Infectious disease-related pathogens and their prevention and control strategies after earthquakes
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Supported by Project of the “11th Five-Year Plan” for Medical Science Research Foundation of the PLA(06Z026) and Program of Public-service Platfrom of Shanghai(07DZ22941).

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    Abstract:

    Epidemic diseases often occur following natural disasters, such as earthquakes. The most commonly seen epidemics after an earthquake include: enteric diseases (dysentery, typoid and paratypoid fever, cholera, hand-foot-mouth disease, hepatitis A, hepatitis E, etc), arthropod-borne infectious diseases (malaria, Kala-Azar, Japanese encephalitis, etc), zoonosis (plague, hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome, anthrax, etc), soil and epidemic water transmitted diseases (tetanus, gas gangrene, leptospirosis, etc), respiratory diseases (measles, rubella, influenza, etc), food-borne diseases (food poisoning caused by bacteria or bacterial toxin). This article reviews the controlling principles and measures for major infectious pathogens and epidemic diseases after earthquake.

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History
  • Received:May 28,2008
  • Revised:June 03,2008
  • Adopted:June 03,2008
  • Online: June 12,2008
  • Published:
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