Communicable Disease Control: A Volume for the Health Officer and Public Health NurseMacmillan, 1953 - 500 sider |
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Side 267
... suggests this period as the time usually needed for the development of rheumatic manifestations . Susceptibility ... suggested not only by the higher incidence of the disease in certain areas but also by the fact that persons who ...
... suggests this period as the time usually needed for the development of rheumatic manifestations . Susceptibility ... suggested not only by the higher incidence of the disease in certain areas but also by the fact that persons who ...
Side 315
... suggested the pos- sibility of spread through food . Though this cannot be denied as a possi- bility , the wavelike spread cannot be explained if this is the principal method . At least three outbreaks have been reported in which it ...
... suggested the pos- sibility of spread through food . Though this cannot be denied as a possi- bility , the wavelike spread cannot be explained if this is the principal method . At least three outbreaks have been reported in which it ...
Side 429
... suggested that in some instances the dust may be heavily contaminated with the feces of infected cattle ticks . The existence of rickettsiae in placental tissue , in milk , and in the feces of calves nursing from infected cows would ...
... suggested that in some instances the dust may be heavily contaminated with the feces of infected cattle ticks . The existence of rickettsiae in placental tissue , in milk , and in the feces of calves nursing from infected cows would ...
Innhold
Historical Considerations | xxi |
The Infectious Process | 19 |
Control Measures | 41 |
Opphavsrett | |
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active immunization acute animal antibodies antigen appears areas arthropods attack attention bacilli bite blood board of health body carriers child clinical colds communicable disease contaminated control measures diphtheria disinfection doses effective encephalitis epidemic Epidemiological Epidemiological investigation especially exposure fatal frequently health department health officer hepatitis human impetigo important incidence incubation period infection Influenza instances isolation and quarantine laboratory large number malaria measles method mild milk mosquitoes occur organisms outbreak passive immunization patient pediculosis persons physician plague pneumonia poliomyelitis possible prevent procedures protection public health nurse Q fever rabies reduce reported require reservoir of infection resistance respiratory tract rheumatic fever rickettsiae risk scarlet fever serum skin smallpox source of infection strains streptococci susceptible symptoms tetanus tion toxin toxoid treatment Tularemia typhoid typhus usually vaccine vector virus visits whooping cough yellow fever