Research Topics
| John F BrundageSummaryAffiliation: Walter Reed Army Medical Center Country: USA Publications
| Collaborators
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Detail Information
Publications
Hospitalization experiences of U.S. servicemembers before, during, and after participation in peacekeeping operations in Bosnia-HerzegovinaJohn F Brundage
Army Medical Surveillance Activity, Directorate of Epidemiology and Disease Surveillance, U S Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine, Washington, District of Columbia 20307 5001, USA
Am J Ind Med 41:279-84. 2002..There are relationships among morbidity experiences before, during, and after participation in overseas military operations...
Interactions between influenza and bacterial respiratory pathogens: implications for pandemic preparednessJohn F Brundage
Army Medical Surveillance Activity, Washington, DC 20307 5001, USA
Lancet Infect Dis 6:303-12. 2006....
Comprehensive systematic surveillance for adverse effects of anthrax vaccine adsorbed, US Armed Forces, 1998-2000Jeffrey L Lange
Army Medical Surveillance Activity, US Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine, Building T-20, Room 213 (Attn: MCHB-TS-EDM, 6900 Georgia Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20307-5001, USA
Vaccine 21:1620-8. 2003..This surveillance suggests that Anthrax Vaccine Adsorbed has few, if any, clinically significant adverse effects...
Comparing the population health impacts of medical conditions using routinely collected health care utilization data: nature and sources of variabilityJohn F Brundage
Army Medical Surveillance Activity, Epidemiology and Disease Surveillance Directorate, U.S. Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine, Washington, DC 20307, USA
Mil Med 171:937-42. 2006..The findings are relevant to prevention planning and resourcing...
Influenza immunization and subsequent diagnoses of group A streptococcus-illnesses among U.S. Army trainees, 2002-2006Seung Eun Lee
Armed Forces Health Surveillance Center provisional, U S Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine, 2900 Linden Lane, Suite 200, Silver Spring, MD 20910, United States
Vaccine 26:3383-6. 2008..Estimated protective effects of influenza immunization against GAS-illness ranged from 50% to 77%. A strong protective effect was suggested for Army trainee influenza immunization on the diagnosis of GAS-illness...
Smallpox vaccination and ischemic coronary events in healthy adultsRobert E Eckart
Brooke Army Medical Center, Fort Sam Houston, TX, United States
Vaccine 25:8359-64. 2007..7 after adopting pre-vaccination cardiac screening (RR 1.4 [95% CI: 0.8-2.7]). Implementation of pre-vaccination cardiac risk factor screening was not associated with a reduction in cardiac events...
Deaths from bacterial pneumonia during 1918-19 influenza pandemicJohn F Brundage
Armed Forces Health Surveillance Center, Silver Spring, Maryland 20910, USA
Emerg Infect Dis 14:1193-9. 2008..g., with bacterial vaccines and antimicrobial drugs), particularly if a pandemic strain-specific vaccine is unavailable or inaccessible to isolated, crowded, or medically underserved populations...
Effects of climate, latitude, and season on the incidence of Bell's palsy in the US Armed Forces, October 1997 to September 1999Karen E Campbell
Army Medical Surveillance Activity, Epidemiology and Disease Surveillance Directorate, US Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine, Washington, DC 20307 5001, USA
Am J Epidemiol 156:32-9. 2002..The results are consistent with hypotheses regarding viral etiologies (e.g., reactivation of herpes simplex) of Bell's palsy...
Timing and completeness of routine testing for antibodies to human immunodeficiency virus type 1 among active duty members of the U.S. Armed ForcesMichael J Silverberg
Army Medical Surveillance Activity, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC 20307, USA
Mil Med 168:160-4. 2003..The results of this analysis may inform the planning and conduct of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 prevention programs as well as deployment-related or other surveillance activities...
Respiratory illnesses in relation to military assignments in the Mojave Desert: retrospective surveillance over a 10-year periodJeffrey L Lange
Army Medical Surveillance Activity, Epidemiology and Disease Surveillance Directorate, U.S. Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine, Washington, DC 20307-5001, USA
Mil Med 168:1039-43. 2003..Healthy, young adults may have increased susceptibility to respiratory infectious illnesses after prolonged exposures to desert environments...
Incidence rates of pelvic inflammatory disease diagnoses among Army and Navy recruits potential impacts of Chlamydia screening policiesMichael S Bloom
Army Medical Surveillance Activity, Silver Spring, Maryland, USA
Am J Prev Med 34:471-7. 2008..Using routinely collected surveillance data, the rates of outpatient pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) following accession into the Army or Navy were compared to assess the potential implications of these policies...
Cases and deaths during influenza pandemics in the United StatesJohn F Brundage
Army Medical Surveillance Activity, Directorate of Epidemiology and Disease Surveillance, US Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine, Washington DC 20307 5001, USA
Am J Prev Med 31:252-6. 2006..To assess how numbers and age distributions of cases and deaths during an influenza pandemic in the United States would potentially vary from those during the 1918-1919 pandemic, given the same virulence of the pandemic strain...
The Defense Medical Surveillance System and the Department of Defense serum repository: glimpses of the future of public health surveillanceMark V Rubertone
Army Medical Surveillance Activity, Directorate of Epidemiology and Disease Surveillance, US Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine, Washington, DC 20307, USA
Am J Public Health 92:1900-4. 2002..Recent applications of the DMSS and DoDSR provide glimpses of the capabilities and uses of comprehensive public health surveillance systems...
Behavioral, demographic, and prior morbidity risk factors for accidental death among men: a case-control study of soldiersAbigail L Garvey Wilson
Army Medical Surveillance Activity, U S Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine, Washington, DC 20307, USA
Prev Med 36:124-30. 2003..S. Army, because it comprises mostly young men, provides insights into factors associated with risk of accidental death. Between 1990 and 1998, accidents accounted for more than half of all deaths of men on active duty in the U.S. Army...
Mental disorders among U.S. military personnel in the 1990s: association with high levels of health care utilization and early military attritionCharles W Hoge
Department of Psychiatry, Deployment Health Clinic Center, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC, USA
Am J Psychiatry 159:1576-83. 2002..However, measurement of the burden of mental disorders by using population-based methods in large working populations, such as the U.S. military, has been limited...
What really happened during the 1918 influenza pandemic? The importance of bacterial secondary infectionsJohn F Brundage
J Infect Dis 196:1717-8; author reply 1718-9. 2007
Meningococcal disease among United States military service members in relation to routine uses of vaccines with different serogroup-specific components, 1964-1998John F Brundage
Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine, Rockville, MD, USA
Clin Infect Dis 35:1376-81. 2002..In the US military, immunizations have been effective for the prevention of disease caused by vaccine-homologous serogroups of N. meningitidis...
