabl
55  in hospitals is an additional challenge for public health surveillance authorities.
56 ICIPANTS: Active, nationally representative, public health surveillance based on patient visits to 60
57 ols can enhance clinical decision-making and public health surveillance by reducing the risk of misse
58 grating whole-genome sequencing into routine public health surveillance can enable the early detectio
59                                              Public health surveillance can help identify potential i
60 iod before they are detected via clinical or public health surveillance, can inform strategies for pr
61 ental studies, for interpreting clinical and public health surveillance data and for the design and i
62 cross-sectional analysis of population-based public health surveillance data assessed the sociodemogr
63                                              Public health surveillance data can inform an understand
64 ional naive forecasts that rely only on past public health surveillance data may not reliably represe
65  authors conducted a case-cohort study using public health surveillance data sets to examine perinata
66                                Here, we used public health surveillance data to assess platform perfo
67 s per 100 people with a PrEP indication) and public health surveillance data to document HIV diagnose
68                     California Department of Public Health surveillance data were reviewed to identif
69 olates of enteric pathogens is essential for public health surveillance, detection, and tracking of o
70                                              Public health surveillance efforts and metrics are there
71  and plasma specimens, which will strengthen public health surveillance efforts for HAV outbreak dete
72 ial to improve both clinical diagnostics and public health surveillance efforts in multiple areas, in
73  This study highlights the utility of UDT in public health surveillance efforts related to patients t
74 ates, and this modeling approach complements public health surveillance efforts to identify areas wit
75 19 patients and inform infection control and public health surveillance efforts.
76               Coccidioidomycosis reported to public health surveillance entities.
77                    AI can be used to support public health surveillance, epidemiological research, co
78 orld is not clear, and the evidence base for public health surveillance, epidemiology, and response a
79 mpliance and the possible negative impact on public health surveillance for antimicrobial resistance.
80          The practical implications are that public health surveillance for artemisinin resistance sh
81                                      Current public health surveillance for E. coli O157:H7 requires
82                                              Public health surveillance for enteric infections addres
83                                              Public health surveillance for hemochromatosis can be us
84  acute infection could improve diagnosis and public health surveillance for Jamestown Canyon virus di
85 ether molecular subtyping could be useful in public health surveillance for S. enterica serotype typh
86 has created opportunities to develop unified public health surveillance for this disorder and its com
87                                              Public health surveillance has been defined as the ongoi
88 the authors note that defining activities as public health surveillance has important implications, b
89 series investigation of patients reported to public health surveillance hospitalized with SARS-CoV-2-
90 ms, they are still useful for the purpose of public health surveillance if they can be corroborated b
91 use clinical HF registries as a platform for public health surveillance, implementation research, and
92  to testing, care, and treatment; strengthen public health surveillance; improve HCV preventive servi
93 icipants: Active, nationally representative, public health surveillance in 58 EDs located in the Unit
94  offer a promising opportunity for expanding public health surveillance in clinical settings.
95 applying similar approaches during real-time public health surveillance in low-income settings.
96 aluated the impact of antibody prevalence on public health surveillance in one of these regions.
97  The revised Common Rule expressly addresses public health surveillance in relation to scientific res
98 iciency virus drug resistance genotyping for public health surveillance in resource-limited countries
99  severe morbidity and mortality, but routine public health surveillance is lacking.
100 population-based study was conducted under a public health surveillance mandate from the US Food and
101 der pathways in epidemiological research and public health surveillance more broadly.
102                    This work can help inform public health surveillance needs and identify areas that
103 nd is already beginning to revolutionise how public health surveillance networks monitor and tackle b
104 utility of Google search trends in augmented public health surveillance of alcohol-related healthcare
105 ETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Statewide enhanced public health surveillance of California residents who w
106                                     Improved public health surveillance of firearm storage and firear
107 g novel SARS-COV-2 variants is important for public health surveillance of potential viral threats an
108                                      Ongoing public health surveillance of pregnancy-associated nonfa
109 y cells and highlight the need for continued public health surveillance of this emerging virus.
110 n future research such as vaccine trials and public health surveillance of tick-borne disease pattern
111  Studies of LTBI screening and treatment for public health surveillance or disease management were ex
112 whom LTBI screening and treatment is part of public health surveillance or disease management were ex
113 aboratory and have numerous applications for public health surveillance, outbreak investigation, and
114 king behavior, are needed to improve routine public health surveillance, outbreak response, and pande
115 cterized as "a serious and current threat to public health surveillance, particularly for Shiga toxin
116 itudinal asthma incidence rates (IRs) from a public health surveillance perspective.
117 is study demonstrates the utility of GMM for public health surveillance, planning, and equitable resp
118 the New Mexico HPV Pap Registry, a statewide public health surveillance program, receives mandatory r
119 or frequent testing as part of an integrated public health surveillance program.
120 al trials, in molecular epidemiology, and in public health surveillance programs.
121 a population level using linked clinical and public health surveillance records.
122 ported cases through the Overcoming COVID-19 public health surveillance registry.
123                                              Public health surveillance relies on standardised metric
124                                    Effective public health surveillance requires consistent monitorin
125 e laboratories to provide a state-of-the-art public health surveillance service.
126  it provides open access to both traditional public health surveillance signals (cases, deaths, and h
127 e highest ever recorded; data collected from public health surveillance sources can help to identify
128 volution and diversity with implications for public health surveillance strategies.
129 hould be deployed in human biomonitoring and public health surveillance studies to guide policy inter
130 d its one-off nature, innovative tactics for public health surveillance, such as crowdsourcing digita
131                         A growing concern in public health surveillance surveys that rely on random d
132                      Based on data from a US public health surveillance system, hospitalization with
133 of Mtb biology, inference of transmission in public health surveillance systems and more generally fo
134       We identified opportunities to improve public health surveillance systems and uses of data for
135                                              Public health surveillance systems are important for tra
136                  The desirable attributes of public health surveillance systems are simplicity, flexi
137  that they could more easily go unnoticed by public health surveillance systems than Asian strains du
138                                     Existing public health surveillance systems that rely on predefin
139 come the paucity of socioeconomic data in US public health surveillance systems, no consensus exists
140 linked immunization and laboratory data from public health surveillance systems.
141 ic impacts, and other topics not reported in public health surveillance systems.
142 onsidered; this could challenge conventional public health surveillance systems.
143 xample is given of a model-based approach to public health surveillance that has been effective in qu
144 red from hospitals, outpatient settings, and public health surveillance to 5 I/Q hotels.
145   These findings emphasize the importance of public health surveillance to identify potential issues
146 logy is emerging as a powerful early-warning public health surveillance tool.
147                   We conducted retrospective public health surveillance using data from 2006 to 2016
148 nti-SARS-CoV-2 antibody tests for diagnosis, public health surveillance, vaccine development and the
149                Using a precision approach to public health surveillance, we detected and characterize
150 ticed may not be suitable for key aspects of public health surveillance where it is now extensively a
151 t decade (2003 to 2013), and compared weekly public health surveillance with search query data to cha

 
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