scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

International Military Sports Council

About: International Military Sports Council is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Malaria. The organization has 608 authors who have published 763 publications receiving 17446 citations. The organization is also known as: Conseil International du Sport Militaire & IMSC.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Ting Shi1, David A. McAllister2, Katherine L. O'Brien3, Eric A. F. Simões4, Shabir A. Madhi5, Bradford D. Gessner, Fernando P. Polack, Evelyn Balsells1, Sozinho Acácio6, Claudia Aguayo, Issifou Alassani, Asad Ali7, Martin Antonio8, Shally Awasthi9, Juliet O. Awori10, Eduardo Azziz-Baumgartner11, Eduardo Azziz-Baumgartner12, Henry C. Baggett11, Vicky L. Baillie5, Angel Balmaseda, Alfredo Barahona, Sudha Basnet13, Sudha Basnet14, Quique Bassat6, Quique Bassat15, Wilma Basualdo, Godfrey Bigogo10, Louis Bont16, Robert F. Breiman17, W. Abdullah Brooks12, W. Abdullah Brooks3, Shobha Broor18, Nigel Bruce19, Dana Bruden11, Philippe Buchy20, Stuart Campbell1, Phyllis Carosone-Link20, Mandeep S. Chadha21, James Chipeta22, Monidarin Chou23, Wilfrido Clara11, Cheryl Cohen24, Cheryl Cohen5, Elizabeth de Cuellar, Duc Anh Dang, Budragchaagiin Dash-Yandag, Maria Deloria-Knoll3, Mukesh Dherani19, Tekchheng Eap, Bernard E. Ebruke8, Marcela Echavarria, Carla Cecília de Freitas Lázaro Emediato, Rodrigo Fasce, Daniel R. Feikin11, Luzhao Feng25, Angela Gentile26, Aubree Gordon27, Doli Goswami3, Doli Goswami12, Sophie Goyet20, Michelle J. Groome5, Natasha B. Halasa28, Siddhivinayak Hirve, Nusrat Homaira29, Nusrat Homaira12, Stephen R. C. Howie8, Stephen R. C. Howie30, Stephen R. C. Howie31, Jorge Jara32, Imane Jroundi15, Cissy B. Kartasasmita, Najwa Khuri-Bulos33, Karen L. Kotloff34, Anand Krishnan18, Romina Libster35, Romina Libster28, Olga Lopez, Marilla G. Lucero36, Florencia Lución26, Socorro Lupisan36, Debora N. Marcone, John P. McCracken32, Mario Mejia, Jennifer C. Moïsi, Joel M. Montgomery11, David P. Moore5, Cinta Moraleda15, Jocelyn Moyes24, Jocelyn Moyes5, Patrick K. Munywoki10, Patrick K. Munywoki37, Kuswandewi Mutyara, Mark P. Nicol38, D. James Nokes39, D. James Nokes10, Pagbajabyn Nymadawa40, Maria Tereza da Costa Oliveira, Histoshi Oshitani41, Nitin Pandey9, Gláucia Paranhos-Baccalà42, Lia Neu Phillips17, Valentina Picot42, Mustafizur Rahman12, Mala Rakoto-Andrianarivelo, Zeba A Rasmussen43, Barbara Rath44, Annick Robinson, Candice Romero, Graciela Russomando45, Vahid Salimi46, Pongpun Sawatwong11, Nienke M Scheltema16, Brunhilde Schweiger47, J. Anthony G. Scott48, J. Anthony G. Scott10, Phil Seidenberg49, Kunling Shen50, Rosalyn J. Singleton11, Rosalyn J. Singleton51, Viviana Sotomayor, Tor A. Strand52, Tor A. Strand14, Agustinus Sutanto, Mariam Sylla, Milagritos D. Tapia34, Somsak Thamthitiwat11, Elizabeth Thomas43, Rafal Tokarz53, Claudia Turner54, Marietjie Venter55, Sunthareeya Waicharoen56, Jianwei Wang57, Wanitda Watthanaworawit54, Lay-Myint Yoshida58, Hongjie Yu25, Heather J. Zar38, Harry Campbell1, Harish Nair59, Harish Nair1 
University of Edinburgh1, University of Glasgow2, Johns Hopkins University3, University of Colorado Boulder4, University of the Witwatersrand5, International Military Sports Council6, Aga Khan University7, Medical Research Council8, King George's Medical University9, Kenya Medical Research Institute10, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention11, International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh12, Tribhuvan University13, University of Bergen14, University of Barcelona15, Utrecht University16, Emory University17, All India Institute of Medical Sciences18, University of Liverpool19, Boston Children's Hospital20, National Institute of Virology21, University of Zambia22, University of Health Sciences Antigua23, National Health Laboratory Service24, Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention25, Austral University26, University of Michigan27, Vanderbilt University28, University of New South Wales29, University of Auckland30, University of Otago31, Universidad del Valle de Guatemala32, University of Jordan33, University of Maryland, Baltimore34, National Scientific and Technical Research Council35, Research Institute for Tropical Medicine36, Pwani University College37, University of Cape Town38, University of Warwick39, Academy of Medical Sciences, United Kingdom40, Tohoku University41, École normale supérieure de Lyon42, John E. Fogarty International Center43, Charité44, Universidad Nacional de Asunción45, Tehran University of Medical Sciences46, Robert Koch Institute47, University of London48, University of New Mexico49, Capital Medical University50, Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium51, Innlandet Hospital Trust52, Columbia University53, Mahidol University54, University of Pretoria55, Thailand Ministry of Public Health56, Peking Union Medical College57, Nagasaki University58, Public Health Foundation of India59
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors estimated the incidence and hospital admission rate of RSV-associated acute lower respiratory infection (RSV-ALRI) in children younger than 5 years stratified by age and World Bank income regions.

