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Dive into the research topics where Richard S. Hopkins is active.

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Featured researches published by Richard S. Hopkins.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1997

Outbreak of Sporotrichosis among Tree Nursery Workers

Rana Hajjeh; Sharon M. McDonnell; Susan E. Reef; Carmelo Licitra; Michael Hankins; Bill Toth; Arvind A. Padhye; Leo Kaufman; L. Pasarell; Chester R. Cooper; Lori Hutwagner; Richard S. Hopkins; Michael M. McNeil

In spring 1994, an outbreak of sporotrichosis occurred at a tree nursery in Florida; 9 (14%) of 65 workers involved in production of sphagnum moss topiaries developed lymphocutaneous sporotrichosis. A cohort study of all 65 employees was conducted to identify risk factors for sporotrichosis, and an environmental investigation was done. The risk of sporotrichosis increased significantly with the duration of working with sphagnum moss (P < .05), in particular with filling topiaries (P < .05), and with having less gardening experience (P < .05). Wearing gloves was protective (P < .005). Sporothrix schenckii was cultured from patients and sphagnum moss used in topiary production. Use of restriction fragment length polymorphism revealed an identical pattern for patient isolates that was different from the patterns of environmental isolates. Physicians should be aware of sporotrichosis in patients with ulcerative skin lesions who have a history of occupational or recreational exposure to sphagnum moss.


American Journal of Public Health | 1985

Waterborne disease in Colorado: three years' surveillance and 18 outbreaks.

Richard S. Hopkins; P Shillam; B Gaspard; L Eisnach; R J Karlin

The Colorado Department of Health conducted intensive surveillance for waterborne diseases during the three-year period July 1, 1980-June 30, 1983. Eighteen outbreaks of waterborne illness were investigated. Outbreaks involved from 15 to 1,500 ill persons. Giardia lamblia was confirmed or suspected as the agent in nine outbreaks, rotavirus in one, and no agent could be identified in eight. Seventeen outbreaks occurred on surface-water systems; none of these had adequate chemical pretreatment and filtration. Investigation of water systems exhibiting positive coliform results during the first year detected no outbreaks. Activities important to effective surveillance included educational outreach programs to local health agencies, physicians and the public, and the designation of one individual to whom all water-related public complaints and health department inquiries were directed.


Pediatric Infectious Disease | 1986

Simultaneous infection with Bordetella pertussis and respiratory syncytial virus in hospitalized children.

Richard S. Hopkins; Martha H. Roe; Mary P. Glode

We compared three groups of hospitalized children with Bordetella pertussis infection, respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection and dual B. perlussis/RSV infections in an effort to establish clinical and laboratory criteria by which to distinguish children with dual infections from children infected with either organism alone. The groups were compared for admission laboratory data, history of present illness, perinatal history and immunization history. Children with pertussis were more likely to have been premature (<37 weeks gestation) than children with RSV infections only (11 of 29 vs. 1 of 22, chi square test, 5.94, P < 0.02). Other than B. pertussis and RSV fluorescent antibody testing and culture, there were no laboratory or clinical criteria by which to differentiate these children consistently at the time of hospital admission. For purposes of medical management and infection control, pertussis or simultaneous infection with pertussis should be considered in young children hospitalized for presumed viral respiratory illness.


Neurology | 1985

Guillain‐Barré syndrome in Larimer County, Colorado A high‐incidc, wce area

Jonathan E. Kaplan; Paul J. Poduska; Gerald C. McIntosh; Richard S. Hopkins; Stanley W. Ferguson; Lawrence B. Schonberger

During the period 1981–1983, 19 cases of Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) occurred in residents of Larimer County, Colorado, for an incidence of 4.0 cases per 100,000 population per year, compared with 1.2 cases per 100,000 per year in 1975–1980 0, < 0.05). The higher incidence of GBS in 1981–1983 may represent an unusual chance occurrence, since no patient characteristics or predisposing events could be found to explain the increase. Nevertheless, the findings demonstrate that over a period of as long as 3 years, the crude average annual incidence of GBS in a large, well-defined population may exceed by twofold the upper limit of the previously reported range (0.6 to 1.9 cases per 100,000 per year).


Journal of Public Health Management and Practice | 2005

Design and operation of state and local infectious disease surveillance systems.

Richard S. Hopkins

Since 2001, increased attention has been focused on improving acute infectious disease surveillance systems. This article describes options for their design and operation. Systems designed primarily to detect individual cases of reportable diseases may differ from those designed to detect outbreaks or support design or evaluation of control programs. Timeliness, sensitivity, and predictive value of surveillance systems cannot all be maximized at the same time. Core activities of surveillance systems include collection, analysis, and dissemination of information about health events under surveillance. Doing these well requires attention to the mechanics of surveillance, such as making the health department accessible at all times to receive reports and provide consultation, and maintaining current directories of persons for dissemination of surveillance data, alerts, and recommendations. Rapid access to electronic representations of health events (eg, laboratory reports, patient records, or health care claims) provides great opportunities for more timely and complete surveillance. Some important information (eg, exposures, contacts) will still need to be collected directly from affected persons. One productive strategy is to collect core demographic and onset data on all cases and detailed clinical, exposure, and outcome data on a subset.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2010

Cluster of Serogroup W135 Meningococci, Southeastern Florida, 2008–2009

Timothy J. Doyle; Alvaro Mejia-Echeverry; Paul Fiorella; Fermin Leguen; John Livengood; Robyn Kay; Richard S. Hopkins

Recently, 14 persons in southeastern Florida were identified with Neisseria meningitidis serogroup W135 invasive infections. All isolates tested had matching or near-matching pulsed-field gel electrophoresis patterns and belonged to the multilocus sequence type 11 clonal complex. The epidemiologic investigation suggested recent endemic transmission of this clonal complex in southeastern Florida.


