C
Charles E. Rupprecht
Researcher at Wistar Institute
Publications - 484
Citations - 29552
Charles E. Rupprecht is an academic researcher from Wistar Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Rabies & Rabies virus. The author has an hindex of 86, co-authored 475 publications receiving 27058 citations. Previous affiliations of Charles E. Rupprecht include United States Department of Health and Human Services & Global Alliance for Rabies Control.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Additional Progress in the Development and Application of a Direct, Rapid Immunohistochemical Test for Rabies Diagnosis.
Charles E. Rupprecht,Zhiquan Xiang,Alexandre Servat,Richard Franka,Jordona D. Kirby,Hildegund C.J. Ertl +5 more
TL;DR: The direct rapid immunohistochemical test (DRIT) appears to be a suitable alternative to the FAT for use in lyssavirus diagnosis.
Journal Article
Human rabies - Missouri, 2008.
H. L. Pue,George Turabelidze,S. L. Patrick,A. Grim,C. Bell,V. Reese,R. Basilan,Charles E. Rupprecht,K. Robertson +8 more
TL;DR: Health-care providers should maintain a high clinical suspicion for rabies in patients with a recent animal bite history and unexplained encephalitis in patients in Missouri, where a man aged 55 years was bitten by a bat and died on November 30.
Journal ArticleDOI
Travel vaccination for rabies.
TL;DR: Travelers to countries where rabies is prevalent should balance the cost and inconvenience of immunization to the benefits of rabies pre-exposure vaccination.
Journal ArticleDOI
Priorities in applied research to ensure programmatic success in the global elimination of canine rabies.
TL;DR: The objective was to concentrate upon those salient improvements to extant tools and methods over the next five years which could assist and simplify the task for both those developing countries that have already begun the process, as well as other localities in the earlier stages of consideration.
Journal ArticleDOI
Towards Canine Rabies Elimination in Cebu, Philippines: Assessment of Health Economic Data
L. M. Miranda,L. M. Miranda,Mary Elizabeth Miranda,Mary Elizabeth Miranda,B. Hatch,B. Hatch,R. Deray,Stephanie A. Shwiff,M. C. Roces,Charles E. Rupprecht +9 more
TL;DR: Analysis of dog vaccination and human PEP costs for dog bite patients in a highly urbanized area and a low‐income rural municipality in Cebu Province, Philippines, from 2010 to 2012 indicated that eliminating rabies in dogs through mass vaccination is more cost‐effective than treating rabies exposures in humans.