1,470 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe anomalous scaling in terms of multifractal objects, defined by a measure whose scaling properties are characterized by a family of singularities, which are identified by a scaling exponent.

762 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Higher, more frequent, or prolonged dosage regimens should now be evaluated in very young children, particularly if malnourished, and in patients with hyperparasitemia, as well as patients in very low transmission intensity areas with emerging parasite resistance.
Abstract: Background: Achieving adequate antimalarial drug exposure is essential for curing malaria. Day 7 blood or plasma lumefantrine concentrations provide a simple measure of drug exposure that correlates well with artemether-lumefantrine efficacy. However, the 'therapeutic' day 7 lumefantrine concentration threshold needs to be defined better, particularly for important patient and parasite sub-populations. Methods: The WorldWide Antimalarial Resistance Network (WWARN) conducted a large pooled analysis of individual pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic data from patients treated with artemether-lumefantrine for uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria, to define therapeutic day 7 lumefantrine concentrations and identify patient factors that substantially alter these concentrations. A systematic review of PubMed, Embase, Google Scholar, ClinicalTrials.gov and conference proceedings identified all relevant studies. Risk of bias in individual studies was evaluated based on study design, methodology and missing data. Results: Of 31 studies identified through a systematic review, 26 studies were shared with WWARN and 21 studies with 2,787 patients were included. Recrudescence was associated with low day 7 lumefantrine concentrations (HR 1.59 (95 % CI 1.36 to 1.85) per halving of day 7 concentrations) and high baseline parasitemia (HR 1.87 (95 % CI 1.22 to 2.87) per 10-fold increase). Adjusted for mg/kg dose, day 7 concentrations were lowest in very young children (98 % cure rates (if parasitemia <135,000/μL). Conclusions: Current artemether-lumefantrine dosing recommendations achieve day 7 lumefantrine concentrations ≥200 ng/ml and high cure rates in most uncomplicated malaria patients. Three groups are at increased risk of treatment failure: very young children (particularly those underweight-for-age); patients with high parasitemias; and patients in very low transmission intensity areas with emerging parasite resistance. In these groups, adherence and treatment response should be monitored closely. Higher, more frequent, or prolonged dosage regimens should now be evaluated in very young children, particularly if malnourished, and in patients with hyperparasitemia.

445 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that iNTS disease is in part an epidemic in sub-Saharan Africa caused by highly related Salmonella Typhimurium lineages that may have occupied new niches associated with a compromised human population and antibiotic treatment.
Abstract: A highly invasive form of non-typhoidal Salmonella (iNTS) disease has recently been documented in many countries in sub-Saharan Africa. The most common Salmonella enterica serovar causing this disease is Typhimurium (Salmonella Typhimurium). We applied whole-genome sequence-based phylogenetic methods to define the population structure of sub-Saharan African invasive Salmonella Typhimurium isolates and compared these to global Salmonella Typhimurium populations. Notably, the vast majority of sub-Saharan invasive Salmonella Typhimurium isolates fell within two closely related, highly clustered phylogenetic lineages that we estimate emerged independently ∼52 and ∼35 years ago in close temporal association with the current HIV pandemic. Clonal replacement of isolates from lineage I by those from lineage II was potentially influenced by the use of chloramphenicol for the treatment of iNTS disease. Our analysis suggests that iNTS disease is in part an epidemic in sub-Saharan Africa caused by highly related Salmonella Typhimurium lineages that may have occupied new niches associated with a compromised human population and antibiotic treatment.

346 citations


Authors

Showing all 608 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Pedro L. Alonso7133523775
Rosario N. Mantegna6226820543
Quique Bassat6142219713
Rosario Fazio5945017990
John J. Aponte5615215159
Clara Menéndez562949161
Angelo Vulpiani5438416220
Bernhard A. Schrefler5232610526
Pietro Siciliano513869000
Jaume Ordi5125811217
Manuel G. Velarde5142710184
Miguel A. Lanaspa481739085
Sheikh A. Akbar451928675
Llorenç Quintó441537001
Inacio Mandomando441649166
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
University of London
88K papers, 4M citations

82% related

Imperial College London
209.1K papers, 9.3M citations

81% related

Uppsala University
107.5K papers, 4.2M citations

81% related

Centre national de la recherche scientifique
382.4K papers, 13.6M citations

80% related

Osaka University
185.6K papers, 5.1M citations

80% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202168
202051
201952
201851
201746
201641