11 research outputs found
Enteric fever: a slow response to an old plague
Man is irremediably embedded in nature with complex interactions with all living organisms. Historically, the establishment of contemporary human societies has been influenced by our coexistence with other microorganisms living in highly interconnected habitats and ecologies. As a result, with the progression from unicellular to multicellular life, bacteria have coexisted with humans. In this biological journey, while there are important benefits provided by bacterial guests to the human host living in complex relationships and becoming part of their microbiome, some organisms are able to cause a wide spectrum of diseases. Among the large Enterobacteriaceae family, the genus Salmonella, a pathotype of Escherichia coli, is one example. Salmonella is further classified into S. enterica and S. bongori serotypes based on its lipopolysaccharide cell wall (somatic O antigen), its flagellar (H antigen), and its surface Vi antigen (present only in S. typhi, S. Paratyphi C, Citrobacter freundii, and S. Dublin) [1]. S. enterica subspecies I, one of the six subspecies of S. enterica, is a major contributor to human disease (Fig 1) [2]. This group of pathogens includes those frequently causing gastroenteritis, such as S. Typhimurium, those causing invasive disease in the forms of bacteremia, such as S. Choleraesius, or the typhoidal Salmonella species causing enteric fever, including S. typhi (typhoid fever) and S. Paratyphi A, B, and C (paratyphoid fever) [1,2]
Research Priorities for Neglected Infectious Diseases in Latin America and the Caribbean Region
Dujardin, J. C. et al. 5 p.-1 tab.Global priorities for research in neglected
infectious diseases (NIDs) can be assessed
in different ways, but it is important to
realize that regional priorities may significantly
differ one from another. The region
of Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)
is—along with Africa and Asia—more
affected by NIDs than other regions of the
world. Some of the Latin American NIDs
are common to other continents, while
others are very specific or disproportionately
affect the Latin American region [1–
3] (Table 1). Because of its huge ecological
diversity, ongoing environmental changes,
and massive migrations, LAC is also a
catalyst for the (re-)emergence and spreading
of NIDs, both inside and outside the
subcontinent. Following a colloquium on
NIDs in LAC held in Lima, Peru, between
12 and 14 November 2009, a thematic
workshop was organized with the support
of the European Commission (EC). It
involved 29 scientists (16 from the Americas,
two from the Democratic Republic of
Congo and India, respectively, and nine
from Europe) working on different NIDs
and representing several research areas
from basic to applied. This report summarizes
the consensus comments of the expert
group after oral and written consultation. It
is envisaged that this document should
stimulate a debate within the scientific
community and serve as a recommendation
for future actions by international or
regional funding agencies in the area of
NIDs in LACThis work was supported by the Directorate-General for Development Cooperation of the Belgian Government (framework agreement 03, project 95502) and the European CommissionPeer reviewe
Challenges in reducing the burden of disease of enteric fever (typhoid fever and paratyphoid fever).
<p>Challenges in reducing the burden of disease of enteric fever (typhoid fever and paratyphoid fever).</p
Global estimates of disease caused by <i>Salmonella enterica</i> including enteric fever (typhoid fever and paratyphoid fever), non-typhoidal salmonellosis, and gastroenteritis.
<p>Global estimates of disease caused by <i>Salmonella enterica</i> including enteric fever (typhoid fever and paratyphoid fever), non-typhoidal salmonellosis, and gastroenteritis.</p
Contribuições da Sociologia na América Latina à imaginação sociológica: análise, crítica e compromisso social Sociology's contribution in Latin America to sociological imagination: analysis, critique, and social commitment
O artigo aborda o papel desempenhado pela Sociologia na análise dos processos de transformação das sociedades latino-americanas, no acompanhamento do processo de construção do Estado e da Nação, na problematização das questões sociais na América Latina. São analisados seis períodos na Sociologia na América Latina e no Caribe: I) a herança intelectual da Sociologia ; II) a sociologia da cátedra; III) O período da "Sociologia Científica" e a configuração da "Sociologia Crítica"; IV) a crise institucional, a consolidação da "Sociologia Crítica" e a diversificação da sociologia; V) a sociologia do autoritarismo, da democracia e da exclusão; VI) a consolidação institucional e a mundialização da sociologia da América Latina (desde o ano de 2000), podendo-se afirmar que os traços distintivos do saber sociológico no continente foram: o internacionalismo, o hibridismo, a abordagem crítica dos processos e conflitos das sociedades latino-americanas e o compromisso social do sociólogo.<br>The article focuses on the role played by Sociology in the analysis of processes of change in Latin American societies, in the process of construction of Nation and State, in the debate of social issues in Latin America and the Caribbean. Six periods in Sociology in Latin America and the Caribbean are examined: I) sociology's intellectual legacy; II) sociology as a cathedra; III) the period of "Scientific Sociology"; IV) the institutional crisis, the consolidation of "Critical Sociology", and the diversifying of sociology; V) sociology of authoritarianism, democracy and exclusion; VI) institutional consolidation and globalization of Latin American sociology (since 2000). It may be said that the distinctive features of sociological knowledge in the continent were: internationalism, hybridism, the critical approach to processes and conflicts of Latin American societies, and the sociologist social commitment
BJS commission on surgery and perioperative care post-COVID-19
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) was declared a pandemic by the WHO on 11 March 2020 and global surgical practice was compromised. This Commission aimed to document and reflect on the changes seen in the surgical environment during the pandemic, by reviewing colleagues' experiences and published evidence