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Featured researches published by Eric R. Brenner.


American Journal of Public Health | 1998

Risk factors for congenital syphilis in infants of women with syphilis in South Carolina.

Julie A. Mobley; Robert E. McKeown; Kirby L. Jackson; Francisco S. Sy; Jon S. Parham; Eric R. Brenner

OBJECTIVES This study examined risk factors for congenital syphilis in South Carolina. METHODS Case infants with presumptive and confirmed congenital syphilis were compared with control infants born to women with reactive serologies during pregnancy, allowing investigation of risk factors for congenital rather than acquired transmission of syphilis. Data were collected from congenital syphilis report forms and birth certificates for 186 case infants and 487 controls born from 1991 to 1993. Odds ratios were calculated for maternal risk factors. RESULTS Significant statistical trends were found for timing of first prenatal visit and number of visits. Other significant factors included rural residence (odds ratio [OR] = 2.0, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.4, 2.9) and previous pregnancy loss (OR = 0.3, 95% CI = 0.2, 0.6). CONCLUSIONS Prevention of congenital syphilis may be less effective among pregnant women with syphilis in South Carolina who have fewer prenatal care visits. Health care providers need further education on maternal/child syphilis management and techniques for motivating and educating patients.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 1994

Changing Patterns of Mycobacterial Disease at a Teaching Community Hospital

Jeffrey N. Cox; Eric R. Brenner; Charles S. Bryan

OBJECTIVES To evaluate trends in the occurrence and diagnosis of mycobacterial disease. DESIGN Prospective surveillance study using a central tuberculosis registry at a 611-bed teaching community hospital. RESULTS Data pertaining to 715 patients were entered into the registry between 1976 and 1991 on the basis of positive smears or cultures for acid-fast bacilli (AFB). Over time, the ratio of isolates of Mycobacterium tuberculosis to isolates of nontuberculous mycobacteria reversed (from 3.2 to 1 between 1976 and 1981 to 1 to 1.6 between 1986 and 1991). The sensitivity of the sputum AFB smear for diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis increased (from 0.73 to 0.96), but the positive predictive value of the sputum AFB smear declined (from 0.72 to 0.59). The acquired immunodeficiency syndrome epidemic accounted for these changes only to a small extent. CONCLUSIONS The increasing occurrence of non-tuberculous mycobacterial disease and the declining positive predictive value of the sputum AFB smear at this hospital imply that respiratory isolation and antituberculous therapy will be used inappropriately for many patients. The development and use of newer tests for early isolation and specific identification of M tuberculosis should be accelerated.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 1981

Nosocomial Bacteremia in Perspective: A Community-Wide Study

Eric R. Brenner; Charles S. Bryan

Prospective surveillance of 1,527 episodes of bacteremia in the four major hospitals serving a community of 300,000 revealed striking differences among the hospitals. The rate of community-acquired bacteremia ranged from 1.9 to 6.8 per 1000 discharges; the rate of nosocomial bacteremia ranged from 0.9 to 9.8 per 1000 discharges. Death rates attributed to nosocomial bacteremias varied among the hospitals by as much as 40-fold. Nosocomial bacteremias were less frequent at two community non-teaching hospitals than at two teaching hospitals. Although fewer blood cultures were obtained at the nonteaching hospitals, the ratio of blood cultures obtained to deaths attributed to bacteremic infection was highest at these hospitals, suggesting that physicians recognized the importance of obtaining blood cultures in critically ill patients. The potential usefulness of bacteremia surveillance is reviewed. It is suggested that hospitals serving a single community might constitute an appropriate unit for such surveillance.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 1994

Utility of the hospital tuberculosis registry.

Charles S. Bryan; Eric R. Brenner

Emerging guidelines suggest that the management of tuberculosis and suspected tuberculosis in the hospital will become an increasingly costly enterprise. The local hospital registry can be a focal point for determining the extent to which such measures are necessary at individual institutions, that existing infection control recommendations are being carried out, and that patients released from the hospital are not lost to follow-up. Consideration might be given to inclusion of all patients begun on antituberculous therapy, regardless of the results of acid-fast bacilli cultures, in view of renewed concern about patient compliance.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 1983

Analysis of 1,186 Episodes of Gram-Negative Bacteremia in Non-University Hospitals: The Effects of Antimicrobial Therapy

Charles S. Bryan; Kenneth L. Reynolds; Eric R. Brenner


American Journal of Epidemiology | 1986

ENDEMIC BACTEREMIA IN COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROLINA

Charles S. Bryan; Carlton A. Hornung; Kenneth L. Reynolds; Eric R. Brenner


Concepts and Methods in Infectious Disease Surveillance | 2014

Implementation of the National Electronic Disease Surveillance System in South Carolina

Eric R. Brenner


Journal of the South Carolina Medical Association | 2011

Efficacy and safety of influenza vaccines.

Eric R. Brenner


Archive | 2009

Perspectives on the Evolving H1N1 Influenza Pandemic

Eric R. Brenner


Journal of the South Carolina Medical Association | 1995

Measles control in institutional settings.

Kim Cs; Wright Hh; Eric R. Brenner; Parker E

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Charles S. Bryan

University of South Carolina

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Kenneth L. Reynolds

University of South Carolina

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Carlton A. Hornung

University of South Carolina

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Francisco S. Sy

University of South Carolina

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Jeffrey N. Cox

University of South Carolina

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Julie A. Mobley

Georgia Regents University

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Kirby L. Jackson

University of South Carolina

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Robert E. McKeown

University of South Carolina

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