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Probable secondary infections in households of SARS patients in Hong Kong.


Although severe acute respiratory syndrome Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) Definition

Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) is the first emergent and highly transmissible viral disease to appear during the twenty-first century.
 (SARS) is highly infectious infectious /in·fec·tious/ (-fek´shus)
1. caused by or capable of being communicated by infection, as an infectious disease.

2. infective (1).


in·fec·tious
adj.
1.
 in clinical settings, SARS has not been well examined in household settings. The household and household member attack rates were calculated for 1,214 SARS case-patients and their household members, stratified stratified /strat·i·fied/ (strat´i-fid) formed or arranged in layers.

strat·i·fied
adj.
Arranged in the form of layers or strata.
 by two phases of the epidemic epidemic, outbreak of disease that affects a much greater number of people than is usual for the locality or that spreads to regions where it is ordinarily not present. . A case-control Case-control studies are one type of epidemiological study design. It is used to identify factors that may contribute to a medical condition by comparing a group of patients who have that condition with a group of patients that do not.  analysis identified risk factors for secondary infection. Secondary infection occurred in 14.9% (22.1% versus 11% in earlier and later phases) of all households and 8% (11.7% versus 5.9% in the earlier and later phases) of all household members. Healthcare workers' households were less likely to be affected. Risk factors from the multivariate analysis multivariate analysis,
n a statistical approach used to evaluate multiple variables.

multivariate analysis,
n a set of techniques used when variation in several variables has to be studied simultaneously.
 included at-home at-home
n. also at home
An informal reception in one's home.

adj.
1. Being, occurring, or functioning in one's home: at-home workers; at-home care.

2.
 duration before hospitalization hospitalization /hos·pi·tal·iza·tion/ (hos?pi-t'l-i-za´shun)
1. the placing of a patient in a hospital for treatment.

2. the term of confinement in a hospital.
, hospital visitation VISITATION. The act of examining into the affairs of a corporation.
     2. The power of visitation is applicable only to ecclesiastical and eleemosynary corporations. 1 Bl. Com. 480; 2 Kid on Corp. 174.
 to the SARS patient (and mask use during the visit), and frequency of close contact. SARS transmission at the household level was not negligible This article or section is written like a personal reflection or and may require .
Please [ improve this article] by rewriting this article or section in an .
 in Hong Kong Hong Kong (hŏng kŏng), Mandarin Xianggang, special administrative region of China, formerly a British crown colony (2005 est. pop. 6,899,000), land area 422 sq mi (1,092 sq km), adjacent to Guangdong prov. . Transmission rates may be greatly reduced with precautionary pre·cau·tion·ar·y   also pre·cau·tion·al
adj.
Of, relating to, or constituting a precaution: taking precautionary measures; gave precautionary advice.

Adj. 1.
 measures taken by household members of SARS patients.

**********

The first large-scale large-scale
adj.
1. Large in scope or extent.

2. Drawn or made large to show detail.


large-scale
Adjective

1. wide-ranging or extensive

2.
 severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) outbreak outbreak

see epidemic.
 occurred in the Prince of Wales Hospital
This article is about a hospital in Hong Kong. For the hospital in Sydney, Australia, see Prince of Wales Hospital, Sydney. There also exists another Prince of Wales Hospital in the United Kingdom.
 in Hong Kong on approximately March 11, 2003 (1,2). It was followed by a large-scale community outbreak in the Amoy Gardens Amoy Gardens (Chinese: 淘大花園; Jyutping: tou4 daai6 faa1 jyun4; Pinyin: táo dà huā yuán) is a high-density middle-class housing estate in Hong Kong completed from 1980 - 1987.  Estate, which had a total of 321 SARS cases as of April 15, 2003; 41.0% were in Block E residents (3) . Environmental transmission of SARS was most likely primarily responsible for the Amoy Gardens outbreak (4,5). As of May 31, 2003, a total of 1,739 suspected or confirmed SARS cases were reported in Hong Kong, of which 384 were in hospital workers (22.1%) and approximately 321 were in residents of the Amoy Gardens (6) (Figure).

[FIGURE OMITTED]

In the clinical setting, a very high attack rate of the SARS virus has been observed (7,8). However, few data describe the attack rates in community settings. The first objective of the study is to estimate the household attack rates and the household member attack rates for different categories of SARS patients. The second objective is to investigate risk factors associated with these two attack rates.

Methods

Study Population

The study population comprised all SARS case-patients who were reported to the Department of Health on or before May 10, 2003 (n = 1,690), and their household members (including kin, nonkin, and domestic helpers). in Hong Kong, confirmed or suspected SARS patients were defined as those with radiographic radiographic (rā´dēōgraf´ik),
adj relating to the process of radiography, the finished product, or its use.
 evidence of infiltrates Infiltrates
Cells or body fluids that have passed into a tissue or body cavity.

Mentioned in: Eosinophilic Pneumonia
 consistent with pneumonia pneumonia (nmōn`yə), acute infection of one or both lungs that can be caused by a bacterium, usually Streptococcus pneumoniae , and fever >38[degrees]C degrees any time in the preceding 2 days, and at least two of the following symptoms: 1) history of chills in the past 2 days, 2) cough cough, sudden, forceful expiration of air from the lungs caused by an involuntary contraction of the muscles controlling the process of breathing. The cough is a response to some irritating condition such as inflammation or the presence of mucus (sputum) in the  or breathing difficulty, 3) general malaise malaise /mal·aise/ (mal-az´) a vague feeling of discomfort.

mal·aise
n.
A vague feeling of bodily discomfort, as at the beginning of an illness.
 or myalgia myalgia /my·al·gia/ (mi-al´jah) muscular pain.myal´gic

epidemic myalgia  see under pleurodynia.


my·al·gia
n.
, or 4) known history of exposure (9). This definition is the same as that of the World Health Organization for probable cases (8).

In this study, an index patient is defined as the SARS case-patient who had the earliest date of fever onset on·set
n.
A beginning; a start, as of a cold.
 within a household. Household members who had an onset of symptoms later than the index patient are considered to be probable secondary (or tertiary tertiary (tûr`shēârē), in the Roman Catholic Church, member of a third order. The third orders are chiefly supplements of the friars—Franciscans (the most numerous), Dominicans, and Carmelites. ) cases. Three of these cases were hospital workers who may have contracted SARS in the hospital setting and were hence excluded from the analysis.

Data Collection

The list of telephone numbers, as well as some demographic and clinical background information of all probable SARS cases in Hong Kong (identified on or before May 16, 2003 [n = 1,690]), were obtained from the Department of Health. A team of trained interviewers called these numbers and briefed the person answering the telephone about the nature of the study. The interviewer then identified the person who had the earliest date of fever onset and confirmed that the household members had not been interviewed twice. When a household had two or more SARS cases with the same fever onset date (11 households), one of them was randomly selected as the index patient. Respondents In the context of marketing research, a representative sample drawn from a larger population of people from whom information is collected and used to develop or confirm marketing strategy.  were then requested to hand the telephone to the household member (who mayor may not be the index patient) who was most familiar with the household situation to serve as the responder. The interview occurred at least 14 days after the index patient's onset of symptoms past the maximum incubation period incubation period
n.
1. See latent period.

