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Upper Respiratory Infections - The Cat Doctor, Santa Rosa, CA, Dr
Upper Respiratory Infections - The Cat Doctor, Santa Rosa, CA, Dr

... similarities but also some important differences. The term “upper respiratory” refers to the eyes, nose, mouth, throat, and trachea (windpipe), but not the bronchi or lungs, which constitute the lower respiratory tract. In humans, there are about 200 different viruses that cause cold symptoms. Infec ...
elimination and eradication of diseases, with special reference to
elimination and eradication of diseases, with special reference to

... more optimistic targets for the reduction in the occurrence of a disease have been put forward, and the concept of eradication, which implies that the disease will no longer occur in a popUlation, has been widely adopted. Attempts to stamp out infectious diseases began almost a century ago. In 1896, ...
Methods Epidemiological investigation
Methods Epidemiological investigation

... • Unexposed group is a group that has not had contact with a cause of, or possess a characteristic that is a determinant of, a particular health problem. • Outcome is any or all of the possible results that may stem from an exposure or study factor. ...
Bloodborne Pathogen Training for School Staff
Bloodborne Pathogen Training for School Staff

... Flu-like symptoms. Pain on the right side of the abdomen. A condition in which the skin and the whites of the eyes turn yellow in color (jaundice). Dark urine (like cola or tea). ...
ILAR Journal - Laboratory Animal Boards Study Group
ILAR Journal - Laboratory Animal Boards Study Group

... Gonder. Select Agent Regulations, pp. 4-7 Due to potential threat of biological agent use by terrorist, laws have been enacted and regulations developed to ensure the appropriate use of specified "select agents and toxins" for legitimate research. Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 199 ...
Blood Borne Pathogen Power Point Presentation
Blood Borne Pathogen Power Point Presentation

... Flu-like symptoms. Pain on the right side of the abdomen. A condition in which the skin and the whites of the eyes turn yellow in color (jaundice). Dark urine (like cola or tea). ...
Celiac Disease? - National Foundation for Celiac
Celiac Disease? - National Foundation for Celiac

... Celiac disease is triggered by consumption of the protein called gluten, which is found in wheat, barley and rye. While this genetic disorder can sometimes emerge in childhood, celiac disease can also be triggered by events such as surgery, pregnancy, childbirth, viral infection, or severe emotional ...
Case Studies in Public Health Preparedness and Response to
Case Studies in Public Health Preparedness and Response to

... • The 2014 Ebola outbreak in West Africa is the largest in history and has affected multiple countries • Think Ebola: U.S. healthcare providers should be aware of clinical presentation and risk factors for EVD • Human-to-human transmission by direct contact – No human-to-human transmission via inhal ...
Endemic zoonoses in the tropics: a public health
Endemic zoonoses in the tropics: a public health

... disease burden, particularly across human populations is crucial to understanding the epidemiology and overall impacts of these diseases fatigue, and joint or muscle aches tropical regions. Endemic zoonoses are commonly associated with affect human health and wellbeing many endemic zoonoses. These s ...
Ishida DACS-Z Checkweigher
Ishida DACS-Z Checkweigher

... Lyme disease, Ebola, West Nile virus, malaria, and rabies are well-known zoonotic diseases, maladies existing in animals that can be transmitted to humans. The Centers for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC) states that “more than 6 out of every 10 infectious diseases in humans are spread from animal ...
Dysentery Infections
Dysentery Infections

... Infections – Essential Information ...
PowerPoint 演示文稿
PowerPoint 演示文稿

... Antigenic drift of viral HA requires re-vaccination for newly emergent or reemerging strains Serum antibody not required for recovery after infection CTL's may play a role in responses after infection ...
Securing circulation pharmaceutically [PDF 960.12KB]
Securing circulation pharmaceutically [PDF 960.12KB]

... imminent threat. Anxious as to what may lie around the corner, governments became gripped by an almost effervescent frenzy as they now competed with one another to rapidly stockpile scarce global supplies of Tamiflu from the manufacturer. All the while, national policy planners were nervously lookin ...
important by patients, not by experts, it entails the risk... experts will not submit research proposals on these topics. This REFERENCES
important by patients, not by experts, it entails the risk... experts will not submit research proposals on these topics. This REFERENCES

