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martes, 31 de diciembre de 2013
viernes, 13 de diciembre de 2013
VIDEO: Películas recomendadas para estas vacaciones
jueves, 5 de diciembre de 2013
Hepatitis C Virus Maintains Infectivity for Weeks
ABSTRACT
Background: Healthcare workers may come into contact with fomites containing
infectious HCV during preparation of plasma, or following placement or removal of
venous lines. Similarly, injection drugs users may come into contact with fomites.
Hypothesizing that prolonged viability of HCV in fomites may contribute significantly to
incidence; we determined the longevity of virus infectivity and the effectiveness of
antiseptics.
Methods: We determined the volume of drops misplaced during transfer of serum or
plasma. Aliquots equivalent to the maximum drop volume of plasma spiked with 2a
HCV reporter virus were loaded into 24-well plates. Plates were stored uncovered at three
temperatures: 4°, 22°, and 37°C for up to 6 weeks before viral infectivity was determined
in a microculture assay.
Results: The mean volume of an accidental drop was 29 μl (min - max of 20 - 33 μl). At
storage temperatures 4° and 22°C, we recovered viable HCV from the low titer spots for
up to 6 weeks of storage. The rank order of HCV virucidal activity of commonly used
antiseptics was bleach (1:10) > cavicide (1:10) > ethanol (70%).
Conclusions:
The hypothesis of potential transmission from fomites was supported by the experimental
results. The anti-HCV activity of commercial antiseptics varied.
Reference
Elijah Paintsil1, Mawuena Binka2, Amisha Patel2, Brett D. Lindenbach3, and Robert Heimer2. Hepatitis C Virus Maintains Infectivity for Weeks after Drying on Inanimate Surfaces at Room Temperature: Implications for Risks of Transmission. JID 2013.
http://jid.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2013/11/22/infdis.jit648.full.pdf
miércoles, 4 de diciembre de 2013
Global Health Risks (2009)
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Global Health Risks (2009)
ISBN 978 92 4 156387 1
© World Health Organization 2009
domingo, 24 de noviembre de 2013
#REGENESIS: TV SERIES <= No se la pierdan #Feliz2014
Estas navidades, en las que tendremos mucho tiempo, les recomiento ver la serie de TV "Regenesis".
David Sandstrom es un científico, genetista, virólogo/microbiólogo, jefe de un laboratorio que se dedica a investigar las causas de diversas enfermedades misteriosas, y que originan la muerte de diversas personas. Una combinación de serie policíaca/forense con tonos de microbiología. Aunque cuenta con algunas inexactitudes científicas, pero considerando el año en que empezó a producirse, logra captar la atención del espectador. No se la pueden perder.
jueves, 21 de noviembre de 2013
Responsible life sciences research for global health security #DURC
Responsible life sciences research for global health security #DURC
Publication details
Publication date: 2010
Languages: English
WHO reference number: WHO/HSE/GAR/BDP/2010.2
#Book : People, pathogens and our planet Vol. 2
This report analyzes and assesses the benefits and the costs of control of an important group of contagious diseases. Zoonotic diseases are caused by pathogens that can infect both animals and humans, resulting in disease outbreaks, including epidemics in humans and epizootics in animals. These diseases account for 70 percent of emerging infectious diseases. In the absence of timely disease control, zoonotic pathogens can cause pandemics, with potentially catastrophic impacts that are global in scale. The report also touches on food safety, but does not cover other risks and opportunities at the interfaces between humans, animals, and the ecosystem, such as food security and pollution. Limiting its focus to this topic matter has important advantages, particularly with respect to immediate relevance and relative simplicity.
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miércoles, 20 de noviembre de 2013
#Book : People, pathogens and our planet Vol. 1
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DETAILS
- 2012/06/01
- Other Agricultural Study
- 69145
- 1 of 1
- World;
- The World Region;
- 2012/06/11
- People, pathogens and our planet : the economics of one health
sábado, 9 de noviembre de 2013
Sesión de entrenamiento en Capasits/COESIDA en #Oaxaca #bioseguridad
jueves, 7 de noviembre de 2013
Infecciones con Salmonella en laboratorio de microbiología universitario #LAI
On May 15, the Health and Environmental Testing Laboratory (HETL) determined that the clinical Salmonella isolates from stool specimens provided by outside hospital laboratories from both patients were indistinguishable by pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) analysis from a specimen used by the students during the microbiology class. The clinical isolates and laboratory class isolate all had a PFGE pattern indistinguishable from that of bacteria isolated during a national Salmonella Typhimurium outbreak in 2010 that was associated with clinical and teaching microbiology laboratories (1). No cases were reported from Maine during the 2010 outbreak. CONTINUA=>
lunes, 4 de noviembre de 2013
¡Los hospitales no se incendian!