2. See incubative stage.


Incubation period 
 of 10 days.

By using a SARS registry The configuration database in all 32-bit versions of Windows that contains settings for the hardware and software in the PC it is installed in. The Registry is made up of the SYSTEM.DAT and USER.DAT files. Many settings previously stored in the WIN.INI and SYSTEM. , a research staff member later crosschecked that the index patient named by the interviewee was, in fact, the one with the earliest onset of fever, if there were more than one SARS case-patient in the household. In July July: see month. , the names of all family members provided by the respondents were also checked against the registry to ensure that the study had not missed any probable secondary cases. This check also ensured that no duplicate DUPLICATE. The double of anything.
     2. It is usually applied to agreements, letters, receipts, and the like, when two originals are made of either of them. Each copy has the same effect.
 interviews had been conducted.

The study was conducted from April 4, 2003, to June June: see month.  10, 2003. Of the 1,690 probable SARS cases reported in Hong Kong as of May 16, a total of 1,214 (72%) SARS cases had been covered by the study (Figure). The 1,214 SARS cases carne from 996 households (881 households were analyzed an·a·lyze  
tr.v. an·a·lyzed, an·a·lyz·ing, an·a·lyz·es
1. To examine methodically by separating into parts and studying their interrelations.

2. Chemistry To make a chemical analysis of.

3.
 and 115 single households were excluded from the analysis). Of the remaining 476 reported SARS cases in Hong Kong that were not covered not covered Health care adjective Referring to a procedure, test or other health service to which a policy holder or insurance beneficiary is not entitled under the terms of the policy or payment system–eg, Medicare. Cf Covered.  by this study, 140 case households (8.2%) did not have a correct telephone number, 163 (9.6%) could not be contacted after at least 5 different attempts, 163 (9.6%) refused to participate in the study, and 10 (0.6%) were not in Hong Kong or could not communicate in Chinese Chinese, subfamily of the Sino-Tibetan family of languages (see Sino-Tibetan languages), which is also sometimes grouped with the Tai, or Thai, languages in a Sinitic subfamily of the Sino-Tibetan language stock.  or English 1. English - (Obsolete) The source code for a program, which may be in any language, as opposed to the linkable or executable binary produced from it by a compiler. The idea behind the term is that to a real hacker, a program written in his favourite programming language is .

Questionnaire questionnaire,
n a series of questions used to gather information.

questionnaire,
n a form usually filled out by patients that provides data concerning their dental and general health.


The study questionnaire collected the following information: 1) Sociodemographic data about the index patient and whether he or she resides in the Amoy Gardens (and apartment block number), 2) Household information--including all household members' names, ages, gender, and relationship with the index patient, and if they were hospital workers, 3) Information about any "probable secondary SARS infection" among household members, 4) Data regarding individual household members' hospital visits to the index patient, and 5) Data regarding close contact between individual household members and the index patient (Table 1).

Study Design

The household attack rate was defined as the number of households with at least one probable secondary SARS case divided by the total number of index patient's households. The household member attack rate was defined as the total number of all probable secondary of tertiary SARS case-patients of all relevant index patient's households divided by the total number of household members (not including the index patient) of all relevant index patient's households.

Two analyses were performed to identify risk factors associated with household attack rates and household member attack rates. Households that had at least one probable secondary infection were first compared with those households which had no probable secondary infections in a number of risk or protective factors. To control for any period effects, a dummy variable This article is not about "dummy variables" as that term is usually understood in mathematics. See free variables and bound variables.

In regression analysis, a dummy variable
 was created to represent the two time periods (before March 25, 2003, and on or after March 25, 2003). March 25 corresponds to the beginning of the Amoy Gardens outbreak; after that date, public awareness of SARS was greatly heightened (10). The average number of secondary cases from one SARS-infected person declined greatly from 2.7 in the initial part of the epidemic to 0.9 after March 25 (11). (These figures were derived from modeling methods [instead of a survey] and were not confined con·fine  
v. con·fined, con·fin·ing, con·fines

v.tr.
1. To keep within bounds; restrict: Please confine your remarks to the issues at hand. See Synonyms at limit.
 to household cases; hence, they are not comparable to the results obtained by this study).

The second analysis used a case-control design that compared individual family members who were probable secondary SARS case-patients with those who were not. To avoid ambiguities arising from distinguishing secondary and tertiary infections, only the "first" probable secondary cases were used as a case in this case-control analysis, if there were multiple SARS cases in the household. In addition, this analysis also examined the frequency of close contacts between the case or control and the index patient (e.g., dining together, sharing a bedroom).

Statistical Analyses

The household attack rates and the household member attack rates were calculated separately for four groups of index patients (hospital workers, Amoy Amoy (ämoi`): see Xiamen, China.  Block E residents, other block residents, and other community members), and 95% confidence intervals confidence interval,
n a statistical device used to determine the range within which an acceptable datum would fall. Confidence intervals are usually expressed in percentages, typically 95% or 99%.
 (CI) were also derived. Univariate univariate adjective Determined, produced, or caused by only one variable  odds ratios and p values from chi-square test chi-square test: see statistics.  were obtained. Stepwise stepwise

incremental; additional information is added at each step.


stepwise multiple regression
used when a large number of possible explanatory variables are available and there is difficulty interpreting the partial regression
 multivariate The use of multiple variables in a forecasting model.  logistic regression In statistics, logistic regression is a regression model for binomially distributed response/dependent variables. It is useful for modeling the probability of an event occurring as a function of other factors.  methods using candidate variables that were, at a minimum, marginally significant in the univariate analysis (p < 0.10) were conducted to obtain factors independently associated with household attack rates and household member attack rates. Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (statistics, tool) Statistical Package for the Social Sciences - (SPSS) The flagship program of SPSS, Inc., written in the late 1960s.

["SPSS X User's Guide", SPSS, Inc. 1986].
 (SPSS A statistical package from SPSS, Inc., Chicago (www.spss.com) that runs on PCs, most mainframes and minis and is used extensively in marketing research. It provides over 50 statistical processes, including regression analysis, correlation and analysis of variance. ), Chicago Chicago, city, United States
Chicago (shĭkä`gō, shĭkô`gō), city (1990 pop. 2,783,726), seat of Cook co., NE Ill., on Lake Michigan; inc. 1837.
, IL, Version 11 was used for all analyses.

Results

Background Characteristics of Index Patients

Of the respondents, 54.6% were female and 45.4% were male; most index patients were 18 to 50 years of age. Healthcare workers represented almost one third of the index patients and approximately 16% were Amoy Gardens Estate residents. Two-thirds of the index patients had fever onset during the later phase of the epidemic (on or after March 25), and most reported hospitalization within 5 days of fever onset (80.6%) and no hospital visits by household members (77.4%) (Table 2).

