|
- Plague - World Health Organization (WHO)
Plague is an infectious disease caused by the bacteria Yersinia pestis, a zoonotic bacteria, usually found in small mammals and their fleas It is transmitted between animals through fleas
- Plague - World Health Organization (WHO)
Plague is an infectious disease caused by the bacteria Yersinia pestis, usually found in small mammals and their fleas
- Plague - World Health Organization (WHO)
Plague is an infectious disease found in some small mammals and their fleas People can contract plague if they are in bitten by infected fleas, and develop the bubonic form of plague Sometimes bubonic plague progresses to pneumonic plague, when the bacteria reaches the lungs Person-to-person transmission is possible through the inhalation of infected respiratory droplets of a person who has
- Peste - World Health Organization (WHO)
La peste es una enfermedad infecciosa causada por <i>Yersinia pestis< i>, una bacteria zoonótica que suele encontrarse en pequeños mamíferos y en las pulgas que los parasitan La transmisión entre los animales se hace a través de las pulgas
- Plague Outbreak Toolbox - World Health Organization (WHO)
Welcome to the Plague Outbreak Toolbox Key reference documents Plague information page (Geneva: World Health Organization; 2018) Plague fact sheet (Geneva: World Health Organization; 2022) Operational guidelines on plague surveillance, diagnosis, prevention and control (New Delhi: WHO Regional Office for South-East Asia; 2010)
- الطاعون - World Health Organization (WHO)
لدغة البراغيث المصابة بعدوى المرض والناقلة له الملامسة غير المحمية لسوائل الجسم المعدية أو المواد الملوثة استنشاق الرذاذ المنبعث من الجهاز التنفسي الجزيئات الصغيرة المنبعثة من فم المريض المصاب بالطاعون الرئوي
- EPI-WIN digest 54 - Plague in the 21st century: new evidence to control . . .
Plague, a zoonotic disease caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis, has affected humans for thousands of years and has been responsible for three major pandemics in human history, causing millions of deaths The first, known as the Plague of Justinian, occurred in the 6th century; the second, known as the Black Death, occurred in the 14th century, killing up to one-third of the European
- Plague - Madagascar - World Health Organization (WHO)
Plague is endemic in Madagascar and outbreaks occur regularly, although every outbreak is cause for concern Furthermore, pneumonic plague is a notifiable disease under the International Health Regulations 2005
|
|
|