Hantaviruses are rodent-borne zoonotic agents that cause hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome in Asia and Europe and hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) in North and South America. The epidemiology of human diseases caused by these viruses is tied to the ecology of the rodent hosts, and effective control and prevention relies on a through understanding of host ecology. After the 1993 HPS outbreak in the southwestern United States, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention initiated long-term studies of the temporal dynamics of hantavirus infection in host populations. These studies, which used mark-recapture techniques on 24 trapping webs at nine sites in the southwestern United States, were designed to monitor changes in reservoir population densities and in the prevalence and incidence of infection; quantify environmental factors associated with these changes; and when linked to surveillance databases for HPS, lead to predictive models of human risk to be used in the design and implementation of control and prevention measures for human hantavirus disease.
Long-term studies of hantavirus reservoir populations in the southwestern United States: rationale, potential, and methods.
J. Mills,T. Yates,T. Ksiazek,C. J. Peters,J. Childs
Published 1999 in Emerging Infectious Diseases
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- Publication year
1999
- Venue
Emerging Infectious Diseases
- Publication date
Unknown publication date
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine, Environmental Science
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Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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