Laurene Mascola’s research while affiliated with Department of Public Health - Los Angeles County and other places

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Publications (4)


West Nile Fever in Los Angeles, 2004: A Follow-Up Study of Physical, Cognitive and Functional Factors
  • Poster
  • File available

April 2018

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34 Reads

Shobita Rajagopalan

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Laurene Mascola

Study Objective: To study the relationship between age and duration of symptoms, and overall physical, cognitive, and functional health among WNF cases.

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Figure 1. Brucella Species Identified (N=25) 
Figure 2. Capture Tim es and Com ponents by Race, Risk Factors, and Sym ptom s 
Table 3 . 
Factors Leading to Prolonged Capture Times for Brucellosis Case Reports in Los Angeles County(2001-2005)

April 2018

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42 Reads

Study Objectives: 1) Review demographics, symptoms and risk factors of naturally occurring brucellosis cases to characterize cases reported to LACDHS.  2) Measure average case capture time, defined as the time from symptoms onset to report of case to health department case database.  3) Examine reporting practices of clinicians, hospitals and labs by reviewing the state’s hospital discharge database, mortality records, and the LACDHS database.


Harnessing Syndromic Surveillance Emergency Department Data to Monitor Health Impacts During the 2015 Special Olympics World Games

July 2017

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8 Reads

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15 Citations

Public Health Reports

Introduction: Mass gatherings that attract a large international presence may cause or amplify point-source outbreaks of emerging infectious disease. The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health customized its syndromic surveillance system to detect increased syndrome-specific utilization of emergency departments (EDs) and other medical encounters coincident to the 2015 Special Olympics World Games. Materials and methods: We queried live databases containing data on ED visits, California Poison Control System calls, and Los Angeles County coroner-investigated deaths for increases in daily counts from July 19 to August 6, 2015. We chose syndrome categories based on the potential for disease outbreaks common to international travel and dormitory settings, morbidity amplified by high temperatures, and bioterrorism threats inherent to mass gatherings. We performed line-list reviews and trend analyses of total, syndrome-specific, and region-specific daily counts, using cumulative sum-based signals. We also piloted a novel strategy of requesting that ED registrars proactively tag Special Olympics attendees in chief complaint data fields. Results: The syndromic surveillance system showed that the 2015 Special Olympics did not generate large-scale acute morbidities leading to detectable stress on local EDs. We recruited 10 hospitals for proactive patient tagging, from which 16 Special Olympics attendees were detected; these patients reported various symptoms, such as injury, vomiting, and syncope. Practice implications: As an enhancement to traditional syndromic surveillance, proactive patient tagging can illuminate potential epidemiologic links among patients in challenging syndromic surveillance applications, such as mass gatherings. Syndromic surveillance has the potential to enhance ED patient polling and reporting of exposure, symptom, and other epidemiologic case definition criteria to public health agencies in near-real time.


FIGURE 3. Percentage of daily smokers* aged ≥18 years, by number of cigarettes smoked per day — National Health Interview Survey, United States, 2005–2014  
FIGURE. Congenital syphilis (CS) rate* among infants aged <1 year and rate of primary and secondary (P&S) syphilis among women † — United States, 2008–2014 §  
FIGURE. Estimated number of measles deaths and number of deaths averted by measles vaccination — worldwide, 2000–2014  
FIGURE. Estimated number of children who did not receive 3 doses of diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis vaccine (DTP3) during the first year of life among 10 countries with the largest number of incompletely vaccinated children and cumulative percentage of all incompletely vaccinated children worldwide accounted for by these 10 countries, 2014  
Meningococcal Disease Among Men Who Have Sex with Men — United States, January 2012–June 2015

November 2015

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150 Reads

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31 Citations

MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report

Since 2012, three clusters of serogroup C meningococcal disease among men who have sex with men (MSM) have been reported in the United States. During 2012, 13 cases of meningococcal disease among MSM were reported by the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (1); over a 5-month period during 2012–2013, the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health reported four cases among MSM; and during May–June 2015, the Chicago Department of Public Health reported seven cases of meningococcal disease among MSM in the greater Chicago area. MSM have not previously been considered at increased risk for meningococcal disease. Determining outbreak thresholds* for special populations of unknown size (such as MSM) can be difficult. The New York City health department declared an outbreak based on an estimated increased risk for meningococcal infection in 2012 among MSM and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)–infected MSM compared with city residents who were not MSM or for whom MSM status was unknown (1). The Chicago Department of Public Health also declared an outbreak based on an increase in case counts and thresholds calculated using population estimates of MSM and HIV-infected MSM. Local public health response included increasing awareness among MSM, conducting contact tracing and providing chemoprophylaxis to close contacts, and offering vaccination to the population at risk (1–3). To better understand the epidemiology and burden of meningococcal disease in MSM populations in the United States and to inform recommendations, CDC analyzed data from a retrospective review of reported cases from January 2012 through June 2015.

Citations (2)


... The usefulness of syndromic surveillance in identifying GI infections or symptoms at an early stage was deemed unclear in 24% (7/29) of the included studies [8,12,17,19,21,37,38], while 2/29 of the included studies suggested that syndromic surveillance was incapable of detecting GI infections at an earlier stage in comparison to traditional surveillance [14,39]. ...

Reference:

Early Detection and Monitoring of Gastrointestinal Infections Using Syndromic Surveillance: A Systematic Review
Harnessing Syndromic Surveillance Emergency Department Data to Monitor Health Impacts During the 2015 Special Olympics World Games
  • Citing Article
  • July 2017

Public Health Reports

... Desde el año 2000, se han informado brotes de enfermedad meningocócica invasora en población de HSH de Norteamérica, Europa y Australia [15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22] . Se estima que su incidencia es alrededor de 10 veces mayor en HSH que en la población general. ...

Meningococcal Disease Among Men Who Have Sex with Men — United States, January 2012–June 2015

MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report