Household Attack Rates

The overall household attack rate, as defined, was 14.9% (95% CI=12.6% to 17.4%) for all the households of the 881 index patients studied. Excluding households related to the Amoy Gardens, the household attack rate was 13.9% (96/738). The household attack rate was much higher for households of those index patients whose onset of fever occurred before March 25, 2003, than for those with onset of fever occurred on or after that date (22.4% versus 11.0%, OR = 0.43, p = 0.001). The Amoy Block E households had the highest household attack rate (38.9%), followed by those living in the other blocks of the Amoy Gardens (19.6%) and households of the "other community member" group (18.3%). The households with index patients who were healthcare workers had the lowest household attack rate (3.8%). Moreover, the household attack rates were higher for the earlier onset group as compared to the later onset group for all the four strata (Table 3).

Household Member Attack Rates

Among all 2,139 household members of the 881 index patients, a total of 188 (8%, 95% CI 7.0% to 9.2%) were probable secondary eases. The household member attack rates for the hospital healthcare worker group, the other community group, the Amoy non-Block E group, and the Amoy Block E group were 1.9%, 9.8%, 11%, and 24.4%, respectively. Excluding households related to Amoy Gardens, the household member attack rate was 6.9% (138/1,991). Similar period effects were observe& the odds ratios for comparing the two fever onset groups (on or after versus before March 25, 2003) were 0.15 (hospital healthcare worker group p = 0.004), 0.41 (other community group, p < 0.001), and 0.29 (Amoy non-Block E group, p = 0.002). For Amoy Block E respondents, the figures for the earlier and later onset groups were 37.1% and 17.7%, respectively (p = 0.058) (Table 3). The median duration between the date of onset of the index patients' symptoms and their "first" probable secondary case was 6.5, 7.0, 2.0, and 4.0 days for the healthcare worker, other community members, Amoy Block E, and Amoy non-Block E groups, respectively.

Factors Associated with Household Attack Rates

While sex of the index patient was not a significant factor, older age of index patient (OR = 1.57-3.77), type of index patient (OR = 5.74-16.35), longer duration home stay between fever onset and hospitalization (OR = 1.76-3.91), whether any household members visited the index patient (OR = 2.03), date of onset fever of index patient (later versus earlier onset groups, OR = 0.43) were all univariately associated with household attack rates (Table 4). Disinfection disinfection,
n the process of destroying pathogenic organisms or rendering them inert.

disinfection, full oral cavity,
n a procedure used to reduce active periodontal disease, usually completed within a certain short time frame.
 of the living quarter after the index patient's onset of fever was, however, not a significant factor (p = 0.88). All of these univariately significant variables except age were significant in the multivariate stepwise logistic regression (Table 5).

Factors Associated with Household Member Attack Rates

As with the household attack rate, type of index patient (OR = 5.48-16.99, Table 1), whether the individual family member had visited the index patient in the hospital (OR = 2.65), longer duration of index patient's home stay (OR = 1.72 and 3.18), and index patient's date of fever onset (later versus earlier onset date, OR = 0.48) were univariately significant factors distinguishing between the case group and the control group. Moreover, the risk for SARS transmission was greatly increased when both the individual household member and the index patient were not wearing a mask during the hospital visit, (OR = 4.16, Table 1). In the univariate analyses, variables associated with close contacts with the index patient, such as the following: whether the was the main caregiver care·giv·er
n.
1. An individual, such as a physician, nurse, or social worker, who assists in the identification, prevention, or treatment of an illness or disability.

2.
 of the index patient (OR = 2.47), whether the participant shared a room or a bed with the index patient (OR 1.66 and 3.74), frequency of dining together with the index patient (OR = 1.90 and 3.82, respectively, for those having dined 5-10 times and >10 times during the period between onset of fever of index patient and his or her hospital admission) and frequency of being coughed on by the index patient within one m (OR = 1.81 and 2.47, respectively, for responses of occasionally and frequently), were also significantly associated with household member attack rates.

In the multivariate analyses, the type of index patient (hospital workers, other community workers, and the like) was associated with household member attack rates, and the directions were the same as in the univariate analyses (Table 6). Moreover, individual household members who had visited the index patient when neither the index patient nor the visitor had worn a mask were more likely to have contracted SARS, when compared to those who had not visited the index patient (OR = 3.12, Table 6). Those household members who had had occasional or frequent close contacts of <1 m with the index patient were more likely than other household members to be included in the case group (OR = 2.14 and 2.30, Table 6). The household members were also less likely to have the index patient's onset of fever occurring on or after March 25 as compared to the control group (OR = 0.51).

Discussion

Of approximately 72% of SARS cases in Hong Kong (as of May 16, 2003) that were covered by this investigation, approximately 15% of all index patient's households and 8% of all members of these households had contracted SARS. These figures include those of the Amoy Gardens residents. It is believed that the Block E transmissions had primarily resulted from environmental contamination contamination /con·tam·i·na·tion/ (kon-tam?i-na-shun)
1. the soiling or making inferior by contact or mixture.

2. the deposition of radioactive material in any place where it is not desired.
 rather than secondary infection (4,5). Excluding the Amoy Gardens cases, the attack rates were 13.9% and 8%, respectively. The SARS attack rates in the households therefore were not negligible.

The names of the probable secondary cases provided by the respondents were compared to the master list of known probable cases. A recent study, conducted by the Chinese University of Hong Kong The motto of the university is "博文約禮" in Chinese, meaning "to broaden one's intellectual horizon and keep within the bounds of propriety". , noted that none of the 94 asymptomatic a·symp·to·mat·ic
adj.
Exhibiting or producing no symptoms.


Asymptomatic
Persons who carry a disease and are usually capable of transmitting the disease but, who do not exhibit symptoms of the disease are said to be
 family members of the SARS case-patients tested positive for SARS in serologic tests serologic test Lab medicine A test that measures components–eg, antibodies, complement, and reactions–eg, complement fixation, agglutination, precipitation, etc, that reflect immune status, especially antibody titers. Cf Seroconversion.  (unpub. data). Any underestimation due to asymptomatic transmission therefore should be minimal.

As the quarantine quarantine (kwŏr`əntēn), isolation of persons, animals, places, and effects that carry or are suspected of harboring communicable disease.  policy was only initiated on March 31 for the Amoy Gardens residents (12), the median home stay was longer for earlier onset SARS cases (4 days) than the later ones (2 days). Both the household and the household member attack rates were much higher in the initial phase of the epidemic (before March 25) (10). Moreover, between the first large-scale outbreak, which occurred approximately March 12, 2003, and March 25, 2003, relatively little was known about the disease, and hence minimal preventive preventive /pre·ven·tive/ (pre-vent´iv) prophylactic.

pre·ven·tive or pre·ven·ta·tive
adj.
Preventing or slowing the course of an illness or disease; prophylactic.

n.
 measures against secondary infections were being practiced by household members (10).

