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Goals
Goals

Scenario-Based Pandemic Preparedness and Response SOP
Scenario-Based Pandemic Preparedness and Response SOP

... (6 months from an epidemic to a pandemic in the case of the A/H1N1 2009 pandemic). While epidemics could be confined within communities or an entire country, and could terminate with the disease in question becoming endemic, pandemics are expansive—i.e. transboundary and spread-out across several co ...
Data Extracted
Data Extracted

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Preparing for the Influenza Pandemic
Preparing for the Influenza Pandemic

... spread (Pandemic) of this lethal virus. In a epidemic and pandemic, the number of cases doubles every few days. ...
12-1 ch17
12-1 ch17

...  Transmissible Disease  WHO estimates that each year the world’s seven deadliest infections kill 13.6 million people – most of them the poor in less developed countries.  Pneumonia and Flu  Pneumonia: fluid in lungs, respiratory infection, can be caused by bacteria  Flu: caused by a virus. (inf ...
Gastroenteritis Strikes Again
Gastroenteritis Strikes Again

... Many examples are acceptable.(Influenza, ebola, monkey pox ….) 2. What are some of the leading causes of their emergence at this point in history? The leading causes of their emergence are human behavior and modifications to natural habitats (expansion of human populations and their encroachment on ...
pojav novega virusa prašičje gripe
pojav novega virusa prašičje gripe

... Dear passengers, ...
Swine flu - H1N1
Swine flu - H1N1

... Swine flu - H1N1 Results for 2009 and infection predictions for 2010 The H1N1 virus outbreak of 2009 did not result in a significant increase in the number of deaths, nor penetrate the community at a greater rate than seasonal influenza, however people infected with the disease were sicker and more ...
Avian & Pandemic Influenza
Avian & Pandemic Influenza

... Avian influenza, commonly known as "avian flu" or "bird flu," is caused by influenza type A viruses that normally only occur in birds. Avian flu is very contagious among birds and can make some domesticated birds, such as chickens, ducks and turkeys, very sick and kill them. These viruses usually do ...
Pandemic Influenza
Pandemic Influenza

...  Rare: airborne over long distance ...
Math 210G Mathematics Appreciation Dr. Robert Smits
Math 210G Mathematics Appreciation Dr. Robert Smits

... • Transmission to humans occurs through ingesting contaminated water or food • The major cholera pandemics are generally listed as: First: 1817-1823, Second: 1829-1851, Third: 1852-1859, Fourth: 1863-1879, Fifth: 1881-1896, Sixth: 1899-1923: Seventh: 1961- 1970, and some would argue that we are in t ...
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Ready or Not: Preparing for Pandemic Flu

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Confederation of Health Care Systems Israel – 2008
Confederation of Health Care Systems Israel – 2008

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Tuberculosis – The facts!
Tuberculosis – The facts!

... Tuberculosis – The facts! TB is curable but kills 5000 people every day or 2 million per year.  2 billion people (1/3 of world’s population) are infected with the microbes that cause TB  1 in 10 people infected with TB microbes will become sick with active TB in their lifetime  TB is contagious & ...
PLAGUES, PESTILENCE AND PUBLIC HEALTH
PLAGUES, PESTILENCE AND PUBLIC HEALTH

... hundreds as Europe's pestilential diseases were introduced, and by about 1520, most of them had crossed the Atlantic. These included measles, smallpox, typhus and influenza. Native Americans had their own diseases such as pinta, trypanosomiasis (Chagas' disease), bartonellosis (Carrion's disease, Or ...
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Pathogens Practice Quiz - Science with Mrs. Barton

... 3. Malaria is a common disease in many countries. What type of pathogen is malaria? a. A virus b. A bacterium c. A fungus d. A protist 4. How can the rate of an infectious disease be drastically reduced? a. By taking medication daily b. By preventing transmission between people c. By wearing clean c ...
What you should know - Lesmahagow High School
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... 3. The study of an infectious disease’s outbreak and the factors that affect its spread is called _________________________________. The spread of a disease that occurs occasionally is described as ______________________, one that occurs as a regular number of cases in a particular area as _________ ...
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... 12) “The people of India had lived with the dangers of cholera since ancient times, but it wasn't until the 19th century that it spread outside this country. During this period, traders inadvertently exported the deadly virus back to cities in China, Japan, North Africa, the Middle East and Europe ...
Epidemic Typhus - AAP Red Book - American Academy of Pediatrics
Epidemic Typhus - AAP Red Book - American Academy of Pediatrics

... Charles-Jules-Henri Nicolle (1866-1936), a physician, microbiologist, novelist, philosopher, and historian. From 1903 until his death in 1936, he was director of the Institut Pasteur in Tunis, Tunisia. Nicolle's many accomplishments include the discovery that epidemic typhus is transmitted by body l ...
What is Avian Influenza (Bird Flu)?
What is Avian Influenza (Bird Flu)?

... Practice and teach “personal protective behaviors”  Sneeze and cough properly  Stay home when ill  Monitor friends who are ill  Learn about homecare for influenza  Stockpile supplies, food and water ...
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A List of Notifiable Scheduled Infectious Diseases (as

... Acute poliomyelitis Amoebic dysentery Anthrax Bacillary dysentery Botulism Chickenpox Chikungunya fever Cholera Community-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus infection Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease Dengue fever Diphtheria Enterovirus 71 infection Food poisoning Haemophilus influenzae ...
Demography and Disease
Demography and Disease

... A. Spread of disease result of human “progress” B. Classic example was Black Plague of 14th century C. Another was Spanish Flu after World War One D. Antibiotics and vaccines have slowed spread E. Recent pandemics move slowly or are contained III. Architecture of global public health regime A. UN ag ...
Pandemic Influenza
Pandemic Influenza

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... Decide if each is true or false. Put __F___a) The 1918 Spanish flu and the Black Plague are extreme examples a “T” for true and an “F” for false. of epidemics. (should be pandemics) __T___b) A pandemic doesn't necessarily mean millions of deathsit means a geographically widespread epidemic. __T___c) ...
Epidemics and Pandemic 8.L.1.2
Epidemics and Pandemic 8.L.1.2

... 4. Which BEST explains the purpose of the research on drug-resistant microbes? A. to find all drug-resistant microbes B. to lower the number of drug-resistant microbes C. to maintain the number of drug-resistant microbes 5. The HIV virus causes AIDS. The first known human cases were in Africa in the ...
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Pandemic



A pandemic (from Greek πᾶν pan ""all"" and δῆμος demos ""people"") is an epidemic of infectious disease that has spread through human populations across a large region; for instance multiple continents, or even worldwide. A widespread endemic disease that is stable in terms of how many people are getting sick from it is not a pandemic. Further, flu pandemics generally exclude recurrences of seasonal flu. Throughout history there have been a number of pandemics, such as smallpox and tuberculosis. More recent pandemics include the HIV pandemic as well as the 1918 and 2009 H1N1 pandemics. The Black Death was a devastating pandemic, killing over 75 million people.
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