Keyword search (4,164 papers available)

"Epidemiology" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Updated Status of Physical Activity Research for People With Traumatic Brain Injury Quilico EL; Driver SJ; 41606762
CONCORDIA
2 Impact of COVID-19 on incidence and trends of adverse events among hospitalised patients in Calgary, Canada: a retrospective chart review study Wu G; Eastwood CA; Cheligeer C; Southern DA; Zeng Y; Ghali WA; Bakal JA; Boussat B; Flemons W; Forster A; Xu Y; Quan H; 41592994
CONCORDIA
3 Effect of body image perception and skin-lightening practices on mental health of Filipino emerging adults: a mixed-methods approach protocol Regencia ZJG; Gouin JP; Ladia MAJ; Montoya JC; Baja ES; 37192806
PSYCHOLOGY
4 Geospatial analysis reveals a hotspot of fecal bacteria in Canadian prairie lakes linked to agricultural non-point sources Oliva A; Onana VE; Garner RE; Kraemer SA; Fradette M; Walsh DA; Huot Y; 36653256
BIOLOGY
5 Body-composition phenotypes and their associations with cardiometabolic risks and health behaviours in a representative general US sample Kakinami L; Plummer S; Cohen TR; Santosa S; Murphy J; 36183799
PERFORM
6 Household income and maternal education in early childhood and activity-limiting chronic health conditions in late childhood: findings from birth cohort studies from six countries Spencer NJ; Ludvigsson J; You Y; Francis K; Abu Awad Y; Markham W; Faresjö T; Goldhaber-Fiebert J; Andersson White P; Raat H; Mensah F; Gauvin L; McGrath JJ; 35863874
PERFORM
7 Comparison of different severe obesity definitions in predicting future cardiometabolic risk in a longitudinal cohort of children Kakinami L; Smyrnova A; Paradis G; Tremblay A; Henderson M; 35705336
PERFORM
8 COVID-19-Related Concerns and Symptoms of Anxiety: Does Concern Play a Role in Predicting Severity and Risk? Benzouak T; Gunpat S; Briner EL; Thake J; Kisely S; Rao S; 34987892
PSYCHOLOGY
9 The occurrence of potentially pathogenic fungi and protists in Canadian lakes predicted using geomatics, in situ and satellite-derived variables: Towards a tele-epidemiological approach Oliva A; Garner RE; Walsh D; Huot Y; 34915335
BIOLOGY
10 Discovery of new vascular disrupting agents based on evolutionarily conserved drug action, pesticide resistance mutations, and humanized yeast Garge RK; Cha HJ; Lee C; Gollihar JD; Kachroo AH; Wallingford JB; Marcotte EM; 34849907
BIOLOGY
11 Overestimation of Postpartum Depression Prevalence Based on a 5-item Version of the EPDS: Systematic Review and Individual Participant Data Meta-analysis Thombs BD; Levis B; Lyubenova A; Neupane D; Negeri Z; Wu Y; Sun Y; He C; Krishnan A; Vigod SN; Bhandari PM; Imran M; Rice DB; Azar M; Chiovitti MJ; Saadat N; Riehm KE; Boruff JT; Cuijpers P; Gilbody S; Ioannidis JPA; Kloda LA; Patten SB; Shrier I; Ziegelstein RC; Comeau L; Mitchell ND; Tonelli M; Barnes J; Beck CT; Bindt C; Figueiredo B; Helle N; Howard LM; Kohlhoff J; Kozinszky Z; Leonardou AA; Radoš SN; Quispel C; Rochat TJ; Stein A; Stewart RC; Tadinac M; Tandon SD; Tendais I; Töreki A; Tran TD; Trevillion K; Turner K; Vega-Dienstmaier JM; Benedetti A; 33104415
LIBRARY
12 Weight cycling is associated with adverse cardiometabolic markers in a cross-sectional representative US sample Kakinami L; Knäuper B; Brunet J; 32366587
PERFORM
13 Income inequality and social gradients in children's height: a comparison of cohort studies from five high-income countries. Bird PK, Pickett KE, Graham H, Faresjö T, Jaddoe VWV, Ludvigsson J, Raat H, Seguin L, Wijtzes AI, McGrath JJ 31909223
PSYCHOLOGY

 

Title:Geospatial analysis reveals a hotspot of fecal bacteria in Canadian prairie lakes linked to agricultural non-point sources
Authors:Oliva AOnana VEGarner REKraemer SAFradette MWalsh DAHuot Y
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36653256/
DOI:10.1016/j.watres.2023.119596
Publication:Water research
Keywords:BacteriaBoosted regression treeMulti-indicatorPathogensPublic healthTele-epidemiology
PMID:36653256 Category: Date Added:2023-01-19
Dept Affiliation: BIOLOGY
1 Département de Géomatique Appliquée, Université de Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, QC J1K 2R1, Canada; Département de Géomatique Appliquée, CARTEL - Centre d'Applications et de Recherche en TELédétection, Université de Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, QC J1K 2R1, Canada; Département de Sciences Biologiques, GRIL - Groupement de Recherche Interuniversitaire en Limnologie, Université de Montréal, Campus MIL, Montréal, QC H3C 3J7, Canada. Electronic address: anais.oliva@usherbrooke.ca.
2 Département de Sciences Biologiques, GRIL - Groupement de Recherche Interuniversitaire en Limnologie, Université de Montréal, Campus MIL, Montréal, QC H3C 3J7, Canada; Department of Biology, Concordia University, Montréal, QC H4B 1R6, Canada.
3 Département de Sciences Biologiques, GRIL - Groupement de Recherche Interuniversitaire en Limnologie, Université de Montréal, Campus MIL, Montréal, QC H3C 3J7, Canada; Department of Biology, Concordia University, Montréal, QC H4B 1R6, Canada; Environment

Description:

Lakes are sentinels of environmental changes within their watersheds including those induced by a changing climate and anthropogenic activities. In particular, contamination originating from point or non-point sources (NPS) within watersheds might be reflected in changes in the bacterial composition of lake water. We assessed the abundance of potentially pathogenic bacteria (PPB) sampled in 413 lakes within 8 southern Canadian ecozones that represent a wide diversity of lakes and watershed land use. The study objectives were (1) to explore the diversity of PPB; (2) to build a fecal multi-indicator from a cluster of co-occurring PPB; and (3) to predict the fecal multi-indicator over thousands of lakes. We identified bacterial taxa based on 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing and clustered 33 PPB matching taxa in the Canadian ePATHogen database using a Sørensen dissimilarity index on binary data across the sampled lakes. One cluster contained Erysipelothrix, Desulfovibrio, Bacteroides, Vibrio and Acholeplasma and was related to the NPS fraction of agriculture and pasture within the watershed as its main driver and thus it was determined as the fecal multi-indicator. We subsequently developed a fecal multi-indicator predictive model across 200 212 southern Canadian lakes which explained 55.1% of the deviance. Mapping the predictions showed higher fecal multi-indicator abundances in the Prairies and Boreal Plains compared to the other ecozones. These results represent the first attempt to map a potential fecal multi-indicator at the continental scale, which may be further improved in the future. Lastly, the study demonstrates the capacity of a multi-disciplinary approach leveraging both datasets derived from remote sensing and DNA sequencing to provide mapping information for public health governmental policies.





BookR developed by Sriram Narayanan
for the Concordia University School of Health
Copyright © 2011-2026
Cookie settings
Concordia University