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3 raisons identifiées
Encadrant universitaire
Forme la prochaine génération de rhumatologues (2 thèses dirigées)
Praticien-chercheur
5 articles scientifiques publiés — formation continue solide
Délais de RDV courts dans la région
336.2 rhumatos / 100 000 hab. — département bien doté
✨ Génération du profil synthétique IA en cours…
Données ANS publiques (Licence Ouverte 2.0) · Enrichissements MonRhumato 100 % opt-in · Toute personne référencée peut demander la suppression ou la rectification.
Mortalité périnatale et morbidité post-hospitalière : données d’une cohorte pédiatrique internationale
2021Doctorant·e : Lison Rambliere
Epidémiologie et transmission mère-enfant des entérobactéries productrices de bêta-lactamases à spectre étendu (E-BLSE) à Madagascar.
2018Doctorant·e : Perlinot Herindrainy
Source theses.fr — signal de direction d'équipe / statut PU-PH (à confirmer via le site universitaire).
Indicateurs publics agrégés sur 250 M+ d'œuvres scientifiques (OpenAlex, PubMed). Traduits ici en langage patient.
Influence scientifique
21
21 articles ont été cités au moins 21fois par d'autres chercheurs — preuve que ses travaux sont repris par la communauté médicale.
h-index
Total citations reçues
1 515
Nombre de fois où d'autres équipes ont mentionné ses publications dans leurs propres travaux.
Publications totales
70
Articles, revues et chapitres référencés dans les bases académiques internationales.
Articles influents
35
Publications ayant marqué leur domaine — chacune citée au moins 10 fois par d'autres chercheurs.
i10-index
Thématiques principales
Affiliations FR : Inserm · Inserm · Institut Pasteur
Source : OpenAlex (CC0, OurResearch). Indicateurs académiques agrégés sur 250 M+ d'œuvres.
Articles déposés en accès libre sur l'archive ouverte des universités françaises (HAL) — gage d'activité de recherche en France.
Impacts of wastewater treatment and the exposome on antibiotic resistance gene dynamics: Insights from Guadeloupe, a French Caribbean Island
2026ArticleWater Research X
Wastewater-based AMR surveillance associated with tourism on a Caribbean island (Guadeloupe)
2025ArticleJournal of Global Antimicrobial Resistance
Evolution of social contacts patterns in France over the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic: results from the SocialCov survey
2025ArticleBMC Infectious Diseases
Sexually transmitted infections and bacterial vaginosis in women of child-bearing age in Antananarivo, Madagascar: prevalence and risk factors from a cross-sectional study
2025ArticleBMC Infectious Diseases
Neonatal Colonization With Antibiotic-Resistant Pathogens in Low- and Middle-Income Countries
2024ArticleJAMA Network Open
Asymptomatic infections with Chlamydia trachomatis, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, and Trichomonas vaginalis among women in low- and middle-income countries: A systematic review and meta-analysis
2024ArticlePLOS Global Public Health
Assessing respiratory epidemic potential in French hospitals through collection of close contact data (April–June 2020)
2024ArticleScientific Reports
Novel point-of-care cytokine biomarker lateral flow test for the screening for sexually transmitted infections and bacterial vaginosis: study protocol of a multicentre multidisciplinary prospective observational clinical study to evaluate the performance and feasibility of the Genital InFlammation Test (GIFT)
2024ArticleBMJ Open
Source : HAL — archive ouverte CCSD/CNRS (couvre articles, chapitres EMC, communications congrès, thèses).
INSTITUT PASTEUR
25 28 28 RUE DU DOCTEUR ROUX, 75015 PARIS 15E ARRONDISSEMENT
Secteur de conventionnement non disponible (médecin hospitalier ou non présent dans l'Annuaire santé CNAM des libéraux conventionnés).
Lien Doctolib = recherche Google site:doctolib.fr (le 1er résultat est presque toujours le profil correct s'il existe).
Pediatric rheumatology online journal · 2020
Abstract Background The purpose of this study was to identify reproductive health knowledge gaps and topics that concern adolescent and young adult (AYA) women with pediatric rheumatic diseases and their parents. Methods Data collection occurred in two cohorts. In the first cohort, young women (15–20 years old) with pediatric-onset rheumatic conditions and their parents were recruited from a single, academic pediatric rheumatology center. In the second cohort, young women (18–25 years old) with pediatric-onset rheumatic conditions were recruited from a national conference for families with pediatric rheumatic diseases. This resulted in 20 adolescents and young adults (18.3 ± 2.4 years old), and 7 parent focus group participants. Focus group leaders facilitated discussions centered on reproductive health topics that participants identified as important, their sources of knowledge, and preferences for patient education and ongoing follow-up. Data were summarized independently by 4 researchers to reduce potential bias and subsequently analyzed using rapid qualitative analysis. Results All participants, regardless of diagnosis, medication, current sexual activity, or current intention to have children, expressed concern about the effect of their rheumatic condition and medications on fertility, risks to mother and child during and after pregnancy, and obtaining safe and effective contraception. Additionally, some participants discussed the burden of disease and its potential impact on motherhood. Finally, participants raised concern around the effect of disease and medication on routine reproductive health care, such as menstrual cycles, feminine self-care, and preventive exams. Three themes emerged: 1) participants had been advised to avoid unplanned pregnancy, however reported receiving inadequate explanation to support this instruction, 2) participants conceptualized reproductive health as tied to rheumatic disease management and thus suggested ways to include family members in discussion, and 3) rheumatology practitioners were not considered a resource of reproductive health information. Conclusions Young women and their parents reported dissatisfaction with the availability, quantity, and quality of reproductive health information they received, particularly when related to their pediatric-onset rheumatic disease. These findings provide an initial step in understanding the patient perspective of reproductive health in rheumatology, and how to address these concerns in the care of young women with rheumatic diseases.
