. "Appendix B: Selected Bibliography." The Threat of Pandemic Influenza: Are We Ready? Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press, 2005.
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The Threat of Pandemic Influenza: Are We Ready? - Workshop Summary
IMPROVING PREPAREDNESS: SURVEILLANCE, PREDICTION, AND COMMUNICATION
Brunell PA, ed. 2004, February. Importance of Vaccinating Healthcare Workers Against Influenza. CME monograph from Infectious Diseases in Children. Selected articles: Eickhoff TC, Keys to compliance; Piedra PA, Time has come to make vaccination mandatory; The literature’s message; Glezen WP, Influenza past and present. [Online]. Available: http://idinchildren.com/monograph/0402/cmei.pdf [accessed June 8, 2004].
Cain KP, Blitz SG. 2004. Integration of clinical practice, publicity, and policy: A shot in the arm for influenza control. American Journal of Managed Care 10(1):11–12.
Davis MM, McMahon SR, Santoli JM, Schwartz B, Clark SJ. 2002. A national survey of physician practices regarding influenza vaccine. Journal of General Internal Medicine 17(9):670–676.
Fraser C, Riley S, Anderson RM, Ferguson NM. 2004. Factors that make an infectious disease outbreak controllable. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 101(16):6146–6151.
Gensheimer KF, Fukuda K, Brammer L, Cox N, Patriarca PA, Strikes RA. 2002. Preparing for pandemic influenza: The need for enhanced surveillance. Vaccine 20(Suppl 2): S63–S65.
Glass TA, Schoch-Spana M. 2002. Bioterrorism and the people: How to vaccinate a city against panic. Clinical Infectious Diseases 34(2):217–223.
Mooney JD, Holmes E, Christie P. 2002. Real-time modelling of influenza outbreaks: A linear regression analysis. Eurosurveillance Monthly 7(12):184–187. [Online]. Available: http://www.eurosurveillance.org/em/v07n12/0712-225.asp [accessed June 8, 2004).
Pavlin J. Epidemiologic Surveillance in Developing Countries. Global Emerging Infections System, U.S. Department of Defense.
Perdue ML. 2003. Molecular diagnostics in an insecure world. Avian Diseases 47(Suppl 3):1063–1068.
Schoch-Spana M. 2000. Implications of pandemic influenza for bioterrorism response. Clinical Infectious Diseases 31(6):1409–1413.
Schopflocher DP, Russell ML, Svenson LW, Thu-Ha N, Mazurenko I. 2004. Pandemic influenza planning: Using the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention FluAid software for small area estimation in the Canadian context. Annals of Epidemiology 14:73–76.
Shult PA, Kirk C. 2003. Laboratory-based surveillance for influenza: Role of the Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene. Wisconsin Medical Journal 102(6):26–30.
Simonsen L, Clarke MJ, Schonberger LB, Arden NH, Cox NJ, Fukuda K. 1998. Pandemic versus epidemic influenza mortality: A pattern of changing age distribution. Journal of Infectious Diseases 178(1):53–60.
Working Group on Governance Dilemmas in Bioterrorism Response. 2004. Leading during bioattacks and epidemics with the public’s trust and help. Biosecurity and Bioterrorism: Biodefense Strategy, Practice, and Science 2(1):25–40.