Last data update: Sep 23, 2024. (Total: 47723 publications since 2009)
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Query Trace: Pena RG [original query] |
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Initial public health laboratory response after Hurricane Maria - Puerto Rico, 2017
Concepcion-Acevedo J , Patel A , Luna-Pinto C , Pena RG , Cuevas Ruiz RI , Arbolay HR , Toro M , Deseda C , De Jesus VR , Ribot E , Gonzalez JQ , Rao G , De Leon Salazar A , Ansbro M , White BB , Hardy MC , Georgi JC , Stinnett R , Mercante AM , Lowe D , Martin H , Starks A , Metchock B , Johnston S , Dalton T , Joglar O , Stafford C , Youngblood M , Klein K , Lindstrom S , Berman L , Galloway R , Schafer IJ , Walke H , Stoddard R , Connelly R , McCaffery E , Rowlinson MC , Soroka S , Tranquillo DT , Gaynor A , Mangal C , Wroblewski K , Muehlenbachs A , Salerno RM , Lozier M , Sunshine B , Shapiro C , Rose D , Funk R , Pillai SK , O'Neill E . MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2018 67 (11) 333-336 Hurricane Maria made landfall in Puerto Rico on September 20, 2017, causing major damage to infrastructure and severely limiting access to potable water, electric power, transportation, and communications. Public services that were affected included operations of the Puerto Rico Department of Health (PRDOH), which provides critical laboratory testing and surveillance for diseases and other health hazards. PRDOH requested assistance from CDC for the restoration of laboratory infrastructure, surveillance capacity, and diagnostic testing for selected priority diseases, including influenza, rabies, leptospirosis, salmonellosis, and tuberculosis. PRDOH, CDC, and the Association of Public Health Laboratories (APHL) collaborated to conduct rapid needs assessments and, with assistance from the CDC Foundation, implement a temporary transport system for shipping samples from Puerto Rico to the continental United States for surveillance and diagnostic and confirmatory testing. This report describes the initial laboratory emergency response and engagement efforts among federal, state, and nongovernmental partners to reestablish public health laboratory services severely affected by Hurricane Maria. The implementation of a sample transport system allowed Puerto Rico to reinitiate priority infectious disease surveillance and laboratory testing for patient and public health interventions, while awaiting the rebuilding and reinstatement of PRDOH laboratory services. |
Human rabies - Puerto Rico, 2015
Styczynski A , Tran C , Dirlikov E , Zapata MR , Ryff K , Petersen B , Sanchez AC , Mayshack M , Martinez LC , Condori R , Ellison J , Orciari L , Yager P , Pena RG , Sanabria D , Velazquez JC , Thomas D , Garcia BR . MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2017 65 (52) 1474-1476 On December 1, 2015, the Puerto Rico Department of Health (PRDH) was notified by a local hospital of a suspected human rabies case. The previous evening, a Puerto Rican man aged 54 years arrived at the emergency department with fever, difficulty swallowing, hand paresthesia, cough, and chest tightness. The next morning the patient left against medical advice but returned to the emergency department in the afternoon with worsening symptoms. The patient's wife reported that he had been bitten by a mongoose during the first week of October, but had not sought care for the bite. While being transferred to the intensive care unit, the patient went into cardiac arrest and died. On December 3, rabies was confirmed from specimens collected during autopsy. PRDH conducted an initial rapid risk assessment, and five family members were started on rabies postexposure prophylaxis (PEP). |
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