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Iconographies supplémentaires de l'article : Factors involved in the aerosol transmission of infection and control of ventilation in healthcare premises

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TLDR
Recommendations are made to improve the control of aerosol-transmitted infections in hospitals as well as in the design and construction of future isolation facilities.
Abstract
Summary The epidemics of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in 2003 highlighted both short- and long-range transmission routes, i.e. between infected patients and healthcare workers, and between distant locations. With other infections such as tuberculosis, measles and chickenpox, the concept of aerosol transmission is so well accepted that isolation of such patients is the norm. With current concerns about a possible approaching influenza pandemic, the control of transmission via infectious air has become more important. Therefore, the aim of this review is to describe the factors involved in: (1) the generation of an infectious aerosol, (2) the transmission of infectious droplets or droplet nuclei from this aerosol, and (3) the potential for inhalation of such droplets or droplet nuclei by a susceptible host. On this basis, recommendations are made to improve the control of aerosol-transmitted infections in hospitals as well as in the design and construction of future isolation facilities.

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Room ventilation and the risk of airborne infection transmission in 3 health care settings within a large teaching hospital.

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Comparison of the incidence of influenza in relation to climate factors during 2000-2007 in five countries.

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Detection of antibiotic resistant Acinetobacter baumannii in various hospital environments: potential sources for transmission of Acinetobacter infections

TL;DR: Detection of antibiotic resistant A. baumannii in various samples revealed that hospital environments could act as a potential source for transmission of A. tournaisianii infections especially in ICUs.
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Airborne bacteria and antibiotic resistance genes in hospital rooms

TL;DR: Results obtained in this study suggest that bacteria from sink drains were not aerosolized in significant concentration, but they still remain a concern because of the risk of aerial transmission associated with their presence.
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Incidence of common respiratory viral infections related to climate factors in hospitalized children in Hong Kong.

TL;DR: Data from this study further reinforces the concept that the relationship between climate factors and respiratory virus incidence differ between subtropical/tropical and temperate countries.
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TL;DR: This updated and expanded edition now offers 297 chapters that cover the basic principles of diagnosis and management, major clinical syndromes, all important pathogenic microbes and the diseases they cause, plus a number of specialised topics useful to the practitioner.
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The numerical computation of turbulent flows

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Food-related illness and death in the United States.

TL;DR: Overall, foodborne diseases appear to cause more illnesses but fewer deaths than previously estimated.