Communicable Disease Control: A Volume for the Public Health WorkerMacmillan, 1962 - 606 sider |
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Side 229
... appear in the stool with the first symptoms and persist for a period ranging from a few days to a few weeks or months . Transmission of infection is identical with that of typhoid fever ( see page 212 ) except that the organisms are ...
... appear in the stool with the first symptoms and persist for a period ranging from a few days to a few weeks or months . Transmission of infection is identical with that of typhoid fever ( see page 212 ) except that the organisms are ...
Side 234
... appear in the feces , special precautions comparable to those in dealing with a typhoid convalescent must be observed . Theoretically these precautions should be continued until laboratory studies show the patient to be free of ...
... appear in the feces , special precautions comparable to those in dealing with a typhoid convalescent must be observed . Theoretically these precautions should be continued until laboratory studies show the patient to be free of ...
Side 319
... appear to play so definite a role in the development or recur- rence of rheumatic fever that entry via the respiratory tract is assumed , but the exact portal of invasion is not clear . The presence or absence of tonsils is not a ...
... appear to play so definite a role in the development or recur- rence of rheumatic fever that entry via the respiratory tract is assumed , but the exact portal of invasion is not clear . The presence or absence of tonsils is not a ...
Innhold
Historical Considerations | 3 |
The Infectious Process | 14 |
Control Measures | 47 |
Opphavsrett | |
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active immunization acute agency animal antibiotics antibodies antigen appear areas bacilli blood board of health body carriers child clinical communicable disease contaminated control measures diagnosis diphtheria disinfection doses effective epidemiological epidemiological investigation escape especially exposure frequently gonorrhea health department health officer Health Rep hepatitis hospital important incidence incubation period infection isolation and quarantine laboratory large number leptospirosis malaria measles method mild milk mosquito occur organisms outbreak passive immunization pathogenic patient persons physician pneumonia poliomyelitis possible prevent problem procedures protection Psittacosis public health nurse Q fever rabies reduce reported Reservoir of Infection resistance respiratory tract responsibility rheumatic fever risk sanitary officer scarlet fever serum skin smallpox source of infection spread staphylococcal staphylococci strains streptococci sulfonamides susceptible symptoms syphilis tetanus tion toxin treatment tuberculosis typhoid usually vaccine vector virus visits whooping cough yellow fever