Standard virologic methods were used to characterize the relative contribution of each of the enterovirus classes to the etiology of aseptic meningitis during a prospective study of this disease among children < 24 months old. Viruses were isolated in cell culture from 164 (60%) of 274 cases identified over 5 years and in newborn mice from only 2 of 104 remaining cell culture-negative cases. Serologic tests identified the viral pathogen in 3 additional cases. The group B coxsackieviruses and the echoviruses were implicated in 156 (92%) of the 169 laboratory-diagnosed cases. Forty-eight percent of all diagnosed cases were due to group B coxsackievirus serotypes 2, 4, and 5; 78% of all cases were attributable to only 8 of the 67 known enterovirus serotypes. Polioviruses were the only viruses isolated from 7 children, including a cerebrospinal fluid isolate from 1 child and a urine isolate from another. Disease was attributable to the group A coxsackie-viruses for only 3 cases.
In 2001 an estimated 103,612 nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants (PAs) were in clinical employment in the United States. The roles of PAs and NPs in providing comparable physician services are similar; they differ in that NPs are predominantly in primary care, while PAs are divided between primary and specialty care. PA and NP education processes also differ in the student pool and trends in the output. The combined number of graduates totaled 11,585 in 2001. However, the annual number of NP graduates is declining, while the number of PA graduates is increasing. These observations have implications for the future in the types of patients they see and the degree of health care services they provide.
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