نتایج جستجو برای: zoonotic disease

تعداد نتایج: 1495789  

2017
Miriam L. Shiferaw Jeffrey B. Doty Giorgi Maghlakelidze Juliette Morgan Ekaterine Khmaladze Otar Parkadze Marina Donduashvili Emile Okitolonda Wemakoy Jean-Jacques Muyembe Leopold Mulumba Jean Malekani Joelle Kabamba Theresa Kanter Linda Lucy Boulanger Abraham Haile Abyot Bekele Meseret Bekele Kasahun Tafese Andrea A. McCollum Mary G. Reynolds

Preventing zoonotic diseases requires coordinated actions by government authorities responsible for human and animal health. Constructing the frameworks needed to foster intersectoral collaboration can be approached in many ways. We highlight 3 examples of approaches to implement zoonotic disease prevention and control programs. The first, rabies control in Ethiopia, was implemented using an um...

Journal: :Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences 2009
Mark W Robinson John P Dalton

Zoonotic infections are among the most common on earth and are responsible for >60 per cent of all human infectious diseases. Some of the most important and well-known human zoonoses are caused by worm or helminth parasites, including species of nematodes (trichinellosis), cestodes (cysticercosis, echinococcosis) and trematodes (schistosomiasis). However, along with social, epidemiological and ...

2017
Yuchen Nan Chunyan Wu Qin Zhao En-Min Zhou

Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is a quasi-enveloped, single-stranded positive-sense RNA virus. HEV belongs to the family Hepeviridae, a family comprised of highly diverse viruses originating from various species. Since confirmation of HEV's zoonosis, HEV-induced hepatitis has been a public health concern both for developing and developed countries. Meanwhile, the demonstration of a broad host range fo...

Journal: :Revue scientifique et technique 2000
F X Meslin K Stöhr D Heymann

Many new, emerging and re-emerging diseases of humans are caused by pathogens which originate from animals or products of animal origin. A wide variety of animal species, both domestic and wild, act as reservoirs for these pathogens, which may be viruses, bacteria or parasites. Given the extensive distribution of the animal species affected, the effective surveillance, prevention and control of...

Journal: :journal of health sciences and surveillance system 0
mehdi nejat student research center for health sciences, department of epidemiology, school of health, shiraz university of medical sciences, shiraz, iran; mohammad fararouei hiv/aids research center, shiraz university of medical sciences, shiraz, iran; hamid reza tabatabaie department of epidemiology, school of health, shiraz university of medical sciences, shiraz, iran; parvin afsar kazerooni hiv/aids research center, shiraz university of medical sciences, shiraz, iran; mohsen akbarpoor health affairs, shiraz university of medical sciences, shiraz, iran; roksana estakhrian haghighi namazi hospital, shiraz university of medical sciences, shiraz, iran

background: complete and fast diagnosis, registry and treatment programs are the main effective strategies for controlling infectious diseases. in addition, an organized and extended infectious disease surveillance system is crucial in designing and monitoring communicable diseases control programs. the quality of the surveillance system can be evaluated by several indices such as timeliness, c...

Journal: :Journal of medical microbiology 2011
Veerle Dickx Daisy Vanrompay

Chlamydia psittaci is an obligately intracellular Gram-negative bacterium causing respiratory disease (chlamydiosis) or asymptomatic carriage in birds. C. psittaci is a zoonotic agent causing psittacosis or parrot fever in humans. Vertical and/or horizontal transmission via eggs might have serious repercussions on the C. psittaci infection status of poultry flocks and thus on zoonotic risk for ...

Journal: :Frontiers in tropical diseases 2022

Schistosomiasis is a parasitic disease acquired through contact with contaminated freshwater. The definitive hosts are terrestrial mammals, including humans, some Schistosoma species crossing the animal-human boundary zoonotic transmission. An estimated 12 million people live at risk of schistosomiasis caused by japonicum and mekongi , largely in World Health Organization’s Western Pacific Regi...

2008
S. Shivakumar

Leptospirosis has long been considered a rare zoonotic disease in India with only sporadic cases being recorded. Since 1980’s the disease has been reported from various states during monsoon months in mini epidemic proportions. The disease is endemic in Kerala, Tamilnadu, Gujarat, Andamans, Karnataka, Maharashtra. It has also been reported from Andhra Pradesh, Orissa, West Bengal, Uttar Pradesh...

2003
Jennifer L. Huff Peter A. Barry

Nonhuman primates are widely used in biomedical research because of their genetic, anatomic, and physiologic similarities to humans. In this setting, human contact directly with macaques or with their tissues and fluids sometimes occurs. Cercopithecine herpesvirus 1 (B virus), an alphaherpesvirus endemic in Asian macaques, is closely related to herpes simplex virus (HSV). Most macaques carry B ...

2016
Krishna Prasad Acharya Nirajan Niroula Krishna Kaphle

Brucellosis is an abortifacient zoonotic disease which remains prominent in third world countries like Nepal. Brucellosis possess a public health concern, the incidences of which in livestocks can present substantial economic and health burdens for herders and health professionals. In Nepal, several cases of bovine including human brucellosis have been reported. This paper aims to evaluate the ...

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