Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Roberto Tapia Conyer is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Roberto Tapia Conyer.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2003

The U.S.-Mexico Border Infectious Disease Surveillance Project: Establishing Binational Border Surveillance

Michelle Weinberg; Stephen H. Waterman; Carlos Alvarez Lucas; Verónica Carrión Falcón; Pablo Kuri Morales; Luis Anaya Lopez; Chris Peter; Alejandro Escobar Gutiérrez; Ernesto Ramirez Gonzalez; Ana Flisser; Ralph T. Bryan; Enrique Navarro Valle; Alfonso Rodriguez; Gerardo Alvarez Hernandez; Cecilia Rosales; Javier Arias Ortiz; Michael Landen; Hugo Vilchis; Julie A. Rawlings; Francisco Lopez Leal; Luis Ortega; Elaine W. Flagg; Roberto Tapia Conyer; Martin S. Cetron

In 1997, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Mexican Secretariat of Health, and border health officials began the development of the Border Infectious Disease Surveillance (BIDS) project, a surveillance system for infectious diseases along the U.S.-Mexico border. During a 3-year period, a binational team implemented an active, sentinel surveillance system for hepatitis and febrile exanthems at 13 clinical sites. The network developed surveillance protocols, trained nine surveillance coordinators, established serologic testing at four Mexican border laboratories, and created agreements for data sharing and notification of selected diseases and outbreaks. BIDS facilitated investigations of dengue fever in Texas-Tamaulipas and measles in California–Baja California. BIDS demonstrates that a binational effort with local, state, and federal participation can create a regional surveillance system that crosses an international border. Reducing administrative, infrastructure, and political barriers to cross-border public health collaboration will enhance the effectiveness of disease prevention projects such as BIDS.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2004

Measles in Mexico, 1941–2001: Interruption of Endemic Transmission and Lessons Learned

Samuel L. Katz; José Ignacio Santos; Miguel Angell Nakamura; Miriam Veras Godoy; Pablo Kuri; Carlos Alvarez Lucas; Roberto Tapia Conyer

In Mexico, measles occurred in a cyclical endemic-epidemic pattern until the early 1970s. Beginning in 1973, routine vaccination augmented by mass vaccination campaigns led to a decrease in the incidence of measles until the 1989-1990 regional pandemic, when the measles attack rate rose to 80 cases per 100000, resulting in 5899 deaths. Since the pandemic, measles elimination efforts in Mexico have resulted in increasing coverage to >95% among children aged 1-6 years with 2 doses of either measles or measles-mumps-rubella vaccine since 1996 and in coverage of 97.6% among children aged 6-10 since 1999. Surveillance data suggest that the transmission of indigenous measles virus was interrupted in 1997. After almost 4 years without measles cases, in April 2000, measles virus was reintroduced into Mexico and 30 laboratory-confirmed cases were reported. Detection of relatively few cases in nonprogrammatic age groups affirms the high immunization coverage and the sensitivity of measles surveillance in Mexico. We conclude that the specific strategies adopted for measles elimination have enabled Mexico to eliminate the endemic transmission of measles.


Gaceta Medica De Mexico | 1990

Estudio nutricional de preescolares y mujeres en México: resultados de una encuesta probabilística nacional

Jaime Sepúlveda Amor; Miguel Lezana; Roberto Tapia Conyer; José Valdespino; Herlinda Madrigal; Jesús Kumate


Salud Publica De Mexico | 1994

Factores asociados al consumo de drogas en adolescentes de áreas urbanas de México

Austreberta Nazar Beutelspacher; Roberto Tapia Conyer; Antonio Villa Romero; Graciela León Alvarez; María Elena Medina Mora; Benito Salvatierra Izaba


Salud Publica De Mexico | 1995

El riesgo de transmisión del dengue: un espacio para la estratificación

Héctor Gómez Dantés; Beatriz Ramos Bonifaz; Roberto Tapia Conyer


Salud Publica De Mexico | 2013

Universal Coverage of Health Services in Mexico

Mercedes Juan; Alba Moguel Ancheita; Cuauhtémoc Valdés Olmedo; Eduardo González Pier; Gabriel Martínez González; Mariana Barraza Llorens; Nelly Aguilera Aburto; Silvia Trejo Rayón; Guillermo Soberón Acevedo; Julio Frenk Mora; Ignacio Ibarra Espinosa; Gabriel Manuell Lee; Roberto Tapia Conyer; Pablo Kuri Morales; Carlos Noriega Curtis; Fernando Valle; Patricia Uribe Zúñiga


Salud Publica De Mexico | 1992

Banco Nacional de Sueros

Clementina Magos-Lopez; Francisco Sanchez Villareal; Gonzalo Gutiérrez; Roberto Tapia Conyer


Gaceta Medica De Mexico | 1995

El dengue en México: situación epidemiológica reciente

Héctor Gómez Dantés; Raúl Montesano Castellanos; Sergio López Moreno; Roberto Tapia Conyer


Salud Publica De Mexico | 1991

Factores asociados a la mortalidad por tétanos neonatal en el área rural de Jalisco

Roberto Tapia Conyer; Jaime Sepúlveda Amor; Benito Salvatierra Izaba; Aurora Tapia Díaz; Lizbeth López Carrillo; José Luis Canales Muñoz; Héctor Gallardo Rincón


Gaceta Medica De Mexico | 1995

El cólera en México: situación epidemiológica actual

Aída Jiménez Corona; Lucina Gutiérrez Cogio; Sergio López Moreno; Roberto Tapia Conyer

Collaboration


Dive into the Roberto Tapia Conyer's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Juan Ramón De La Fuente

National Autonomous University of Mexico

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pablo Kuri Morales

National Autonomous University of Mexico

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Héctor Gómez Dantés

National Autonomous University of Mexico

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

José Ignacio Santos

National Autonomous University of Mexico

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

María Luisa Rascón

Mexican Institute of Petroleum

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alejandro Mohar Betancourt

National Autonomous University of Mexico

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ana Flisser

National Autonomous University of Mexico

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Blanca de la Rosa

National Autonomous University of Mexico

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eduardo González Pier

Mexican Social Security Institute

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge