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Kirsten St. George

Researcher at New York State Department of Health

Publications -  124
Citations -  9121

Kirsten St. George is an academic researcher from New York State Department of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Virus & Influenza A virus. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 104 publications receiving 8006 citations. Previous affiliations of Kirsten St. George include University of Pittsburgh & Wadsworth Center.

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Antigenic and Genetic Characteristics of Swine-Origin 2009 A(H1N1) Influenza Viruses Circulating in Humans

Rebecca Garten, +62 more
- 10 Jul 2009 - 
TL;DR: The lack of similarity between the 2009 A(H1N1) virus and its nearest relatives indicates that its gene segments have been circulating undetected for an extended period as mentioned in this paper.
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Single-Reaction Genomic Amplification Accelerates Sequencing and Vaccine Production for Classical and Swine Origin Human Influenza A Viruses

TL;DR: A multisegment reverse transcription-PCR approach that simultaneously amplifies eight genomic RNA segments, irrespective of virus subtype is developed and used to rescue a contemporary H3N2 virus and a swine origin H1N1 virus directly from human swab specimens.
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Infections With Oseltamivir-Resistant Influenza A(H1N1) Virus in the United States

TL;DR: Oseltamivir-resistant A(H1N1) viruses circulated widely in the United States during the 2007-2008 influenza season, appeared to be unrelated to oseltAMivir use, and appeared to cause illness similar to oselstamIVir-susceptible A( H1N 1) viruses.
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Whole-Genome Analysis of Human Influenza A Virus Reveals Multiple Persistent Lineages and Reassortment among Recent H3N2 Viruses

TL;DR: A phylogenetic analysis of 156 complete genomes of human H3N2 influenza A viruses collected between 1999 and 2004 from New York State, United States demonstrated that multiple lineages can co-circulate, persist, and reassort in epidemiologically significant ways, and underscore the importance of genomic analyses for future influenza surveillance.