Both the household and the household member attack rates of hospital healthcare workers were much lower than those of other types of households, even after controlling for other variables that were significant in the multivariate models. As compared to other households, less frequent close contacts were made in the healthcare worker households. Only 14% of the household members in the healthcare worker household had made frequent close contact (<1 m) with the index patient, as compared to 25% in the other groups (p < 0.01). Similarly, the percentages of dining together for > 10 times during the reference period were 30.2% and 47.9%, respectively, for the healthcare worker and non-healthcare worker households (p < 0.01). These findings suggest that with a greater awareness and proper preventive measures, secondary attacks of SARS among household members may be greatly reduced.

Our data support the government's suggestion that environmental contamination was responsible for the largo Largo, town (1990 pop. 65,674), Pinellas co., W Fla., on the Pinellas peninsula and the Gulf Coast, across the bay from Tampa; settled 1853, inc. 1905. It is a packing, canning, and shipping center in a citrus fruit and fishing area.  number of SARS infections in the Amoy Gardens Block E (4,5) but not in other Blocks of the Amoy Gardens. The attack rates for the Amoy Block E households were much higher than those for households of other Blocks (for later onset households, household attack rates: 36% versus 13.4%; household member attack rates: 20.8% versus 7.7%), whereas the rates of the Amoy non-Block E households were comparable to those of the "other community group" (for later onset households, household attack rates: 13.4% versus 13.1%; household member attack rates: 7.7% versus 7.2%). The observation that the median duration between the onset of symptoms in the index patient and the "first" probable secondary case of the Amoy Gardens cases were much shorter than those of the other groups also supports the environmental contamination theory that had been suggested to explain the Amoy Gardens Block E outbreak.

Our data indicate that hospital visitations to the index patient was another independent risk factor for contracting SARS, suggesting that hospital visitors may have played an important role in the SARS epidemic in Hong Kong. Among all household members who had visited an index patient in the hospital, 51 (16.5%) of 310 contracted SARS (20.3% and 8.2%, respectively, for the earlier and later onset groups). Moreover, our results demonstrated that the risk was increased when both the SARS patient and the visitor were not wearing a mask. Hence, stringent hospital visitation policies should be implemented and proper personal protection equipment should be required for all visitors of SARS patients.

As a longer exposure period increased the risk for secondary SARS infection among household members, clear public health messages encouraging people who develop influenza-like symptoms to seek rapid medical treatment and to use preventive measures should be disseminated disseminated /dis·sem·i·nat·ed/ (-sem´i-nat?ed) scattered; distributed over a considerable area.

dis·sem·i·nat·ed
adj.
Spread over a large area of a body, a tissue, or an organ.
. Ah effective surveillance system should also be able to substantially reduce the duration of home stay of the SARS patients.

The frequency of close contact is another important risk factor for household member attack rates. Together with the significant association with index patient's home stay duration, these results suggest that viral load viral load
n.
The concentration of a virus, such as HIV, in the blood.


viral load,
n a measure of the number of virus particles present in the bloodstream, expressed as copies per milliliter.
 is important in determining whether a secondary infection occurs. The results are also highly consistent with droplet droplet

very small drop of fluid.


droplet nuclei
the finite particles of matter which are transmitted from animal to animal.
 theory of transmission but do not lend much support for transmission by fomites fomites

see fomes.
, particularly since the household attack rate was not found to be significantly associated with thorough disinfection of the living quarters.

When the data were stratified by Amoy Block E households versus other households, household disinfection was significantly associated with the household member attack rates in the former but not in the latter group (Amoy Gardens: OR = 1.11; p = 0.56, exact test; other households: OR = 0.24, p = 0.019, exact test; test for homogeneity Homogeneity

The degree to which items are similar.
, p = 0.013). Similar results were also obtained for the association between the household attack rate in the two groups (OR = 1.12 and 0.4, respectively, for Amoy Block E households and other households), although the association in the Amoy Block E group was not of statistical significance, possibly due to the small sample size (36 such households in total). This finding again strongly supports the claim that environmental contamination occurred in Amoy Block E households and that many of the cases were not secondary infections. Moreover, it suggests that although household disinfection was not a protective factor in the prevention of secondary infection, its role in reducing the risk for environmental infection cannot be dismissed dis·miss  
tr.v. dis·missed, dis·miss·ing, dis·miss·es
1. To end the employment or service of; discharge.

2.
. It is speculated that probable benefits of disinfection for protecting secondary infection might have been overridden by the effects of frequent contacts with the index patient of hospital visits.

The study has a few limitations. First, there is no way to confirm that the probable secondary infection of household members actually carne from the index patient. Nosocomial infections Nosocomial infections
Infections that were not present before the patient came to a hospital, but were acquired by a patient while in the hospital.

Mentioned in: Enterobacterial Infections, Staphylococcal Infections
, rather than secondary infections, may also have occurred in some of the household members during hospital visits to the index patient, but it is not possible to distinguish the two scenarios. The possibility of household members contracting the SARS virus in the community outside the home was, however, very small. Nevertheless, infection by environmental contamination has not been implicated im·pli·cate  
tr.v. im·pli·cat·ed, im·pli·cat·ing, im·pli·cates
1. To involve or connect intimately or incriminatingly: evidence that implicates others in the plot.

2.
 as a large source of SARS except among Amoy Block E residents. Second, 44.6% of the time, information was provided by the household member most familiar with the household situation rather than the index patient. The households interviewed by the index patients and the households interviewed by proxy See proxy server.

(networking) proxy - A process that accepts requests for some service and passes them on to the real server. A proxy may run on dedicated hardware or may be purely software.
 did not, however, differ in the distribution of risk factors. Moreover, most Hong Kong residents live in small apartments of <60 [m.sup.2], and many avoided going out during the SARS epidemic; the people were very sensitized sensitized /sen·si·tized/ (sen´si-tizd) rendered sensitive.

sensitized

rendered sensitive.


sensitized cells
see sensitization (2).
 to close contact to those with SARS or flu-like symptoms (10). Hence, although the results may still be influenced by recall and reporting bias, the amount of bias should not substantially alter the findings. Third, even though recall bias may be another potential problem, almost all of the interviews were made within 3 weeks after the index patient's onset of fever; given the extremely unusual nature of SARS, respondents should have been able to reliably recall the requested information. Fourth, the study was notable to cover all SARS patients in Hong Kong, but after incorrect or unavailable contact numbers were eliminated, 78.3% of all SARS patients had been covered by this study, and the refusal rate was moderate (10.5%). Finally, the case definition of SARS was nonspecific nonspecific /non·spe·cif·ic/ (non?spi-sif´ik)
1. not due to any single known cause.

