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Anthony W. Mounts
Researcher at Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Publications - 60
Citations - 5741
Anthony W. Mounts is an academic researcher from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pandemic & Influenza A virus. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 58 publications receiving 5165 citations. Previous affiliations of Anthony W. Mounts include United States Department of Health and Human Services & World Health Organization.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Global burden of respiratory infections due to seasonal influenza in young children: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Harish Nair,Harish Nair,W. Abdullah Brooks,Mark A. Katz,Anna Roca,James A. Berkley,Shabir A. Madhi,James Mark Simmerman,Aubree Gordon,Aubree Gordon,Masatoki Sato,Stephen R. C. Howie,Anand Krishnan,Maurice Ope,Kim A. Lindblade,Phyllis Carosone-Link,Marilla G. Lucero,Walter Onalo Ochieng,Laurie Kamimoto,Erica Dueger,Niranjan Bhat,Sirenda Vong,Evropi Theodoratou,Malinee Chittaganpitch,Osaretin Chimah,Osaretin Chimah,Angel Balmaseda,Philippe Buchy,Eva Harris,Valerie Evans,Masahiko Katayose,Bharti Gaur,Cristina O'Callaghan-Gordo,Doli Goswami,Wences Arvelo,Marietjie Venter,Thomas Briese,Rafal Tokarz,Marc-Alain Widdowson,Anthony W. Mounts,Robert F. Breiman,Daniel R. Feikin,Daniel R. Feikin,Keith P. Klugman,Keith P. Klugman,Sonja J. Olsen,Bradford D. Gessner,Peter F. Wright,Igor Rudan,Igor Rudan,Shobha Broor,Eric A. F. Simões,Harry Campbell +52 more
TL;DR: The role of influenza in childhood mortality from ALRI is estimated by combining incidence estimates with case fatality ratios from hospital-based reports and identifying studies with population-based data for influenza seasonality and monthly ALRI mortality.
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Risk Factors for Severe Outcomes following 2009 Influenza A (H1N1) Infection: A Global Pooled Analysis
Maria D. Van Kerkhove,Katelijn Vandemaele,Vivek Shinde,Giovanna Jaramillo-Gutierrez,Artemis Koukounari,Christl A. Donnelly,Luis O. Carlino,Rhonda Owen,Beverly Paterson,Louise Pelletier,Julie Vachon,Claudia González,Yu Hongjie,Feng Zijian,Shuk Kwan Chuang,Albert Ka-Wing Au,Silke Buda,Gérard Krause,Walter Haas,Isabelle Bonmarin,Kiyosu Taniguichi,Kensuke Nakajima,Tokuaki Shobayashi,Yoshihiro Takayama,Tomi Sunagawa,Jean-Michel Heraud,Arnaud Orelle,Ethel Palacios,Marianne A B van der Sande,C. C. H. Lieke Wielders,Darren Hunt,Jeffrey Cutter,Vernon J. Lee,Vernon J. Lee,Juno Thomas,Patricia Santa-Olalla,Maria J. Sierra-Moros,Wanna Hanshaoworakul,Kumnuan Ungchusak,Richard Pebody,Seema Jain,Anthony W. Mounts +41 more
TL;DR: This study analyzes data from 19 countries, comprising some 70,000 hospitalized patients with severe H1N1 infection, to reveal risk factors for severe pandemic influenza, which include chronic illness, cardiac disease, chronic respiratory disease, and diabetes.
Journal ArticleDOI
Global Mortality Estimates for the 2009 Influenza Pandemic from the GLaMOR Project: A Modeling Study
Lone Simonsen,Lone Simonsen,Peter Spreeuwenberg,Roger Lustig,Robert J. Taylor,Douglas M. Fleming,Madelon Kroneman,Maria D. Van Kerkhove,Anthony W. Mounts,W. John Paget +9 more
TL;DR: A two-stage statistical modeling approach is used to estimate the global mortality burden of the 2009 influenza pandemic from mortality data obtained from multiple countries.
Journal ArticleDOI
The epidemiology of enteric caliciviruses from humans: a reassessment using new diagnostics.
Roger I. Glass,Jacqueline S. Noel,Tamie Ando,Rebecca L. Fankhauser,Gaël Belliot,Anthony W. Mounts,Umesh D. Parashar,Joseph S. Bresee,Stephan S. Monroe +8 more
TL;DR: Novel molecular methods have permitted outbreak strains to be traced back to their common source and have led to the first identification of virus in implicated vehicles of infection-water, shellfish, and foods contaminated both at their source and by food handlers.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cold Weather Seasonality of Gastroenteritis Associated with Norwalk-like Viruses
Anthony W. Mounts,Tamie Ando,Marion Koopmans,Joseph S. Bresee,Jacqueline S. Noel,Roger I. Glass +5 more
TL;DR: While transmission occurred year-round in most surveys, a cold weather peak was demonstrated in 11 of the 12 studies, which has important implications concerning their mode of transmission and for understanding the etiology of acute gastroenteritis in adults.