M
Maeve K. Lalor
Researcher at Public Health England
Publications - 53
Citations - 2033
Maeve K. Lalor is an academic researcher from Public Health England. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tuberculosis & Vaccination. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 52 publications receiving 1759 citations. Previous affiliations of Maeve K. Lalor include University of London & University College London.
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English surveillance programme for antimicrobial utilisation and resistance (ESPAUR) 2010 to 2014: report 2015
Susan Hopkins,Berit Muller-Pebody,Rebecca Guy,Sarah Gerver,Dean Ironmonger,Richard Puleston,Miranda G. Loutet,Maeve K. Lalor,Jennifer Davidson,Tehreem Mohiyuddin,H Lucy Thomas,Hikaru Bolt,Antara Kundu,Katy Town,Martina Furegato,Hamish Mohammed,Michelle J Cole,Aura Andreason,Helen Fifer,Stephanie A. Chisholm,Gwenda Hughes,Katie Hopkins,Rachel Freeman,Neil Woodford,Graeme Rooney,David Ladenheim,Miroslava Mihalkova,Katherine L. Henderson,Diane Ashiru-Oredope,Christopher Fuller,Alex Bhattacharya,Peter Stephens,Mehdi Minaji,Emma L. Budd,Anna Sallis,Cliodna McNulty,Elizabeth Beech,Stuart Brown,Philip Howard,Alan P. Johnson +39 more
Journal ArticleDOI
Assessment of Mycobacterium tuberculosis transmission in Oxfordshire, UK, 2007–12, with whole pathogen genome sequences: an observational study
Timothy M Walker,Maeve K. Lalor,Agnieszka Broda,Agnieszka Broda,Luisa Saldana Ortega,Marcus Morgan,Lynne Parker,Sheila Churchill,Karen Bennett,Tanya Golubchik,Adam Giess,Carlos del Ojo Elias,Katie Jeffery,Ian C. J. W. Bowler,Ian F. Laurenson,Anne Barrett,Francis Drobniewski,Francis Drobniewski,Noel D. McCarthy,Laura F Anderson,Ibrahim Abubakar,Ibrahim Abubakar,H Lucy Thomas,Philip Monk,E. Grace Smith,A. Sarah Walker,A. Sarah Walker,Derrick W. Crook,Derrick W. Crook,Tim E. A. Peto,Tim E. A. Peto,Christopher P. Conlon +31 more
TL;DR: Although inward migration has contributed to the overall tuberculosis incidence, the findings suggest that most patients born in high-incidence countries reactivate latent infection acquired abroad and are not involved in local onward transmission.
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Immunogenicity of novel DosR regulon-encoded candidate antigens of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in three high-burden populations in Africa.
Gillian F. Black,Bonnie Thiel,Martin O. C. Ota,Shreemanta K. Parida,Richard A. Adegbola,W. Henry Boom,W. Henry Boom,Hazel M. Dockrell,Kees L. M. C. Franken,Annemiek H. Friggen,Philip C. Hill,Michèl R. Klein,Maeve K. Lalor,Harriet Mayanja,Gary K. Schoolnik,Kim Stanley,Karin Weldingh,Stefan H. E. Kaufmann,Gerhard Walzl,Tom H. M. Ottenhoff +19 more
TL;DR: Significant similarities in antigen recognition profiles between the three African population groups were found, but there were also disparities, which may stem from genetic differences between both pathogen and host populations.
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Insidious Risk of Severe Mycobacterium chimaera Infection in Cardiac Surgery Patients.
Meera Chand,Meera Chand,Meera Chand,Theresa Lamagni,Katharina Kranzer,Jessica Hedge,Ginny Moore,Simon Parks,Samuel Collins,Carlos del Ojo Elias,Nada Ahmed,Tim Brown,E. Grace Smith,E. Grace Smith,Peter Hoffman,Peter Kirwan,Brendan W. Mason,Alison Smith-Palmer,Philip Veal,Maeve K. Lalor,Allan Bennett,James T. Walker,Alicia Yeap,Antonio Isidro Carrion Martin,Antonio Isidro Carrion Martin,Gayle P. Dolan,Sonia Bhatt,Andrew Skingsley,Andre Charlett,David Pearce,Katherine Russell,Simon Kendall,Andrew A. Klein,Stephen Robins,Silke Schelenz,William Newsholme,Stephanie Thomas,Tim Collyns,Eleri Davies,Eleri Davies,Jim McMenamin,Lorraine Doherty,Tim E. A. Peto,Derrick W. Crook,Derrick W. Crook,Maria Zambon,Maria Zambon,Nick Phin +47 more
TL;DR: These investigations strengthen etiological evidence for the role of heater-coolers in transmission and raise the possibility of an ongoing, international point-source outbreak of invasive Mycobacterium chimaera in cardiothoracic surgery.
Journal ArticleDOI
Tuberculosis in migrants moving from high-incidence to low-incidence countries: a population-based cohort study of 519 955 migrants screened before entry to England, Wales, and Northern Ireland.
Robert W Aldridge,Dominik Zenner,Dominik Zenner,Peter J White,Peter J White,Elizabeth A. Williamson,Morris C Muzyamba,Morris C Muzyamba,Poonam Dhavan,Davide Mosca,H Lucy Thomas,H Lucy Thomas,Maeve K. Lalor,Maeve K. Lalor,Ibrahim Abubakar,Ibrahim Abubakar,Andrew Hayward +16 more
TL;DR: Migrants from countries with a high incidence of tuberculosis screened before being granted entry to low-incidence countries pose a negligible risk of onward transmission but are at increased risk of tuberculosis, which could potentially be prevented through identification and treatment of latent infection in close collaboration with a pre-entry screening programme.