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Infectious Bursal Disease - Washington State University
Infectious Bursal Disease - Washington State University

... rise, and diarrhea (sometimes bloody). Immunosuppressed survivors may be affected with other disease agents,  resulting in various secondary infections that can end in death, or manifest as respiratory or gastrointestinal disease.  How is infectious bursal disease transmitted?  The mode of transmiss ...
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... • “The pork and beef tapeworms are large, flat worms that live in the intestine and can grow 15 to 30 feet in length. Egg-bearing sections of the worm (proglottids) are passed in the stool. If untreated human waste is released into the environment, the eggs may be ingested by intermediate hosts, s ...
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MNA Mosby`s Long Term Care Assistant Chapter 1

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Tuberculosis Fact Sheet for DOs

... called active pulmonary TB and means the person is coughing the bacteria into the air. Other people can then breathe the TB bacteria into their lungs and become infected. Infection usually requires close, prolonged contact (>8 hours) with TB bacteria. People cannot get TB by sharing cutlery, dinner ...
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Bauman Chapter 1 Answers to Critical Thinking Questions

... sample of the diluted medium. What advantages does Koch’s method have over the French method? Many bacteria are very small and may be easily overlooked during examination with a light microscope. On the other hand, Koch’s method allows a single microbe to reproduce into a much more visible populatio ...
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Research Protocol Registration at WUStL

... U.S. PATRIOT Act (Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism-2001)  Extends limitations of the SAT Rule to use and possession of Select Agents.  Prohibits certain personnel from access to select agents. ...
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... Emily Toubali is the Director for HKI’s new Morbidity Management and Disability Prevention (MMDP) project. Previously she was HKI’s Senior Program Manager for Neglected Tropical Disease Control programs in West, Central, and East Africa, where she provided day‐to‐day support in monitoring and evalua ...
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China Information System for Disease Control and Prevention

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... – Pus-filled vesicles form in mouth and throat then face, forearms, hands • Cow pox (vaccinia), monkeypox viruses– less severe than small pox – antibodies cross reactive with small pox • Molluscum Contagiosum Virus– causes painless pearly white tumors – – increasing as an STD can can become inflamed ...
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... distribution quantifies the current range at unsampled locations. These models provide effective management tools to prioritize locations for early detection and eradication of disease outbreaks, and illustrate how iSDM can be used to analyze the actual vs. potential distribution of emerging infecti ...
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... ensue.3,4 Those who are exposed may subsequently transport the infectious agents internationally, spawning new epidemics in other parts of the world.5 Current efforts to prepare for infectious disease threats at mass gatherings are generally led by the host country, often in collaboration with inter ...
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... local health officer or designee or a licensed physician (with the concurrence of the local health officer) that the disease is no longer communicable to others in the school setting. For those diseases indicated by an asterisk (*) the restriction may be removed by a school nurse. For pediculosis, o ...
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... other hand, this scene illustrates the potential result of military-law enforcement among civilians. Clean Sweep is a different story. At the beginning of the movie, Sam said that the virus has a short incubation period and if people do not get sick within 24 hours then they will not get sick. The f ...
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... Mexico to transmit the parasite, as well as the effect of stress such as shipping on an infected animal (disease reservoir if ticks are present). The presence of vectors and other facilitators required to sustain disease transmission need to be analyzed. Disease transmission depends on a series of e ...
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Measles and Small Pox

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... rural setting. Infection in an urban setting with no known risk factors or contact with infected animals suggests a possible deliberate source. 2. The most likely presentations of tularemia in a BT attack are pneumonic and typhoidal disease, as opposed to cutaneous disease in naturally occurring cas ...
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Tanja Ducomble - European Centre for Disease Prevention and

... On 27 September 2012, the federal state of Brandenburg informed the Robert Koch-Institute about several outbreaks of gastroenteritis in schools and childcare facilities, with a total of least 500 cases. The Robert Koch-Institute informed food safety authorities and public health authorities in all f ...
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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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