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Harold Kloeze

Researcher at Canadian Food Inspection Agency

Publications -  10
Citations -  106

Harold Kloeze is an academic researcher from Canadian Food Inspection Agency. The author has contributed to research in topics: Disease surveillance & National Animal Identification System. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 10 publications receiving 89 citations. Previous affiliations of Harold Kloeze include Public Health Agency of Canada & National Microbiology Laboratory.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Mass depopulation of laying hens in whole barns with liquid carbon dioxide: evaluation of welfare impact.

TL;DR: Evaluation of welfare costs and benefits suggest clear advantages over catching and transporting cull hens for slaughter, and results are being used to develop national protocols for whole barn depopulation of hens by CO(2) inhalation.
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Bioaerosol and surface sampling for the surveillance of influenza A virus in swine

TL;DR: Bioaerosol sampling using PTFE samplers is an effective hands-off approach for detecting influenza virus activity among swine and mobile data collection stands to be an invaluable tool in the field by allowing secure, real-time reporting of sample collection and results.
Journal Article

Mycoplasma felis pleuritis in two show-jumper horses.

TL;DR: Mycoplasma felis was identified as the cause of acute pleuritis in 2 show-jumping horses and a pneumonia detected in one of the horses resolved following a single drainage of pleural fluid and intravenous fluid, antibiotic, and analgesic therapy.
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Effective animal health disease surveillance using a network-enabled approach.

TL;DR: The genesis of CAHSN is described, its current capability and governance, and potential for future development are described, which include protecting public health and maintaining public confidence in the food supply.
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A Minimum Data Set of Animal Health Laboratory Data to allow for Collation and Analysis across Jurisdictions for the Purpose of Surveillance

TL;DR: A minimum data set consisting of 15 data elements originating from laboratory submissions and results was formulated by a national committee of epidemiologists in Canada for the purposes of disease reporting, disease detection and analysis to allow for voluntary collaboration and data sharing.