2. not directed against a particular agent, but rather having a general effect.


nonspecific

1.
. Data on laboratory confirmation of the SARS coronavirus The SARS coronavirus is the virus that causes severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS).[1] On April 16 2003, following the outbreak of SARS in Asia and secondary cases elsewhere in the world, the World Health Organization (WHO) issued a press release stating that the  were not available so it was possible that some of the cases were in fact pneumonia rather than SARS. In the later phase of the epidemic, it was possible that either case-finding became more thorough or case-finding was more specific as more information became more available. Nevertheless, it is logical to argue that the secondary attack rate declined in the later phase as the awareness was greatly heightened. It is emphasized that the figures reported in this study are probable, rather than actual attack rates.

The study, being a large-scale study investigating SARS transmission in the community setting, allows us to have a better understanding of the infectivity infectivity

ability of an agent to infect.
, modes of transmission, and prevention of SARS in a community setting. It also gives insight into the prevention of secondary SARS infection within the household.
Table 1. Univariate association between various risk factors and
Household Member Attack Rates (HMAR)

                                         % attack rate

                                      Case        Control
Risk factor                         (n = 131)   (n = 2,139)

Sex (a)
  Male                                46.6         48.3
  Female                              53.4         51.7
Age (y) (b)
  18-30                               46.6         46.9
  31-40                               15.3         15.3
  41-50                               16.2         16.3
  51-60                               10.9         10.7
  [greater than or equal to] 61       11.1         10.8
Type of Index Person (IP)
  Hospital workers                     7.6         33.5
  Amoy Gardens Block E residents      10.7          2.8
  Amoy Gardens other Block
    residents                         15.3         10.6
  Other community members             66.4         53.2
Date of IP's fever onset (d)
  Before March 25                     51.9         34.2
  On or after March 25                48.1         65.8
Duration IP stayed home between
    fever onset and
    hospitalization (d) (e)
  [greater than or equal to] 2        31.3         51.0
  3-5                                 32.1         30.3
  [greater than or equal to] 6        36.6         18.8
IP visited by a family member
    during hospitalization?
  No                                  73.3         87.9
  Yes                                 26.7         12.1
Mask use during hospital visits
    by a household member (f)
  Not visited by any household
    member                            75.0         88.6
  Visited, both with mask on           6.3          4.0
  Visited, one with mask on            5.5          3.6
  Visited, both without mask on       13.3          3.8
Whether caretaker of IP
  No                                  64.9         82.0
  Yes                                 35.1         18.0
Whether shared room or bed with
    IP (g)
  Never                               59.7         81.3
  Sharing room                         8.9          7.3
  Sharing room and bed                31.5         11.4
Frequency of dining together with
    IP (h)
  Never                               37.0         60.2
  <5                                  21.8         18.7
  5-10                                14.3          9.7
  >10                                 26.9         11.4
Frequency of close contact with
    IP (within 1 m) (i)
  Never                               22.5         48.4
  Seldom                              15.0         14.7
  Occasionally                        24.2         16.4
  Frequent                            38.3         20.5
Frequency coughed at by IP
    (within 1 meter) (j)
  Never                               77.6         90.3
  Seldom                               6.5          4.2
  Occasionally                        10.3          2.8
  Frequent                             5.6          2.6

                                                            Chi-square
Risk factor                          Odds ratio (95% CI)     p value

Sex (a)
  Male                                      1.00              0.701
  Female                             1.07 (0.75 to 1.53)
Age (y) (b)
  18-30                                     1.00              0.287
  31-40                              1.17 (0.68 to 2.01)
  41-50                              1.04 (0.60 to 1.81)
  51-60                              1.58 (0.90 to 2.76)
  [greater than or equal to] 61      1.65 (0.95 to 2.86)
Type of Index Person (IP)
  Hospital workers                          1.00            <0.001 (c)
  Amoy Gardens Block E residents    16.99 (7.23 to 39.90)
  Amoy Gardens other Block
    residents                       6.31 (2.91 to 13.67)
  Other community members           5.48 (2.83 to 10.61)
Date of IP's fever onset (d)
  Before March 25                           1.00              <0.001
  On or after March 25               0.48 (0.34 to 0.69)
Duration IP stayed home between
    fever onset and
    hospitalization (d) (e)
  [greater than or equal to] 2              1.00              <0.001
  3-5                                1.72 (1.11 to 2.68)
  [greater than or equal to] 6       3.18 (2.07 to 4.90)
IP visited by a family member
    during hospitalization?
  No                                        1.00              <0.001
  Yes                                2.65 (1.76 to 3.98)
Mask use during hospital visits
    by a household member (f)
  Not visited by any household
    member                                  1.00            <0.001 (c)
  Visited, both with mask on         1.87 (0.88 to 3.96)
  Visited, one with mask on          1.78 (0.80 to 3.96)
  Visited, both without mask on      4.16 (2.37 to 7.30)
Whether caretaker of IP
  No                                        1.00              <0.001
  Yes                                2.47 (1.70 to 3.60)
Whether shared room or bed with
    IP (g)
  Never                                     1.00              <0.001
  Sharing room                       1.66 (0.86 to 3.19)
  Sharing room and bed               3.74 (2.48 to 5.64)
Frequency of dining together with
    IP (h)
  Never                                     1.00              <0.001
  <5                                 1.90 (1.15 to 3.12)
  5-10                               2.40 (1.35 to 4.29)
  >10                                3.82 (2.38 to 6.15)
Frequency of close contact with
    IP (within 1 m) (i)
  Never                                     1.00              <0.001
  Seldom                             2.19 (1.19 to 4.02)
  Occasionally                       3.17 (1.85 to 5.42)
  Frequent                           4.03 (2.47 to 6.56)
Frequency coughed at by IP
    (within 1 meter) (j)
  Never                                     1.00            <0.001 (3)
  Seldom                             1.81 (0.81 to 4.03)
  Occasionally                       4.29 (2.17 to 8.48)
  Frequent                           2.47 (1.03 to 5.90)

(a) Information on 31 controls missing.

(b) Information on 7 cases and 160 controls missing.

(c) Chi-square test exact p value.

(d) Information on 3 controls missing.

(e) Information on 6 controls missing.

(f) Information on 3 cases 18 controls missing.

(g) Information on 7 cases and 24 controls missing.

(h) Information on 12 cases and 51 controls missing.

(i) Information on 13 cases and 37 controls missing.

(j) Information on 24 cases and 99 controls missing.

Table 2. Background characteristics of the Index Patient (IP)

Characteristic                           n     %

Sex
  Male                                  400   45.4
  Female                                481   54.6
Age (y) (a)
  <18                                   44    5.1
  18-30                                 239   27.8
  31-10                                 197   22.9
  41-50                                 165   19.2
  51-60                                 76    8.8
  [greater than or equal to] 61         138   16.1
Education level (b)
  No education                          60    7.1
  Primary                               152   17.9
  1-F3                                  123   14.5
  F4-F5                                 208   24.5
  F6-F7                                 44    5.2
  University or above                   263   31.0
Type of IP
  Hospital worker                       267   30.3
  Amoy Gardens Block E residents        36    4.1
  Amoy Gardens other Block residents    107   12.1
  Other community member                471   53.5
Duration IP stayed home between fever
    onset and hospitalization (d) (c)
  [less than or equal to] 2             440   50.1
  3-5                                   268   30.5
  [greater than or equal to] 6          171   19.5
IP visited by any household member
    during hospitalization
  No                                    682   77.4
  Yes                                   199   22.6
Date of IP's fever onset (d)
  Before March 25                       299   34.0
  On or after March 25                  581   66.0

(a) 22 missing persons.

