Communicable Disease Control: A Volume for the Public Health WorkerMacmillan, 1962 - 606 sider |
Inni boken
Resultat 1-3 av 91
Side 95
... practice laws usually include diagnosis as a part of medical practice , thus preventing the nurse or schoolteacher from making a report of a specifically named disease , inasmuch as reporting implies earlier diagnosis . The laws do not ...
... practice laws usually include diagnosis as a part of medical practice , thus preventing the nurse or schoolteacher from making a report of a specifically named disease , inasmuch as reporting implies earlier diagnosis . The laws do not ...
Side 146
... practice is probably the most difficult and the least successful of the programs of the sanitary officer . There are ... practices involved . The second difficulty comes from the fact that contamination of food is related not so much to ...
... practice is probably the most difficult and the least successful of the programs of the sanitary officer . There are ... practices involved . The second difficulty comes from the fact that contamination of food is related not so much to ...
Side 147
... practices , and the health of the workers . The first of these he can observe and check . He should devote special ... practices likewise depend upon the education of the worker and of management . During his visits the sanitary officer ...
... practices , and the health of the workers . The first of these he can observe and check . He should devote special ... practices likewise depend upon the education of the worker and of management . During his visits the sanitary officer ...
Innhold
Historical Considerations | 3 |
The Infectious Process | 14 |
Control Measures | 47 |
Opphavsrett | |
41 andre deler vises ikke
Andre utgaver - Vis alle
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
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