Selected article for: "co detection and patient detection"

Author: Lindsay Meyers; Christine C. Ginocchio; Aimie N. Faucett; Frederick S. Nolte; Per H. Gesteland; Amy Leber; Diane Janowiak; Virginia Donovan; Jennifer Dien Bard; Silvia Spitzer; Kathleen A. Stellrecht; Hossein Salimnia; Rangaraj Selvarangan; Stefan Juretschko; Judy A. Daly; Jeremy C. Wallentine; Kristy Lindsey; Franklin Moore; Sharon L. Reed; Maria Aguero-Rosenfeld; Paul D. Fey; Gregory A. Storch; Steve J. Melnick; Christine C. Robinson; Jennifer F. Meredith; Camille V. Cook; Robert K. Nelson; Jay D. Jones; Samuel V. Scarpino; Benjamin M. Althouse; Kirk M. Ririe; Bradley A. Malin; Mark A. Poritz
Title: Automated collection of pathogen-specific diagnostic data for real-time syndromic epidemiological studies
  • Document date: 2017_7_31
  • ID: iisqysqm_28
    Snippet: As previously observed [66] , the viruses that share the winter seasonality of influenza demonstrate annual or biennial behavior. It is possible that the viruses that share an influenza- Detection of multiple respiratory viruses in the same patient has been reported before. In the 415 Trend dataset the rate of dual and triple co-detections was approximately 7.7 %, with HRV/EV as the organism most commonly observed in a co-detection. Some viruses,.....
    Document: As previously observed [66] , the viruses that share the winter seasonality of influenza demonstrate annual or biennial behavior. It is possible that the viruses that share an influenza- Detection of multiple respiratory viruses in the same patient has been reported before. In the 415 Trend dataset the rate of dual and triple co-detections was approximately 7.7 %, with HRV/EV as the organism most commonly observed in a co-detection. Some viruses, such as ADV and

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