(b) 31 missing persons.

(c) 2 missing persons.

(d) 1 missing person.

Table 3. Household attack rates (HAR) and household member attack
rates (HMAR) for different categories of index patient

                                              % attack rate

                                           Date IP's fever onset

                                                      March 25, 2003
Type of index patient                                 [greater than or
                                   <March 25, 2003    equal to]

HAIR
  Hospital workers                     n = 114            n = 153
                                    7.0 (3.1-13.4)     1.3 (0.2-4.6)
  Other community members               n=148             n = 322
                                   29.1 (21.9-37.1)   13.4 (9.8-17.6)
  Amoy Gardens Block E residents        n = 12             n = 24
                                   50.0 (21.1-78.9)   33.3 (15.6-55.3)
  Amoy Gardens other                    n = 25             n = 82
  Block residents                  40.0 (21.1-61.3)   13.4 (6.9-22.7)
  All households of all IP             n = 299            n = 581
                                   22.4 (17.8-27.6)   11.0 (8.6-13.9)
HMAR
  Hospital workers                     n = 349            n = 381
                                    3.4 (1.8-5.9)      0.5 (0.06-1.9)
  Other community members              n = 392            n = 866
                                   15.8 (12.4-19.8)    7.2 (5.5-9.1)
  Amoy Gardens residents                n = 27             n = 51
  (Block E)                        37.0 (19.4-57.6)   17.7 (8.4-30.9)
  Amoy Gardens residents                n = 59            n = 196
  (non-Block E)                    22.0 (12.3-34.7)    7.7 (4.4-12.3)
All households of all IP               n = 827           n = 1,494
                                   11.7 (9.6-14.1)     5.9 (4.8-7.2)

Type of index patient                  Overall

HAIR
  Hospital workers                     n = 267
                                    3.8 (1.8-6.8)
  Other community members              n = 471
                                   18.3 (14.9-22.1)
  Amoy Gardens Block E residents        n = 36
                                   38.9 (23.1-56.5)
  Amoy Gardens other                   n = 107
  Block residents                  19.6 (12.6-28.4)
  All households of all IP             n = 881
                                   14.9 (12.6-17.4)
HMAR
  Hospital workers                     n = 730
                                    1.9 (1.1-3.2)
  Other community members             n = 1,261
                                    9.8 (8.3-11.6)
  Amoy Gardens residents                n = 78
  (Block E)                        24.4 (15.4-35.4)
  Amoy Gardens residents               n = 255
  (non-Block E)                    11.0 (7.4-15.5)
All households of all IP              n = 2,324
                                    8.0 (6.9-9.1)

Type of index patient              Odds ratio (95% CI) (a)

HAIR
  Hospital workers                 0.18 (0.02 to 0.91) (b)
  Other community members            0.38 (0.23 to 0.62)
  Amoy Gardens Block E residents    0.50 (0.10, to 2.54)
  Amoy Gardens other                  0.23 (0.07, 0.72)
  Block residents
  All households of all IP            0.43 (0.29, 0.63)

HMAR
  Hospital workers                  0.15 (0.02, 0.67) (b)
  Other community members             0.41 (0.28, 0.61)
  Amoy Gardens residents              0.36 (0.11, 1.19)
  (Block E)
  Amoy Gardens residents              0.29 (0.12, 0.71)
  (non-Block E)
All households of all IP              0.47 (0.31, 0.64)

Type of index patient              chi-square p value

HAIR
  Hospital workers                       0.021
  Other community members                <0.001
  Amoy Gardens Block E residents       0.441 (c)
  Amoy Gardens other                   0.008 (c)
  Block residents
  All households of all IP               <0.001

HMAR
  Hospital workers                       0.004
  Other community members                <0.001
  Amoy Gardens residents                 0.058
  (Block E)
  Amoy Gardens residents                 0.002
  (non-Block E)
All households of all IP                 <0.001

(a) The reference group is before March 25.

(b) Exact 95% CI.

(c) Fisher exact test p value.

Table 4. Univariate analysis of associations between risk
factors and Household Attack Rates

                                   Any probable secondary case
                                     within the household (%)

Risk factor                                Yes    No

Sex of index person (IP)
  Male (n = 400)                           16.5   83.5
  Female (n = 481)                         13.5   86.5
Age of IP (y) (a)
  [less than or equal to] 30
    (n = 283)                               7.4   92.6
  31-40 (n = 197)                          11.2   88.8
  41-50 (n = 165)                          19.4   80.6
  51-60 (n = 76)                           23.7   76.3
  [greater than or equal to] 61
    (n = 138)                              23.2   76.8
Type of IP
  Hospital workers (n = 267)                3.7   96.3
  Amoy Gardens bock E residents
    (n = 36)                               38.9   61.1
  Amoy Gardens other Block
    residents (n = 107)                    19.6   80.4
  Other community members
    (n = 471)                              18.3   81.7
Date of IP's fever onset (b)
  Before March 25 (n = 299)                22.4   77.6
  On or after March 25 (n = 581)           11.0   89.0
Duration IP stayed home between
    fever onset and
    hospitalization (d) (c)
  [less than or equal to] 2
    (n = 440)                               9.3   90.7
  3-5 (n = 268)                            15.3   84.7
  [greater than or equal to] 6
    (n = 171)                              28.7   71.3
IP visited by any household
    member during
    hospitalization?
  No (n = 682)                             12.6   87.4
  Yes (n = 199)                            22.6   77.4
Disinfection of IP's quarters?
  Yes                                      15.2   84.8
  No                                       14.7   85.3

                                                           Chi-square
Risk factor                         Odds ratio (95% CI)    p value (a)

Sex of index person (IP)
  Male (n = 400)                           1.00               0.215
  Female (n = 481)                  0.79 (0.55 to 1.15)
Age of IP (y) (a)
  [less than or equal to] 30
    (n = 283)                              1.00              <0.001
  31-40 (n = 197)                   1.57 (0.84 to 2.93)
  41-50 (n = 165)                   3.00 (1.67 to 5.41)
  51-60 (n = 76)                    3.87 (1.94 to 7.73)
  [greater than or equal to] 61
    (n = 138)                       3.77 (2.08 to 6.83)
Type of IP
  Hospital workers (n = 267)               1.00              <0.001
  Amoy Gardens bock E residents
    (n = 36)                       16.35 (6.51 to 41.08)
  Amoy Gardens other Block
    residents (n = 107)            6.28 (2.84 to 13.85)
  Other community members
    (n = 471)                      5.74 (2.93 to 11.26)
Date of IP's fever onset (b)
  Before March 25 (n = 299)                1.00              <0.001
  On or after March 25 (n = 581)    0.43 (0.29 to 0.62)
Duration IP stayed home between
    fever onset and
    hospitalization (d) (c)
  [less than or equal to] 2
    (n = 440)                              1.00              <0.001
  3-5 (n = 268)                     1.76 (1.11 to 2.79)
  [greater than or equal to] 6
    (n = 171)                       3.91 (2.46 to 6.20)
IP visited by any household
    member during
    hospitalization?
  No (n = 682)                             1.00               0.001
  Yes (n = 199)                     2.03 (1.36 to 3.03)
Disinfection of IP's quarters?
  Yes                                      1.00               0.884
  No                                0.96 (0.66 to 1.40)

(a) Excluded 22 missing persons.