¡Los hospitales no se incendian! Guía hospitalaria para la prevención de incendios y evacuación
Esta guía ha sido creada para poner de relieve la vulnerabilidad de los hospitales a los incendios. Es necesario que se adopten todas las medidas posibles para minimizar el riesgo de incendios en hospitales y asegurar la evacuación. El documento se puede aplicar en hospitales que han sido reforzados para mejorar la seguridad en cuanto a incendios, así como en nuevas instalaciones en proyecto.
El documento está dividido en cuatro secciones principales a considerarse en caso de incendio en hospitales, a saber, prevención, supresión, evacuación y simulacros de capacitación.
REFERENCIA:
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lunes, 21 de octubre de 2013
Antimicrobial Resistance in the Food Chain: A Review
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| Overview of horizontal gene transfer in food products (For complete image click HERE). |
REFERENCIA:
Verraes C. Antimicrobial Resistance in the Food Chain: A Review. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2013 July; 10(7): 2643–2669.
viernes, 18 de octubre de 2013
Influence of temperature and organic load on chemical disinfection
This study evaluated the influence of temperature and organic load on the effectiveness of domestic bleach (DB), Surface Decontamination Foam (SDF), and Virkon in inactivating Geobacillus stearothermophilus spores, which are a surrogate for Bacillus anthracis spores. The spores were suspended in light or heavy organic preparations and the suspension was applied to stainless steel carrier disks. The dried spore inoculum was covered with the disinfectants and the disks were then incubated at various temperatures. At −20°C, the 3 disinfectants caused less than a 2.0 log10 reduction of spores in both organic preparations during a 24-h test period. At 4°C, the DB caused a 4.4 log10 reduction of spores in light organic preparations within 2 h, which was about 3 log10 higher than what was achieved with SDF or Virkon. In heavy organic preparations, after 24 h at 4°C the SDF had reduced the spore count by 4.5 log10, which was about 2 log10 higher than for DB or Virkon. In general, the disinfectants were most effective at 23°C but a 24-h contact time was required for SDF and Virkon to reduce spore counts in both organic preparations by at least 5.5 log10. Comparable disinfecting activity with DB only occurred with the light organic load. In summary, at temperatures as low as 4°C, DB was the most effective disinfectant, inactivating spores within 2 h on surfaces with a light organic load, whereas SDF produced the greatest reduction of spores within 24 h on surfaces with a heavy organic load.
REFERENCE:
Jiewen Guan, Maria Chan, Brian W. Brooks, and Liz Rohonczy. Influence of temperature and organic load on chemical disinfection of Geobacillus steareothermophilus spores, a surrogate for Bacillus anthracis. Can J Vet Res. 2013 April; 77(2): 100–104.
jueves, 17 de octubre de 2013
Histoplasmosis: Protecting Workers at Risk
Outbreaks of histoplasmosis have shared similar circumstances: People who did not know the health risks of breathing in the spores of H. capsulatum became ill and sometimes caused others nearby to become ill when they disturbed contaminated soil or accumulations of bird or bat manure. Because they were unaware of the hazard, they did not take protective measures that could have prevented illness.
This booklet will help prevent such exposures by serving as a guide for safety and health professionals, environmental consultants, supervisors, and others responsible for the safety and health of those working near material contaminated with H. capsulatum. Activities that pose a health risk to workers at these sites include disturbance of soil at an active or inactive bird roost or poultry house, excavation in regions where this fungus is endemic, and removal of bat or bird manure from buildings.
