P
Philip A. Collender
Researcher at University of California, Berkeley
Publications - 26
Citations - 309
Philip A. Collender is an academic researcher from University of California, Berkeley. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Biology. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 18 publications receiving 171 citations. Previous affiliations of Philip A. Collender include Emory University & University of California.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Methods for Quantification of Soil-Transmitted Helminths in Environmental Media: Current Techniques and Recent Advances
TL;DR: It is concluded that methods for sampling and recovering STHs require substantial advances to provide reliable measurements for STH control and recent innovations in the use of automated image identification and developments in molecular genetic assays offer considerable promise for improving quantification and viability assessment.
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Modeling Biphasic Environmental Decay of Pathogens and Implications for Risk Analysis.
Andrew F. Brouwer,Marisa C. Eisenberg,Justin V. Remais,Philip A. Collender,Rafael Meza,Joseph N. S. Eisenberg +5 more
TL;DR: This work demonstrates that biphasic dynamics can arise through a number of plausible mechanisms, and examines the identifiability of a general model encompassing three such mechanisms: population heterogeneity, hardening off, and the existence of viable-but-not-culturable states.
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Modeling environmentally mediated rotavirus transmission: The role of temperature and hydrologic factors
Alicia N M Kraay,Andrew F. Brouwer,Nancy G. Lin,Philip A. Collender,Justin V. Remais,Joseph N. S. Eisenberg +5 more
TL;DR: The analysis suggests that water can affect incidence for larger communities that draw water from slow-moving or stagnant sources and is likely most important in cooler seasons, and that environmental transmission through water sources may partially explain the observed associations between temperature and rotavirus incidence.
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Early evidence of inactivated enterovirus 71 vaccine impact against hand, foot, and mouth disease in a major center of ongoing transmission in China, 2011-2018: a longitudinal surveillance study
Jennifer R. Head,Philip A. Collender,Joseph A Lewnard,Nicholas K. Skaff,Ling Li,Qu Cheng,Julia M Baker,Charles Li,Dehao Chen,Alison Ohringer,Song Liang,Changhong Yang,Alan Hubbard,Benjamin A. Lopman,Justin V. Remais +14 more
TL;DR: The first real-world evidence that programmatic vaccination against EV71 is effective against childhood HFMD is provided and an approach to detect early vaccine impact or intended consequences from surveillance data is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI
Prenatal and early-life exposure to the Great Chinese Famine increased the risk of tuberculosis in adulthood across two generations.
Qu Cheng,Rob Trangucci,Kristin N. Nelson,Wenjiang Fu,Philip A. Collender,Jennifer R. Head,Christopher M. Hoover,Nicholas K. Skaff,Ting Li,Xintong Li,Yue You,Li-Qun Fang,Song Liang,Changhong Yang,Jin’ge He,Jonathan L. Zelner,Justin V. Remais +16 more
TL;DR: Prenatal and early-life exposure to malnutrition may increase the risk of active PTB in the exposed generation and their offspring, with the intergenerational effect potentially due to both within-household transmission and increases in host susceptibility.