Pathogen Genomics & Public Health
CDC information: New tools in pathogen genomics are changing the landscape in the fight against infectious diseases
Driving forward infectious disease genomics in the UK: Public Health England to launch a pathogen genomics service, Christine McCartney, Dec 9
Pathogen Genomics
Pathogen Genomics for Public Health
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is well known for its work in monitoring, investigating, and controlling infectious diseases in the United States and worldwide. Genetic information from viruses, bacteria, and other infectious organisms has long played a crucial role in these efforts.
Advances in molecular technologies and bioinformatics have made it possible to examine pathogen genomes in much greater detail. Now, falling cost and turnaround time are bringing high-throughput genetic sequencing within reach for use by clinical and public health investigators.
Public health applications of pathogen genomics include:
- Diagnosing infection (Legionella; Plasmodium knowlesi)
- Investigating outbreaks (Listeria; HCAI)
- Describing transmission patterns (Tuberculosis; Dengue)
- Monitoring antimicrobial resistance (HIV; Salmonella)
- Developing interventions, including vaccines (Influenza; Influenza A)
OPHG blog posts on pathogen genomics:
Now watch this: Genomic epidemiology (September 6, 2012)
No genome is an island (January 12, 2012)
Genome vs. genome: E. coli sprouts in Germany (June 30, 2011)
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario