4.6 Article

Flooding and Emergency Room Visits for Gastrointestinal Illness in Massachusetts: A Case-Crossover Study

Related references

Note: Only part of the references are listed.
Article Public, Environmental & Occupational Health

Personal protective equipment, hygiene behaviours and occupational risk of illness after July 2011 flood in Copenhagen, Denmark

O. P. Wojcik et al.

EPIDEMIOLOGY AND INFECTION (2013)

Review Infectious Diseases

Consequences of Clostridium difficile infection: understanding the healthcare burden

E. Bouza

CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY AND INFECTION (2012)

Article Environmental Sciences

Rainfall and outbreaks of drinking water related disease and in England and Wales

Gordon Nichols et al.

JOURNAL OF WATER AND HEALTH (2009)

Article Mathematical & Computational Biology

A simple method of determining confidence intervals for population attributable risk from complex surveys

Sundar Natarajan et al.

STATISTICS IN MEDICINE (2007)

Review Medicine, General & Internal

Climate change and human health: present and future risks

AJ McMichael et al.

LANCET (2006)

Article Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences

Characteristics of US extreme rain events during 1999-2003

RS Schumacher et al.

WEATHER AND FORECASTING (2006)

Article Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences

Derecho hazards in the United States

WS Ashley et al.

BULLETIN OF THE AMERICAN METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY (2005)

Article Mathematical & Computational Biology

Overlap bias in the case-crossover design, with application to air pollution exposures

H Janes et al.

STATISTICS IN MEDICINE (2005)

Article Public, Environmental & Occupational Health

Did a severe flood in the midwest cause an increase in the incidence of gastrointestinal symptoms?

TJ Wade et al.

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY (2004)

Article Public, Environmental & Occupational Health

The association between extreme precipitation and waterborne disease outbreaks in the United States, 1948-1994

FC Curriero et al.

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH (2001)

Article Public, Environmental & Occupational Health

A heuristic approach to the formulas for population attributable fraction

JA Hanley

JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY AND COMMUNITY HEALTH (2001)