REFERENCE:
Histoplasmosis: Protecting Workers at Risk. NIOSH/CDC 2003
miércoles, 16 de octubre de 2013
Technologies to Enable Autonomous Detection for BioWatch
lunes, 14 de octubre de 2013
Oct 15, Día Mundial del Lavado de Manos #IWashMyHands
Referencias:
Global Hand Washing
UNICEF
viernes, 11 de octubre de 2013
Fire Exposures of Fire Fighter Self-Contained Breathing Apparatus Facepiece Lenses
REFERENCE
Fire Exposures of Fire Fighter Self-Contained Breathing Apparatus Facepiece Lenses
National Institute of Standards and Technology Technical Note 1724
Natl. Inst. Stand. Technol. Tech. Note 1724, 45 pages (November 2011)
CODEN: NSPUE2
jueves, 10 de octubre de 2013
The Handwashing Handbook
TheHandwashingHandbook:A guide for developing a hygiene promotion programto increase handwashing with soap
miércoles, 9 de octubre de 2013
Volcanoes: Protecting the Public´s Health
REFERENCIA:
Volcanoes: Protecting the Public’s Health
lunes, 7 de octubre de 2013
Advancing infection control in dental care settings
Background and Overview. The authors set out to identify factors associated with implementation by U.S. dentists of four practices first recommended in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Guidelines for Infection Control in Dental Health-Care Settings—2003.
Methods. In 2008, the authors surveyed a stratified random sample of 6,825 U.S. dentists. The response rate was 49 percent. The authors gathered data regarding dentists’ demographic and practice characteristics, attitudes toward infection control, sources of instruction regarding the guidelines and knowledge about the need to use sterile water for surgical procedures. Then they assessed the impact of those factors on the implementation of four recommendations: having an infection control coordinator, maintaining dental unit water quality, documenting percutaneous injuries and using safer medical devices, such as safer syringes and scalpels. The authors conducted bivariate analyses and proportional odds modeling.
Results. Responding dentists in 34 percent of practices had implemented none or one of the four recommendations, 40 percent had implemented two of the recommendations and 26 percent had implemented three or four of the recommendations. The likelihood of implementation was higher among dentists who acknowledged the importance of infection control, had practiced dentistry for less than 30 years, had received more continuing dental education credits in infection control, correctly identified more surgical procedures that require the use of sterile water, worked in larger practices and had at least three sources of instruction regarding the guidelines. Dentists with practices in the South Atlantic, Middle Atlantic or East South Central U.S. Census divisions were less likely to have complied.
Conclusions. Implementation of the four recommendations varied among U.S. dentists. Strategies targeted at raising awareness of the importance of infection control, increasing continuing education requirements and developing multiple modes of instruction may increase implementation of current and future Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines.
REFERENCE:
Jennifer L. Cleveland, et al. Advancing infection control in dental care settings. JADA 2012;143(10):1127-1138.
viernes, 4 de octubre de 2013
StarTalkRadio: Zombie Apocalypse (Part 2)
45 mins.
miércoles, 2 de octubre de 2013
How to choose a suit for a BSL4 laboratory
REFERENCIA:
Kümin D, Krebs C & Wick P. How to choose a suit for a BSL4 laboratory- The approach taken at Spiez Laboratory. Applied Biosafety 2011. Vol. 16, No. 2, p94-102
lunes, 30 de septiembre de 2013
Intervención de laboratorios y bancos de sangre en situaciones de desastre
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| ISBN 92 75 32380 1 OPS/HSP/HSE/08-2001 |
• La confirmación diagnóstica de las enfermedades transmisibles de alta mortalidad.
• La disponibilidad de exámenes básicos para el manejo de heridos.
• La provisión oportuna de sangre segura.
La presente guía pretende sensibilizar y orientar a las autoridades de salud, directores y técnicos de laboratorios y bancos de sangre en la identificación de responsabilidades y funciones de estos servicios ante situaciones de desastres, basándose en prioridades, necesidades y capacidad de respuesta inmediata local. La incorporación de actividades de mitigación y reducción de vulnerabilidad, rehabilitación y reorganización de los servicios en los planes de contingencia permitirá una mejor respuesta de los servicios de salud posterior a los desastres.
REFERENCIA:
Intervención de laboratorios y bancos de sangre en situaciones de desastre
viernes, 27 de septiembre de 2013
StarTalkRadio: Zombie Apocalypse (Part 1)
45 mins.
miércoles, 25 de septiembre de 2013
Evaluation of the Operator Protection Factors Offered by Positive Pressure Air Suit
REFERENCE


















