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Anthrax in Australian Wildlife Sept 2016
Anthrax in Australian Wildlife Sept 2016

... There is an AUSVETPLAN Disease Strategy for anthrax (Animal Health Australia 2012). Anthrax is in Emergency Animal Disease Response Category 3 (50% of costs borne by government and 50% by the relevant industry) (Animal Health Australia 2012) and is an OIE listed disease (OIE 2016). In Australia, ant ...
Causes of disease
Causes of disease

... • Pinkeye happens when enough causes are present to result in disease • Not every cause will be present at any one time – Always have the bacteria present – May have different combination of other causes ...
my CV - The University of Texas Medical School at Houston
my CV - The University of Texas Medical School at Houston

... PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS 2010-present 2006-present ...
Peter A. Shult, Ph.D., Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene
Peter A. Shult, Ph.D., Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene

... • Collect & communicate patient travel history and risk factors to testing staff • In most cases, no BSC. Therefore: • Techniques to minimize aerosol production • Consider use of personal protective equipment (PPE) during test performance • Consider use of physical barriers for test performance (e.g ...
Environmental Health Tracking: Bridging the Gap Between Environmental Factors and Disease (PDF: 60KB/2 pages)
Environmental Health Tracking: Bridging the Gap Between Environmental Factors and Disease (PDF: 60KB/2 pages)

... ver the last half-century we have witnessed a dramatic change in our nation’s health burden, from concern with infectious diseases such as pneumonia and tuberculosis, to treating and managing chronic conditions like asthma, heart disease, diabetes, and cancer. The last halfcentury has also spawned r ...
If Foot-and-Mouth Disease Came to Florida: Potential Impact
If Foot-and-Mouth Disease Came to Florida: Potential Impact

... Services, USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Services (APHIS), stated his belief that FMD most likely would be self-limiting in wildlife in the long term. He said that FMD should be successfully controlled through actions on domesticated livestock and that APHIS did not foresee a need to system ...
Principles of Communicable Diseases Epidemiology
Principles of Communicable Diseases Epidemiology

... unvaccinated susceptible  p01: tp from vaccinated infective to unvaccinated susceptible  p10: tp from unvaccinated infective to vaccinated susceptible  p11: tp from vaccinated infective to vaccinated susceptible ...
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and

... 2. CDC and international collaborations on Taenia solium cysticercosis research and control T. solium infections in humans have long been recognized in the United States as an imported disease with potential for local transmission. The incidence of imported cases of NCC has increased markedly in rec ...
Antigenic variation
Antigenic variation

... the safety and efficacy of new vaccines Vaccine trials are long, complex and expensive. Due to these costs some new vaccines appear as low-profit products that although useful may never be licensed ...
Scientific Committee on Emerging and Zoonotic Diseases
Scientific Committee on Emerging and Zoonotic Diseases

... pathogens, e.g. in the PulseNet Asia Pacific network of laboratories. A genetic database for three foodborne bacterial pathogens, namely salmonella, E. coli O157:H7 and listeria, will be established to facilitate tracking the source and spread of infections. ...
Where does H5N1 come from?
Where does H5N1 come from?

... • REMAIN ON YOUR FARM and call: – Your flock supervisor or veterinarian – Your local extension agent – NCDA’s toll free hotline 1-866-506-6222 or the state veterinarian 919-733-5657 ...
High School Infectious Disease Virtual Field Trip
High School Infectious Disease Virtual Field Trip

... the board and underneath it the names of participants with whom he or she exchanged fluids in the order in which the exchanges occurred. Then, as a group, highlight the names of the currently "infected" people. The sample chart shows one example of how to trace the infection (bolded names are infect ...
imovax polio
imovax polio

... vaccination be delayed until the end of treatment or that the protection level of the subject be checked. Nevertheless, the vaccination of subjects with chronic immunodepression such as HIV infection is recommended if the underlying pathology allows the induction of an antibody response, even if lim ...
Middle School Infectious Disease Virtual Field Trip
Middle School Infectious Disease Virtual Field Trip

