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Annemarie Bouma

Researcher at Utrecht University

Publications -  119
Citations -  5450

Annemarie Bouma is an academic researcher from Utrecht University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Influenza A virus subtype H5N1 & Vaccination. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 119 publications receiving 5122 citations. Previous affiliations of Annemarie Bouma include Chinese Ministry of Economic Affairs.

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Avian Influenza A Virus (H7N7) Epidemic in The Netherlands in 2003: Course of the Epidemic and Effectiveness of Control Measures

TL;DR: The observation that Rh remained >1 suggests that the containment of the epidemic was probably due to the reduction in the number of susceptible flocks by complete depopulation of the infected areas rather than to the reduce of the transmission by the other control measures.
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Risk Maps for the Spread of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza in Poultry

TL;DR: The analyses provide an estimate of the spatial range over which highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses spread between farms, and emphasize that control measures aimed at controlling such outbreaks need to take into account the local density of farms.
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Herd immunity to Newcastle disease virus in poultry by vaccination

TL;DR: In this article, the requirements of an epidemiologically effective vaccination program against Newcastle disease in poultry, based on data from experimental transmission studies, were studied and the implications for the control of Newcastle disease by vaccination were discussed.
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The foot-and-mouth disease epidemic in The Netherlands in 2001

TL;DR: An outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease in Great Britain was reported on 21 February 2001, followed by an outbreak of FMD in The Netherlands a month later, and this Dutch index outbreak occurred on a mixed, veal-calf/dairy-goat farm in Oene, in the central part of The Netherlands.
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Development of a classical swine fever subunit marker vaccine and companion diagnostic test.

TL;DR: The E(RNS) test detects CSFV-specific antibodies in vaccinated or unvaccinated pigs as early as 14 days after infection with a virulent CSF strain, indicating that the E2 vaccine and companion test fully comply with the marker vaccine concept.