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PDF - Matheson Center For Health Care Studies
PDF - Matheson Center For Health Care Studies

... is spread most commonly through water or food that is contaminated with infected fecal matter. It may incubate for as long as a month. With no cure existing, treatment centers on antibiotics for possible infections, analgesics, and methods to speed up recovery. There were no cases of Polio in Utah i ...
Diseases of the Respiratory Tract
Diseases of the Respiratory Tract

... Requires hospitalization, antibiotics Symptoms: – Dyspnea – Cough, productive or nonproductive – Fever ...
PRIORIX
PRIORIX

... a fever, runny nose, hacking cough and conjunctivitis (eye inflammation). The rash appears 3-5 days after the onset of symptoms and spreads rapidly all over the body. Measles is often a severe disease complicated by ear infection and pneumonia (lung infection). Encephalitis (swelling of the brain) c ...
Immunisations at secondary school age
Immunisations at secondary school age

... discuss the information in this guide so that you can make decisions together. For the vaccines being offered in school, you may be given a consent form that should be signed by your parent (or guardian) giving permission for you to have the vaccinations. The School Nurse will discuss the vaccine wi ...
Everything there is to know about vaccination
Everything there is to know about vaccination

... • A child can contract Hib in contact with other children or adults who carry the bacteria, without being aware of it. The germs are transmitted from an adult or from one child to another by droplets through the air or through secretions from the respiratory system. • If the bacteria remain in the c ...
the quest for a universal vaccine
the quest for a universal vaccine

... immunological correlates of protection as the pathogen,” Dr Drury adds. Advancing basic and applied vaccinology, will involve, for example, using the latest technological and computational advances – vaccine research generates huge amounts of data – to bridge the gaps between the effect in vitro and ...
CBS_Apr_7_05
CBS_Apr_7_05

... ability to grow cells from higher organisms such as vertebrates in the laboratory, made it easier to develop new vaccines, and the number of pathogens for which vaccines can be made have almost doubled. •Many vaccines were grown in chicken embryo cells (from eggs), and even today many vaccines such ...
Rick Fairhurst Bacteria charts
Rick Fairhurst Bacteria charts

... Diseases ...
Chapter 22 Powerpoint lecture
Chapter 22 Powerpoint lecture

... Explain how bacterial meningitis is diagnosed and treated. ...
Chapter 22 Powerpoint Show
Chapter 22 Powerpoint Show

... • Requires blood factors for growth • Type b occurs mostly in children (6 months to 4 years) ...
Infectious diseases
Infectious diseases

... infection. The disease is usually mild and may even go unnoticed. Children may have few symptoms, but adults may experience a prodrome (warning symptom) of a fever, headache, malaise, runny nose, and inflamed eyes that lasts from 1 to 5 days before the rash appears. A person can transmit the disease ...
Feline Upper Respiratory Infection Full.vp
Feline Upper Respiratory Infection Full.vp

... infection due to their inherent facial flattening. The average house cat who is not exposed to any rescued kittens, lives with only one or two other cats at most, and never goes outside is unlikely break with infection. Kittens are predisposed due to their immature immune systems and are usually hit ...
HOSPITAL KUALA KUBU BHARU PHARMACY BULLETIN
HOSPITAL KUALA KUBU BHARU PHARMACY BULLETIN

... Non-human to human transmission  Camels are likely to be a major reservoir host for MERSCoV and an animal source of infection in humans. Human-to-human transmission  Spread from an infected person’s respiratory secretions and is droplets. MERS-CoV has spread from ill people to others through close ...
The Struggle with Infectious Disease
The Struggle with Infectious Disease

... in a 2 hour period • Can result in death within hours ...
2009-01-09 Flu Resistance, and Our Own
2009-01-09 Flu Resistance, and Our Own

... episode. In 1976, based on an outbreak at Fort Dix in New Jersey, it appeared that a pandemic of ‘swine flu’ with similarities to the infamous 1918 pandemic strain was a real possibility. There was an aggressive immunization campaign, but a flu pandemic never materialized. Cases of Guillain-Barré Sy ...
Meningococcus - Crawfordsville Community School
Meningococcus - Crawfordsville Community School

... Meningococcus can be devastating — claiming a child’s life in hours. Although infants less than 1 year of age are at the highest risk of getting this disease, adolescents and teens are most likely to die from it. The meningococcal vaccine is recommended for all adolescents and teens. Q. What is meni ...
Set 7 Antibiotics - IUP Personal Websites
Set 7 Antibiotics - IUP Personal Websites

... • Latent-no symptoms but still infectious • Teriary-disease invades entire body including bones and brain Syphilis is called the Great Imitator because its symptoms resemble those of other diseases ...
vaccines - Pfizer Ireland
vaccines - Pfizer Ireland

... These low and inconsistent rates of vaccination among adults have complex root causes but can be partially explained by the misplaced belief that vaccination is only for the young on the one hand, and the reliance on risk-based guidelines for adults on the other. Contrary to vaccination guidelines f ...
Annotated Bibliography
Annotated Bibliography

... veterinarian, it was not written for veterinarians. The list of recommended vaccines for canines excludes Bordetella bronchiseptica. From this source, I found very broad information such as that on viruses and bacteria, not on the specific viruses and bacteria related to tracheobronchitis. It provid ...
Immunoproteomics: the Key to Discovery of New Vaccine Antigens
Immunoproteomics: the Key to Discovery of New Vaccine Antigens

... Keywords: Antigens, immunoproteomics, immunoreactive proteins, respiratory disease, vaccine, virulence. INTRODUCTION The value of vaccination as a means of combating lifethreatening and chronic infectious diseases is well established. Many diseases which previously contributed to mortality are now p ...
Active and passive immunity, vaccine types, excipients and licensing
Active and passive immunity, vaccine types, excipients and licensing

... the response takes days/weeks to develop but may be long lasting—even lifelong. Active immunity is usually classified as natural or acquired. Wild infection for example with hepatitis A virus (HAV) and subsequent recovery gives rise to a natural active immune response usually leading to lifelong pro ...
The Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC)
The Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC)

...  The number of regions reporting widespread or localized activity was similar in weeks 07 and 08; however, there is an overall decline in influenza/ILI activity from the peak in early January. ...
HPV VACs Partner Newsletter - February 2017
HPV VACs Partner Newsletter - February 2017

... Steps Guide, Just the Facts, and National HPV Vaccination Roundtable Clearinghouse on the CDC’s HPV clinician resource page. ...
Prevention of Communicable Diseases
Prevention of Communicable Diseases

... Non-communicable Diseases: Those diseases or illnesses that cannot be transmitted from an infected person to a susceptible, healthy one A contagious disease is the one that is transmitted through contact. Examples include scabies, trachoma, STD Nosocomial (hospital acquired) infection is an infectio ...
What parents should know about vaccination and diseases targeted
What parents should know about vaccination and diseases targeted

... Initially fever, fatigue, headache, vomiting, stiffness in the neck and pain in the limbs. Paralysis and death might occur when breathing muscles affected. ...
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