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Folorunso Oludayo Fasina
Researcher at Food and Agriculture Organization
Publications - 166
Citations - 2821
Folorunso Oludayo Fasina is an academic researcher from Food and Agriculture Organization. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Influenza A virus subtype H5N1. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 141 publications receiving 1985 citations. Previous affiliations of Folorunso Oludayo Fasina include United Nations & Mammal Research Institute.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Transmission dynamics and control of Ebola virus disease outbreak in Nigeria, July to September 2014.
Folorunso Oludayo Fasina,Aminu Shittu,D.D. Lazarus,Oyewale Tomori,Lone Simonsen,Lone Simonsen,Cécile Viboud,Gerardo Chowell,Gerardo Chowell +8 more
TL;DR: Results indicate that Nigeria’s quick and forceful implementation of control interventions was determinant in controlling the outbreak rapidly and avoiding a far worse scenario in this country.
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Molecular Diagnosis of African Swine Fever by a New Real-Time PCR Using Universal Probe Library
Jovita Fernández-Pinero,Carmina Gallardo,M. Elizalde,A. B. Robles,C. Gómez,Richard P. Bishop,Livio Heath,Emmanuel Couacy-Hymann,Folorunso Oludayo Fasina,V. Pelayo,Alejandro Soler,Marisa Arias +11 more
TL;DR: Validation experiments demonstrated that the UPL PCR technique was able to detect over 10% more positive samples than the real-time TaqMan PCR test recommended in the OIE manual, confirming its superior diagnostic sensitivity.
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Antibacterial and antibiofilm activity of acetone leaf extracts of nine under-investigated south African Eugenia and Syzygium (Myrtaceae) species and their selectivity indices.
I.M. Famuyide,A.O. Aro,Folorunso Oludayo Fasina,Folorunso Oludayo Fasina,Jacobus Nicolaas Eloff,Lyndy Joy McGaw +5 more
TL;DR: The plant species examined in this study had varying degrees of antibacterial activity against bacterial planktonic and biofilm forms with some having good activity against both forms and many extracts had relatively low cytotoxicity leading to reasonable selectivity indices.
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Plant extracts to control ticks of veterinary and medical importance: A review
TL;DR: Based on their wide use by rural livestock farmers, plant-based compounds may be a good source of effective acaricidal preparations either as an extract or as a source of new acar suicidal compounds.
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Towards a bottom-up understanding of antimicrobial use and resistance on the farm: A knowledge, attitudes, and practices survey across livestock systems in five African countries.
Mark A. Caudell,Alejandro Dorado-García,Suzanne Eckford,Chris Creese,Denis K. Byarugaba,Kofi Afakye,Tamara Chansa-Kabali,Folorunso Oludayo Fasina,Emmanuel Kabali,Stella Kiambi,Tabitha Kimani,Geoffrey Mainda,Peter Mangesho,Francis Chimpangu,Kululeko Dube,Bashiru Boi Kikimoto,Eric Koka,Tendai Mugara,Bachana Rubegwa,Samuel Swiswa +19 more
TL;DR: It is found that interventions to limit antimicrobial resistance should be founded upon a bottom-up understanding of antimicrobial use at the farm-level given limited input from animal health professionals and under-resourced regulatory capacities within most low- and middle-income countries.