Pages that link to "Q43048628"
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The following pages link to The tattooing paradox: are studies of acute hepatitis adequate to identify routes of transmission of subclinical hepatitis C infection? (Q43048628):
Displaying 15 items.
- Seroepidemiology of viral hepatitis, HIV and herpes simplex type 2 in the household population aged 21-64 years in Puerto Rico (Q33544908) (← links)
- Risk factors associated with Hepatitis C among female substance users enrolled in community-based HIV prevention studies (Q33872878) (← links)
- Molecular epidemiology of hepatitis C among drug users in Flanders, Belgium: association of genotype with clinical parameters and with sex- and drug-related risk behaviours (Q34560512) (← links)
- Prevalence, distribution, and correlates of hepatitis C virus infection among homeless adults in Los Angeles (Q36005257) (← links)
- Quantifying hepatitis C transmission risk using a new weighted scoring system for the Blood-Borne Virus Transmission Risk Assessment Questionnaire (BBV-TRAQ): applications for community-based HCV surveillance, education and prevention. (Q36663249) (← links)
- Acute hepatitis C in Israel: a predominantly iatrogenic disease? (Q36734134) (← links)
- The association between use of non-injection drug implements and hepatitis C virus antibody status in homeless and marginally housed persons in San Francisco (Q36975130) (← links)
- Combined effects of alcohol and hepatitis C: a secondary analysis of alcohol use biomarkers and high-risk behaviors from two medication trials for alcohol dependence (Q37442751) (← links)
- Identifying newly acquired cases of hepatitis C using surveillance: a literature review (Q38014990) (← links)
- Evidence for a substantial role of sharing of injecting paraphernalia other than syringes/needles to the spread of hepatitis C among injecting drug users (Q42595031) (← links)
- Hepatitis C virus infection among homeless men referred from a community clinic (Q42684938) (← links)
- Phylogenetic investigation of nosocomial transmission of hepatitis C virus in an oncology ward (Q43033723) (← links)
- Prevalence of selected viral infections among temporarily deferred donors who returned to donate blood: American Red Cross blood donor study (Q50754171) (← links)
- Biases in surveillance of hepatitis C infection systematically underestimate the etiologic role of tattooing. (Q52967480) (← links)
- Hepatitis C awareness among adolescents in the Alpes-Maritimes area of France (Q80413172) (← links)