... New Lambton, Australia with CF diagnosed by a positive sweat test and CF genotyping. Participants were assessed at baseline and reviewed every 3 months for 1 yr, from 2007 to 2009. Participants were advised to contact investigators as soon as they developed symptoms of a cold or a worsening of their ...
Hepatitis B: What hospitals need to do to protect newborns in New
Hepatitis B: What hospitals need to do to protect newborns in New

... sexually-transmitted virus that causes both acute and chronic hepatitis. The risk for chronic infection varies according to the age at infection and is greatest among young children. Approximately 90% of infants will remain chronically infected with HBV. By contrast, approximately 95% of adults reco ...
Digital Disease Detection: Building the toolkit i
Digital Disease Detection: Building the toolkit i

... smartphone-connected diagnostic tests to prevent the spread of deadly infections including influenza, MRSA and HIV. We currently have up to £1M funding available to support new Exploratory Projects to complement and grow our Core Research Challenge Programme. Our aim is to bring in new academics fro ...
FINAL Press Release
FINAL Press Release

... “Silence the Sounds of Pertussis” Campaign Keri Russell Shares her Personal Experience about Protecting Kids from a Deadly but Vaccine-Preventable Disease Washington D.C. – October 16, 2007 – Parents of Kids with Infectious Diseases (PKIDs) today announced the launch of its national educational camp ...
RSV - NSW Health
RSV - NSW Health

... RSV can spread easily from person to person through droplets from a sneeze or cough. People can also be infected by touching their nose or eyes after touching a person with RSV or contaminated items. A person is usually infectious for up to 10 days after symptoms begin. ...
Roseola
Roseola

... from the nose or mouth travelling through the air or by direct contact. The tiny droplets of fluid are expelled when an infected person talks, coughs, sneezes or laughs. If people touch these droplets and then touch their own noses or mouths they can become infected. The incubation period (time from ...
Reparatory tract infection
Reparatory tract infection

... that is most often found in contaminated water supplies and air conditioners. It is a potentially fatal infection if not accurately diagnosed. Pneumonia is part of the overall infection, and symptoms include high fever, a relatively slow heart rate, diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, and chest pain. Older ...
Serious Pediatric Infections2013-04-29 14:2910.1 MB
Serious Pediatric Infections2013-04-29 14:2910.1 MB

... 6. Appreciate utilization of knowledge of pathogenesis of diseases in therapeutic and preventive measures. Pediatric infectious diseases (special considerations)  Most common problem you will encounter in pediatrics  First exposure: because most children will encounter the organism for the first t ...
blood bourne pathogen - Mendham Borough School
blood bourne pathogen - Mendham Borough School

... • At work, the diseases are spread by blood entering your body through cuts, punctures, or splashing that enter the mucous membranes of the eyes or mouth. • Employees providing first aid or medical care involving fresh blood are at-risk. • Biting is not a common way of transmitting HIV- however seve ...
Maternal Health: What`s Infectious Disease Got to Do With It?
Maternal Health: What`s Infectious Disease Got to Do With It?

... – TB/HIV cascade ...
Infection Control Power Point
Infection Control Power Point

Population heterogeneity, structure, and mixing
Population heterogeneity, structure, and mixing

... But how to approach other directly-transmitted diseases, for which contacts are hard to define? ...
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Pandemic



A pandemic (from Greek πᾶν pan ""all"" and δῆμος demos ""people"") is an epidemic of infectious disease that has spread through human populations across a large region; for instance multiple continents, or even worldwide. A widespread endemic disease that is stable in terms of how many people are getting sick from it is not a pandemic. Further, flu pandemics generally exclude recurrences of seasonal flu. Throughout history there have been a number of pandemics, such as smallpox and tuberculosis. More recent pandemics include the HIV pandemic as well as the 1918 and 2009 H1N1 pandemics. The Black Death was a devastating pandemic, killing over 75 million people.
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