Infection, genetics and evolution : journal of molecular epidemiology and evolutionary genetics in infectious diseases · 2013
The Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy · 2022
Abstract Background In Southeast-Asia, where many conditions associated with dissemination of ESBL-producing Enterobacterales (ESBL-E) in the community are met, data from the community are scarce but show high ESBL-E carriage prevalence. Maternal ESBL-E colonization is considered a risk factor for neonatal colonization, which is the first step towards developing neonatal sepsis. Despite this, ESBL-E carriage prevalence and its risk factors during pregnancy or postpartum remain undefined in Southeast-Asia. Objectives To estimate the prevalence of ESBL-E faecal colonization among peripartum women in the community of an urban and a rural area in Cambodia, to investigate ESBL-E genomic characteristics and to identify associated risk factors. Methods Epidemiological data and faecal samples from 423 peripartum women were collected in an urban and rural areas in Cambodia (2015–16). Bacterial cultures, antibiotic susceptibility tests and ESBL gene sequencing were performed. Risk factor analysis was conducted using logistic regression. Results The prevalence of ESBL-E faecal carriage was 79.2% (95% CI 75.0%–82.8%) among which Escherichia coli (n = 315/335, 94.0%) were most frequent. All isolates were multidrug resistant. Among 318 ESBL-E, the genes most frequently detected were blaCTX-M-15 (41.5%), blaCTX-M-55 (24.8%), and blaCTX-M-27 (15.1%). Low income, undernutrition, multiparity, regular consumption of pork, dried meat, and raw vegetables, were associated with ESBL-E faecal carriage. Conclusions The high prevalence of ESBL-E carriage observed among peripartum women in Southeast-Asia and the identified associated factors underline the urgent need for public health measures to address antimicrobial resistance, including a ‘One Health’ approach.
Source PubMed · Recherche par auteur (homonymes possibles, vérifier l'affiliation).
Pediatric rheumatology online journal · 2025 · Journal Article
Huynh B, Ott MA, Tarvin SE
Pediatric rheumatology online journal · 2020 · Journal Article
Carandang K, Mruk V, Ardoin SP, Huynh B, et al.
Infection, genetics and evolution : journal of molecular epidemiology and evolutionary genetics in infectious diseases · 2013 · Journal Article
Dechavanne C, Pierrat C, Renard E, Costes B, et al.
The Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy · 2022 · Journal Article
de Lauzanne A, Sreng N, Foucaud E, Sok T, et al.
Infection, genetics and evolution : journal of molecular epidemiology and evolutionary genetics in infectious diseases · 2013 · Journal Article
Dechavanne C, Pierrat C, Renard E, Costes B, et al.
Journal of investigative medicine high impact case reports · 2021 · Case Reports
Schreiber C, Khamlong M, Raza N, Huynh BQ
20240821_META_S01_database_3GC-R_publication.xlsx
This is the database describing all studies containing data on third-generation cephalosporin resistance.
Data dictionary _ database 3GC-R-E.tab
This is the data dictionary of the database " 20240821_META_S01_database_3GC-R_publication.xlsx"
Data dictionary _ database MRSA.tab
This is the data dictionary of the database "20240821_META_S01_database_MRSA_publication.xlsx "
20240821_META_S01_database_MRSA_publication.tab
This is the database describing all studies containing data on MRSA.
Optimizing COVID-19 surveillance in long-term care facilities: a modelling study
Abstract Background Long-term care facilities (LTCFs) are vulnerable to outbreaks of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Timely epidemiological surveillance is essential for outbreak response, but is complicated by a hi
Optimizing COVID-19 surveillance in long-term care facilities: a modelling study
Abstract Background Long-term care facilities (LTCFs) are vulnerable to outbreaks of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Timely epidemiological surveillance is essential for outbreak response, but is complicated by a hi
Source : DataCite — DOIs pour datasets, logiciels, protocoles, registres patient. Hors articles (déjà couverts).