Journal of Public Health Management and Practice | 2000

The industry manipulation attitudes of smokers and nonsmokers.

David F. Sly; Gary R. Heald; Richard S. Hopkins; Trent Wade Moore; Meggin McCloskey; Sarah Ray

A cross-sectional random sample was obtained of Florida youth between the ages of 12-17. Data were collected through a telephone survey after obtaining parent and child consent. Industry manipulation attitudes of three groups (self-identified nonsmokers who did not use cigarettes in the past 30 days, self-identified nonsmokers who used cigarettes in the past 30 days, and self-identified smokers who used cigarettes in the past 30 days) were compared. Constraints resulting from the method of data collection resulted in a conservative estimate of the strength of the association between industry manipulation attitudes and smoking behavior.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Prevalence of 2009 Pandemic Influenza A (H1N1) Virus Antibodies, Tampa Bay Florida — November–December, 2009

Chad M. Cox; Kate Goodin; Emily Fisher; Fatimah S. Dawood; Janet J. Hamilton; German F. Leparc; Monica Gray; Linda Nelson; Rebekah H. Borse; James A. Singleton; Carrie Reed; Amanda Balish; Jacqueline M. Katz; Richard S. Hopkins; Alicia M. Fry

Background In 2009, a novel influenza virus (2009 pandemic influenza A (H1N1) virus (pH1N1)) caused significant disease in the United States. Most states, including Florida, experienced a large fall wave of disease from September through November, after which disease activity decreased substantially. We determined the prevalence of antibodies due to the pH1N1 virus in Florida after influenza activity had peaked and estimated the proportion of the population infected with pH1N1 virus during the pandemic. Methods During November-December 2009, we collected leftover serum from a blood bank, a pediatric childrens hospital and a pediatric outpatient clinic in Tampa Bay Florida. Serum was tested for pH1N1 virus antibodies using the hemagglutination-inhibition (HI) assay. HI titers ≥40 were considered seropositive. We adjusted seroprevalence results to account for previously established HI assay specificity and sensitivity and employed a simple statistical model to estimate the proportion of seropositivity due to pH1N1 virus infection and vaccination. Results During the study time period, the overall seroprevalence in Tampa Bay, Florida was 25%, increasing to 30% after adjusting for HI assay sensitivity and specificity. We estimated that 5.9% of the population had vaccine-induced seropositivity while 25% had seropositivity secondary to pH1N1 virus infection. The highest cumulative incidence of pH1N1 virus infection was among children aged 5–17 years (53%) and young adults aged 18–24 years (47%), while adults aged ≥50 years had the lowest cumulative incidence (11–13%) of pH1N1 virus infection. Conclusions After the peak of the fall wave of the pandemic, an estimated one quarter of the Tampa Bay population had been infected with the pH1N1 virus. Consistent with epidemiologic trends observed during the pandemic, the highest burdens of disease were among school-aged children and young adults.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2002

Mass Vaccination Campaign Following Community Outbreak of Meningococcal Disease

Gérard Krause; Carina Blackmore; Steven Wiersma; Cheryll Lesneski; Laurey Gauch; Richard S. Hopkins

During December 12–29, 1998, seven patients ages 2–18 years were diagnosed with serogroup C meningococcal disease in two neighboring Florida towns with 33,000 residents. We evaluated a mass vaccination campaign implemented to control the outbreak. We maintained vaccination logs and recorded the resources used in the campaign that targeted 2- to 22-year-old residents of the two towns. A total of 13,148 persons received the vaccinations in 3 days. Vaccination coverage in the target population was estimated to be 86% to 99%. Five additional cases of serogroup C meningococcal disease occurred in the community during the year after the campaign began, four in patients who had not received the vaccine. The cost of control efforts was approximately


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 2013

Antimicrobial stewardship programs in Florida's acute care facilities.

Lilian M. Abbo; Kaming Lo; Ronda L. Sinkowitz-Cochran; Anne Carol Burke; Richard S. Hopkins; Arjun Srinivasan; Thomas M. Hooton

370,000. Although cases continued to occur, the vaccination campaign appeared to control the outbreak. Rapid implementation, a targeted approach, and high coverage were important to the campaigns success.

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Janet J. Hamilton

Florida Department of Health

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Steven Wiersma

Florida Department of Health

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Carina Blackmore

Florida Department of Health

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Gregory R. Istre

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Tammie M. Johnson

University of North Florida

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David F. Sly

Florida State University

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Gérard Krause

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Kate Goodin

Florida Department of Health

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Mary P. Glode

University of Colorado Denver

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