(b) Excluded 1 missing person.

(c) Excluded 2 missing persons.

Table 5. Summary of stepwise multivariate logistic regression model
predicting "probable secondary infection" within the household
level (a)

Risk factor                            Coefficient    SE

Type of Index Person (IP)
  Healthcare worker
  Amoy Gardens Block E residents          3.074      0.487
  Amoy Gardens other Block residents      1.901      0.425
  Other community member                  1.705      0.354
Date of IP's fever onset
  Before March 25
  On or after March 25                   -0.696      0.235
Duration IP stayed home between
    fever onset and
    hospitalization (d)
  [less than or equal to] 2
  3-5                                     0.283      0.258
  [greater than or equal to] 6            1.045      0.265
IP visited by any household member
    when hospitalized?
  No
  Yes                                     0.483      0.242

Risk factor                             Odds ratio (95% CI)    p value

Type of Index Person (IP)
  Healthcare worker                            1.00
  Amoy Gardens Block E residents       21.62 (8.33 to 56.10)   <0.001
  Amoy Gardens other Block residents   6.69 (2.91 to 15.39)    <0.001
  Other community member               5.50 (2.75 to 11.01)    <0.001
Date of IP's fever onset
  Before March 25                              1.00
  On or after March 25                  0.50 (0.32 to 0.79)    <0.001
Duration IP stayed home between
    fever onset and
    hospitalization (d)
  [less than or equal to] 2                    1.00
  3-5                                   1.33 (0.80 to 2.20)     0.274
  [greater than or equal to] 6          2.84 (1.69 to 4.78)    <0.001
IP visited by any household member
    when hospitalized?
  No                                           1.00
  Yes                                   1.62 (1.01 to 2.60)     0.046

(a) Age was not significant in the multivariable analysis.

Table 6. Summary of multivariate logistic regression model
predicting "probable secondary infection" of household members
(N = 2,195)

Risk factor                            Coefficient    SE

Type of Index Person (IP)
  Hospital care workers
  Amoy Gardens Block E residents          2.888      0.455
  Amoy Gardens other Block residents      1.661      0.419
  Other community members                 1.387      0.352
IP visited by a household member
  Not visited by any
  Both with mask                          0.571      0.412
  Either one with mask                    0.483      0.429
  Both without mask                       1.139      0.326
Frequency of close contact with IP
    (within 1 m) (a)
  Never
  Seldom                                  0.466      0.338
  Occasionally                            0.762      0.304
  Frequently                              0.834      0.288
Date of IP's fever onset
  Before March 25
  On or after March 25                   -0.681      0.220
Duration IP stayed home between
    fever onset and
    hospitalization (d)
  [less than or equal to] 2
  3-5                                     0.092      0.278
  [greater than or equal to] 6            0.655      0.278

Risk factor                             Odds ratio (95% CI)    p value

Type of Index Person (IP)
  Hospital care workers                        1.00
  Amoy Gardens Block E residents       17.95 (7.35 to 43.83)   <0.001
  Amoy Gardens other Block residents   5.26 (2.32 to 11.95)    <0.001
  Other community members               4.01 (2.01 to 7.98)    <0.001
IP visited by a household member
  Not visited by any                           1.00
  Both with mask                        1.77 (0.79 to 3.97)     0.166
  Either one with mask                  1.62 (0.70 to 3.76)     0.260
  Both without mask                     3.12 (1.65 to 5.91)    <0.001
Frequency of close contact with IP
    (within 1 m) (a)
  Never                                        1.00
  Seldom                                1.59 (0.82 to 3.09)     0.168
  Occasionally                          2.14 (1.18 to 3.89)     0.012
  Frequently                            2.30 (1.31 to 4.05)     0.004
Date of IP's fever onset
  Before March 25                              1.00
  On or after March 25                  0.51 (0.33 to 0.78)     0.002
Duration IP stayed home between
    fever onset and
    hospitalization (d)
  [less than or equal to] 2                    1.00
  3-5                                   1.10 (0.64 to 1.89)     0.740
  [greater than or equal to] 6          1.93 (1.12 to 3.32)     0.018

(a) Information on 13 cases and 37 controls missing.


Acknowledgments See About this product.

We thank the study participants, the Chinese University medical students and volunteers who assisted in the telephone interviews, and M.K. Tam and C.K. Lee for their assistance on the project.

The study was funded from internal funds internal funds

Funds that are raised within a firm. For example, income after taxes and noncash expenses, such as depreciation, provide a firm with funds to use in the acquisition of investments.
 of the Faculty of Medicine of the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

References

(1.) World Health Organization. WHO issues a global alert of cases of atypical pneumonia atypical pneumonia
n.
See primary atypical pneumonia.


atypical pneumonia Chest medicine A clinically 'atypical' form of pneumonia, which lacks the classic signs and Sx of pneumonia Types Chlamydia pneumonia,
: cases of severe respiratory illness Noun 1. respiratory illness - a disease affecting the respiratory system
respiratory disease, respiratory disorder

adult respiratory distress syndrome, ARDS, wet lung, white lung - acute lung injury characterized by coughing and rales; inflammation of the
 may spread to hospital staff. [March, 12, 2003]. Available from: URL URL
 in full Uniform Resource Locator

Address of a resource on the Internet. The resource can be any type of file stored on a server, such as a Web page, a text file, a graphics file, or an application program.
: http://www.who.int/mediacentre/releases/2003/pr22/en/print.html

(2.) Lee N, Hui Hui

Muslim people of western China. They number about nine million. Their ancestors were merchants, soldiers, craftsmen, and scholars who came to China from Islamic Persia and Central Asia from the 7th to the 13th century and intermarried with the Han Chinese and other local
 D, Wu A, Chan P, Cameron Cam·er·on   , Mount

A peak, 4,342.6 m (14,238 ft) high, in the Rocky Mountains of central Colorado.
 P, Joynt GM, et al. A major outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome in Hong Kong. N Engl ENGL English  J Med 2003;348:1986-94.

(3.) Hong Kong Department of Health. Health, Welfare & Food Bureau SARS Bulletin. [April 18, 2003]. Available from: URL: www.info.gov See .gov and GovNet.

