C. Lane
Public Health England
37 Papers
241 Citations
C. Lane is an academic researcher from Public Health England. The author has contributed to research in topics: Salmonella enteritidis & Salmonella. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 37 publications. Previous affiliations of C. Lane include World Health Organization & University of London.
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Papers
Rainfall and outbreaks of drinking water related disease and in England and Wales.
TL;DR: Evidence is provided that both low rainfall and heavy rain precede many drinking water outbreaks and assessing the health impacts of climate change should examine both.
Campylobacter epidemiology: a descriptive study reviewing 1 million cases in England and Wales between 1989 and 2011
Gordon Nichols,Judith F. Richardson,Samuel K. Sheppard,Samuel K. Sheppard,C. Lane,Christophe Sarran +5 more
TL;DR: The drivers/mechanisms influencing seasonality, age distribution, population density, socioeconomic and long-term differences are diverse and their relative contributions remain to be established.
148
Changing Pattern of Human Listeriosis, England and Wales, 2001–2004
Iain A. Gillespie,James McLauchlin,Kathie Grant,Kathie Grant,Christine L. Little,Christine L. Little,V Mithani,Celia Penman,C. Lane,C. Lane,Martyn Regan +10 more
TL;DR: Disease has reemerged, mainly in patients ≥60 years of age with bacteremia, with concern for the long-term health of patients with this condition.
A re-evaluation of the impact of temperature and climate change on foodborne illness.
Iain R. Lake,Iain A. Gillespie,Graham Bentham,Gordon Nichols,C. Lane,Goutam K. Adak,E. J. Threlfall +6 more
TL;DR: The results are consistent with reduced pathogen concentrations in food and improved food hygiene over time and imply that current estimates of how climate change may alter foodborne illness burden are overly pessimistic.
121
Public health surveillance in the UK revolutionises our understanding of the invasive Salmonella Typhimurium epidemic in Africa
Philip M. Ashton,Siân V. Owen,Lukeki Kaindama,Will P. M. Rowe,C. Lane,Lesley Larkin,Satheesh Nair,Claire Jenkins,de Pinna E,Nicholas A. Feasey,Jay C. D. Hinton,Timothy J. Dallman +11 more
TL;DR: The discovery of ST313 isolates responsible for gastroenteritis in the UK reveals new diversity in this important sequence type, and highlights the power of routine WGS by public health agencies to make epidemiologically significant deductions that would be missed by conventional microbiological methods.