Rabies Laboratory,
Wadsworth Center,
Rabies Laboratory, Wadsworth Center
Jodie Jarvis is the Deputy Director of the New York State Department of Health – Wadsworth Center Rabies Laboratory. She received her Bachelor of Science from University of Wisconsin where she studied wildlife ecology, discovering her interest in zoonotic and wildlife diseases.
Jodie was first a volunteer and later a technician at the USGS – National Wildlife Health Center. She assisted in bird necropsies, laboratory tests, animal handling, and collecting samples in the field for avian botulism, plague, and avian vacuolar myelinopathy research.
In 2001 she participated in the Wadsworth Center’s Emerging Infectious Disease Fellowship Program where she partnered her interest in zoonotic diseases with public health. Rotations were done in zoonotic epidemiology, the arbovirus laboratory, and the rabies laboratory. Following the fellowship she joined the rabies laboratory as a research scientist as well as becoming a member of the Biodefense and Emerging Infectious Disease Response Team.
Jodie’s interests are in rabies DFA testing, rabies infection in bats, and rabies serum neutralization testing. She is a member of the USDA APHIS WS National Rabies Management Program’s Blue Ribbon Panel Serology Subcommittee aiding in their monitoring and evaluating oral rabies vaccination efforts targeting free-ranging wild carnivores.
Susceptibility and pathogenesis of little brown bats (Myotis lucifugus) to heterologous and homologous rabies viruses.
Journal of virology Aug, 2013 | Pubmed ID: 23741002
Rabies virus infection in Eptesicus fuscus bats born in captivity (naïve bats).
PloS one , 2013 | Pubmed ID: 23741396
Rabies direct fluorescent antibody test does not inactivate rabies or eastern equine encephalitis viruses.
Journal of virological methods 08, 2016 | Pubmed ID: 27079827
Overwintering of Rabies Virus in Silver Haired Bats (Lasionycteris noctivagans).
PloS one , 2016 | Pubmed ID: 27195489
HEALTH SURVEY OF FREE-RANGING RACCOONS (PROCYON LOTOR) IN CENTRAL PARK, NEW YORK, NEW YORK, USA: IMPLICATIONS FOR HUMAN AND DOMESTIC ANIMAL HEALTH.
Journal of wildlife diseases 04, 2017 | Pubmed ID: 28135131
Clarifying Indeterminate Results on the Rabies Direct Fluorescent Antibody Test Using Real-Time Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction.
Public health reports (Washington, D.C. : 1974) Jan/Feb, 2019 | Pubmed ID: 30508492
Detection of rabies viral neutralizing antibodies in the Puerto Rican .
Infection ecology & epidemiology Oct, 2020 | Pubmed ID: 33224448
Charles E. Rupprecht1,
Wei-Cheng Hsu2,
Feng Ye3,
Megan Golding4,
Luca Zaeck5,
Laurent Dacheux6,
Noel Tordo7,
Jodie A. Jarvis8,
Erin Patrick9,
Are Berentsen10
1, LYSSA LLC,
2Animal Health Research Institute, Council of Agriculture, Executive Yuan,
3Key Laboratory of Jilin Province for Zoonosis Prevention and Control, Institute of Military Veterinary Medicine, Academy of Military Medical Sciences,
4Wildlife Zoonoses & Vector-Borne Diseases Research Group, Animal and Plant Health Agency,
5Institute of Molecular Virology and Cell Biology, Friedrich-Loeffler-Institut, Federal Research Institute for Animal Health,
6Unit Lyssavirus Epidemiology and Neuropathology, National Reference Center for Rabies and WHO Collaborating Center for Reference and Research on Rabies, Institut Pasteur,
7Unit Antiviral Strategies, OIE Reference Laboratories for Rift Valley Fever Virus & Crimean Congo Hemorrhagic Fever Virus, Institut Pasteur, Institut Pasteur de Guinea, Conakry,
8Rabies Laboratory, Wadsworth Center, New York State Department of Health,
9Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, Wildlife Services, Knoxville, TN, US Department of Agriculture,
10Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, Wildlife Services, National Wildlife Research Center, US Department of Agriculture
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