... Lead a class discussion about measures for preventing the spread of disease. First, discuss how rapid and constant evolution challenges our main defenses against infectious diseases, which include • public health measures that minimize exposure to disease-causing organisms; • immunity, whether gaine ...
Chapter 5
Chapter 5

... bacilli form spherical spores with tough outer coverings which are resistant to adverse conditions. This allows the dormant bacteria to withstand long periods without food. When favorable conditions are restored, the spores become active or vegetative and begin to grow and reproduce once again. Ther ...
Anthrax in Europe: its epidemiology, clinical characteristics, and role
Anthrax in Europe: its epidemiology, clinical characteristics, and role

... where disease in livestock occurs and, occasionally, outbreaks among humans occur (Figure 1). Spain has the largest number of cases reported, 78– 152 cases annually between 1991 and 1995 (the last 5-year period for which comparable figures are available), largely in central Spain [17]. In most count ...
Exposure Control Plan – Blood Borne Pathogens
Exposure Control Plan – Blood Borne Pathogens

... Exposure Control Plan – Blood Borne Pathogens BLOOD BORNE PATHOGENS, BODILY FLUIDS or BIOLOGICAL SUBSTANCES The purpose of an exposure control plan is to have procedures and controls in place to eliminate or minimized the risk of occupational exposure to an infectious disease, as well as to reduce t ...
Symptoms of Ebola virus disease
Symptoms of Ebola virus disease

... The incubation period, that is, the time interval from infection with the virus to onset of symptoms is 2 to 21 days. Humans are not infectious until they ...
hepatitis B
hepatitis B

... Hepatitis B is a serious infectious disease caused by a virus that attacks the liver. In a small but significant number of people, the hepatitis B virus (HBV) can lead to life-long infection resulting in cirrhosis (scarring) of the liver, liver cancer, or liver failure. Fortunately, the infection ca ...
Chapter 12 - Cloudfront.net
Chapter 12 - Cloudfront.net

... such as bacteria, fungi, protozoans, and viruses…even some larger creatures like parasitic worms… ...
Summary of CDC guidance on Quarantine and Vaccinatio
Summary of CDC guidance on Quarantine and Vaccinatio

... o Vaccinating and monitoring a “ring” of people around each case protects those at greatest risk and creates a buffer of immune individuals to prevent disease spread o This strategy is more desirable than an indiscriminate mass vaccination for a number of reasons (listed in source) o The determinati ...
Bacillus anthracis and anthrax
Bacillus anthracis and anthrax

... solution (1 tbsp. bleach per gallon of water). Spore destruction requires steam sterilization." It has also been reported that boiling (100 degrees C) for 30 minutes kills endospores of B. anthracis. An infection of local animal populations such as sheep and cattle could follow a biological attack w ...
BIOSECURITY BULLETIN
BIOSECURITY BULLETIN

... equipment, dust, insects, wild birds and rodents. RHDV is caused by a Calicivirus which is extremely hardy and can survive in the environment and remain infectious for three and a half months at +25 C and for as long as seven and half months at +4 C. Disinfectants that can be used to decontaminate a ...
Transcript - Northwest Center for Public Health Practice
Transcript - Northwest Center for Public Health Practice

... as with refugees), or urbanization. Disasters can be considered as an environmental factor that makes disease spread more likely. ...
Questions and Answers for the Laboratory—Ebola Virus
Questions and Answers for the Laboratory—Ebola Virus

... inactivate agents such as Ebola. If a decontamination process is known to be sufficient to inactivate the hepatitis C or hepatitis B viruses, then it will suffice for inactivation of filoviruses, including the Ebola virus. All laboratory staff that came into contact with the specimen before EVD was ...
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Bioterrorism



Bioterrorism is terrorism involving the intentional release or dissemination of biological agents. These agents are bacteria, viruses, or toxins, and may be in a naturally occurring or a human-modified form. For the use of this method in warfare, see biological warfare.
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