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Summary of CDC guidance on Quarantine and Vaccinatio
Summary of CDC guidance on Quarantine and Vaccinatio

Bioterrorism PP
Bioterrorism PP

... • Rush hands together in circular motion, being sure to wash between fingers and two inches above wrists • Clean under nails by rubbing against palms • Wash for at least 15 seconds or longer if contaminated • Rinse wrists and hands with running water • Dry hands thoroughly with paper towel and disca ...
Research Protocol Registration at WUStL
Research Protocol Registration at WUStL

... biological outcome. Animals for which a reasonable potential for transmission of zoonotic agents exists, e.g., wildtrapped animals, sheep, & rhesus macaques. Exotic plants, animals or microbes (e.g., nonindigenous plant or insect pathogen, or biological control agent). ...
EHS500.6.24.04.ExposureAssmt.m3
EHS500.6.24.04.ExposureAssmt.m3

... • Exposures are usually of the ‘oneshot’ (acute) variety (as opposed to ‘chronic’): for example:– ingesting infected food or water – inhaling organisms suddenly present in ambient or workplace air – bite from a malaria-infected mosquito ...
FetschPresentationQ4..
FetschPresentationQ4..

... possibilities ...
05. The concept of disease, controlled by the International Health
05. The concept of disease, controlled by the International Health

... – Active with increased sensitivity ...
Events That Changed the World – The Black Death
Events That Changed the World – The Black Death

Slide 1
Slide 1

public health emergency response
public health emergency response

... HHS has been involved with public health preparedness for bioterrorist attacks against U.S. since 1999 ...
MANFRED GREEN
MANFRED GREEN

... dealing with isolation of patients, quarantine and social distancing? Can workers be forced to remain at work ...
Measuring the Ocean`s Biological Carbon Pump Using Oxygen Data
Measuring the Ocean`s Biological Carbon Pump Using Oxygen Data

Section 12 day 3 Biological Hazards
Section 12 day 3 Biological Hazards

... muscle pains, pneumonia and possible kidney failure and death. ...
1- Overview - Moodle Lille 2
1- Overview - Moodle Lille 2

... Gram-positive, rod-shaped bacteria : Bacillus anthracis ...
Infectious Agents as a Security Challenge: Experience of Typhus
Infectious Agents as a Security Challenge: Experience of Typhus

... that the vaccine against smallpox can also be applied in the post-exposure stage which is very important in providing protective immunity. Otherwise, smallpox is considered one of the most deadly diseases in human history. It first appeared in China and the Far East more than 3,000 years ago. Pharao ...
B. anthracis
B. anthracis

... hours. The papule rapidly changes into a vesicle, then a pustule, and finally a necrotic eschar. The infection may disseminate, giving rise to septicemia. Inhalation anthrax (wool-sorters’ disease): long incubation time (2 months or more). Mediastinitis (enlargement of mediastinal lymph nodes), seps ...
What you should know about smallpox in the post
What you should know about smallpox in the post

... Smallpox is a febrile exanthem caused by Orthopoxvirus variola (variola virus). The majority of the global population younger than 40 years of age has been neither vaccinated against nor exposed to smallpox virus and therefore is susceptible to disease. The threat of smallpox persists because the vi ...
Minutes of the 5th biosafety committee meeting
Minutes of the 5th biosafety committee meeting

Math 210G Mathematics Appreciation Dr. Robert Smits
Math 210G Mathematics Appreciation Dr. Robert Smits

... bacteria…caused ….went right through …liquid retained the power to infect other plants. • Ivanovsky published findings… little attention was paid … • Martinus Beijerinck (1898) … same experiments … same results • infectious agent destroyed when the liquid was heated. • Beijerinck concluded agent was ...
Freeman 1e: How we got there
Freeman 1e: How we got there

Influenza epidemic spread simulation for Poland a large
Influenza epidemic spread simulation for Poland a large

Task 05 - SHE - Infectious diseases
Task 05 - SHE - Infectious diseases

... A "mysterious" disease began silently spreading in a small town in Victoria on 26 December 2015. It was later identified as an outbreak of Disease X. The first patients who contracted Disease X developed an illness characterized by fever, black stools, and vomiting. All of these patients succumbed t ...
12 Diseases That Altered History
12 Diseases That Altered History

... occur in areas with poor medical facilities. ...
12 Diseases That Altered History
12 Diseases That Altered History

Lecture 18-Yersinia
Lecture 18-Yersinia

bioterrorism_history
bioterrorism_history

... 1855-1950s: The Third Pandemic, originated in China, spread worldwide via ships WWI: the German Army allegedly spread plague in St. Petersburg, Russia 1940: Imperial Japanese Army Air Force bomb Ningbo with plague-carrying flea ceramic bombs 1941: Unit 731 air-drop plague-carrying fleas on Changde 1 ...
< 1 ... 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 24 >

History of biological warfare

Various types of biological warfare (BW) have been practiced repeatedly throughout history. This has included the use of biological agents (microbes and plants) as well as the biotoxins, including venoms, derived from them.Before the 20th century, the use of biological agents took three major forms: Deliberate contamination of food and water with poisonous or contagious material Use of microbes, biological toxins, animals, or plants (living or dead) in a weapon system Use of biologically inoculated fabrics and personsIn the 20th century, sophisticated bacteriological and virological techniques allowed the production of significant stockpiles of weaponized bio-agents:Bacterial agents: Anthrax, Brucella, Tularemia, etc.Viral agents: Smallpox, Viral hemorrhagic fevers, etc.Toxins: Botulinum, Ricin, etc.
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