(networking) gov - The top-level domain for US government bodies.
.hk/dh/diseases/ap/eng/bulletin0418.htm

(4.) Hong Kong Department of Health. Outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) at Amoy Gardens, Kowloon Bay Kowloon Bay (Traditional Chinese: 九龍灣) is a bay located at the east of the Kowloon Peninsula and north of Hong Kong Island in Hong Kong. , Hong Kong: Main findings of the investigation. [April 17, 2003] Available from: URL: http://www.info.gov.hk/info/ap/pdf/amoy_e.pdf

(5.) World Health Organization. Site-Amoy Gardens Estate. [May 16, 2003]. Available from: URL: www.info.gov.hk/info/ap/who-amoy.pdf

(6.) Hong Kong Government. Latest figures on severe acute respiratory syndrome (as of May 31st 2003). [May 31, 2003]. Available from: URL: http://www.info.gov.hk/dh/diseases/ap/cng/infected.htm

(7.) Hong Kong Government. "Latest figures on Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (as of June 1st 2003)", [June 2, 2003]. Available from: URL: http://www.info.gov.hk/dh/diseases/ ap/eng/infected.htm

(8.) World Health Organization. Case definitions for surveillance of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS). [May 1, 2003]. Available from: URL: http://www.who.int/csr/sars/casedefinition/en/

(9.) Hong Kong Hospital Authority. HA information on severe acute respiratory syndrome. [April 22, 2003]. Available from: URL: http://www.ha.org See .org.

(networking) org - The top-level domain for organisations or individuals that don't fit any other top-level domain (national, com, edu, or gov). Though many have .org domains, it was never intended to be limited to non-profit organisations.

RFC 1591.
.hk/sars/ps/in formation/diagnosis_n_report.htm

(10.) Lau JTF JTF Joint Task Force
JTF Just the Facts
JTF Jewish Task Force
JTF Jitter Transfer Function
JTF Joint Tactical Force
JTF Joint Tactical Fusion
JTF Janasaviya Trust Fund (Sri Lanka)
JTF Joint Test Facility
, Yang yang (yang) [Chinese] in Chinese philosophy, the active, positive, masculine principle that is complementary to yin; see yin, under principle.  X, Tsui HY, Kim Kim

orphan wanders streets of India with lama. [Br. Lit.: Kim]

See : Adventurousness
 JH. Monitoring community responses to the SARS epidemic in Hong n. 1. A mercantile establishment or factory for foreign trade in China, as formerly at Canton; a succession of offices connected by a common passage and used for business or storage.  Kong--from day 10 to day 62. J Epidemiol Community Health 2003;57: 864-870.

(11.) Riley S, Fraser Fraser, river, Canada
Fraser, chief river of British Columbia, Canada, c.850 mi (1,370 km) long. It rises in the Rocky Mts., at Yellowhead Pass, near the British Columbia–Alta. line and flows northwest through the Rocky Mt.
 C, Donnelly Donnelly is a surname, of Irish origins, and may refer to:
  • Alan Donnelly
  • Brendan Donnelly
  • Brian Donnelly
  • Brian J. Donnelly
  • Charles Donnelly
  • Charley Donnelly
  • Ciaran Donnelly
  • Dan Donnelly, Belfast-born singer/songwriter
  • Declan Donnelly
 CA, Chan AC, Abu-Raddad LJ, Hedley Hedley may refer to:
  • Hedley (band)
  • Hedley (album), their debut
  • Hedley, British Columbia
  • Hedley, Northumberland
  • Hedley Hill, county Durham
  • Hedley, Texas
Hedley is also the surname of:
 AJ. et al. Transmission dynamics of the etiological etiological

pertaining to etiology.


etiological diagnosis
the name of a disease which includes the identification of the causative agent, e.g. Streptococcus agalactiae mastitis.
 agent of SARS in Hong Kong: impact of public health interventions health intervention Health care An activity undertaken to prevent, improve, or stabilize a medical condition . Science 2003;300:1961-6.

(12.) Hong Kong Department of Health. Household contacts of AP patients order to stay home. [April 10, 2003]. Available from: URL: www.info.gov.hk/gia/general/200304/10/0410248.htm

Dr. Lau is the director of the Centre for Epidemiology epidemiology, field of medicine concerned with the study of epidemics, outbreaks of disease that affect large numbers of people. Epidemiologists, using sophisticated statistical analyses, field investigations, and complex laboratory techniques, investigate the cause  and Biostatistics biostatistics /bio·sta·tis·tics/ (-stah-tis´tiks) biometry.

bi·o·sta·tis·tics
n.
The science of statistics applied to the analysis of biological or medical data.
 of the School of Public Health of the Chinese University of Hong Kong. One of his research interests is the behavioral behavioral

pertaining to behavior.


behavioral disorders
see vice.

behavioral seizure
see psychomotor seizure.
 aspects of infectious diseases infectious diseases: see communicable diseases. .

Address for correspondence: Joseph T.F. Lau, Centre for Biostatistics and Epidemiology, Faculty of Medicine, the Chinese University of Hong Kong, 5/F, School of Public Health, Prince of Wales Hospital, Shatin, NT; Hong Kong SAR (Segmentation And Reassembly) The protocol that converts data to cells for transmission over an ATM network. It is the lower part of the ATM Adaption Layer (AAL), which is responsible for the entire operation. See AAL.

SAR - segmentation and reassembly
; fax: (852) 2645-3098; email: jlau@cuhk.edu See .edu.

(networking) edu - ("education") The top-level domain for educational establishments in the USA (and some other countries). E.g. "mit.edu". The UK equivalent is "ac.uk".
.hk

Joseph T.F. Lau, * Mason Lau, * Jean H. Kim, * Eric ERIC Educational Research Information Clearinghouse
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
ERIC ERISA Industry Committee
ERIC Epidemiologic Research and Information Center (Durham, NC) 
 Wong n. 1. A field. , * Hi-Yi Tsui, * Thomas (language) Thomas - A language compatible with the language Dylan(TM). Thomas is NOT Dylan(TM).

The first public release of a translator to Scheme by Matt Birkholz, Jim Miller, and Ron Weiss, written at Digital Equipment Corporation's Cambridge Research Laboratory runs
 Tsang Tsang can refer to:
  • Tsang (གཙང་), a region of Tibet containing the cities of Gyantse and Shigatse and one of three regions in the traditional province called Ü-Tsang;
  • Tsang (
, ([dagger]) and Tze Wai Wong *

* Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region A special administrative region may be:
People's Republic of China
  • Special administrative regions, present-day administrative divisions (as of 2006) set up by the People's Republic of China to administer Hong Kong (since 1997) and Macau (since 1999)
, People's Republic People's Republic
n.
A political organization founded and controlled by a national Communist party.
 of China (SAR); and ([dagger])--Department of Health, Hong Kong SAR
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Title Annotation:SARS Transmission
Author:Wong, Tze Wai
Publication:Emerging Infectious Diseases
Date:Feb 1, 2004
Words:7197
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