Influenza Vaccine

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    The Influenza Virus

    Ashley Maier Wain ENG lll7-60 26 Sept. 2015 The Influenza Virus We all know that time of year. The time of year when the cold of winter ascends upon us as well as a very common illness known as the flu. Everyone has had this illness at least once in their life, whether they were too young to remember it or if it was just last week. The influenza virus is one of the most common viruses as well as one of the deadliest. People don’t really think about the flu as deadly, but thirty-six thousand

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    Influenza

    Influenza Influenza is an acute, highly contagious respiratory infection. Influenza can be a serious disease, especially in the elderly, young children, and people with certain health conditions. Influenza is a viral infection commonly spread by coughing of respiratory secretions. There are many strains of influenza virus, the primary of which are identified as A, B, and C. Substrains, or subtypes, include H0N1, H1N1, H2N2, H3N2, and several others (Neighbors, 2015, p. 194). The most common symptoms are

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    Impotence

    Dengue fever transmission has two generics both epidemic dengue or hyperendemic has become a pandemic ever since the Second World War II, widespread and it is an endemic in more than a hundred over countries in the tropical and subtropical region over the globe. The dengue fever is regulated by both the vector and regulated by the host. It is transmitted to humans through mosquito bites of the genus Aedes eminently A. aegypti but other susceptible species that can transmit this disease are the A

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    Information System as an Effective Force Against H1N1

    INFORMATION SYSTEM AS AN EFFECTIVE FORCE AGAINST H1N1 PANDEMIC Public health leaders and communities face extraordinary challenges when a novel influenza virus emerges. Timely data and information are needed in order to make containment decisions, prioritize antiviral and/or vaccine distribution, deploy personnel and communicate with industry experts and the public. Arguably, the pandemics that occurred before the 2009 H1N1 outbreak were more devastating because we lacked the benefit of information

    Words: 434 - Pages: 2

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    Flu Virus

    Discussion of Communicable Disease: Seasonal Influenza Marcie E. Boone, RN Grand Canyon University- NRS- 427V September 2, 2014 Discussion of Communicable Disease: Seasonal Influenza Each year the general public is urged to take action to avoid getting the Seasonal Flu virus by, encourage the pubic to obtain the vaccine before January. It is also; widely made known to the general public the impact of the Flu virus and that it can lead death for some each. However, each year many choose to

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    Influenza Global Issue

    Influenza is a highly infectious viral illness. The first pandemic or worldwide epidemic, which clearly fits the description of influenza, was in 1580. At least four pandemics of influenza occurred in the 19th century, and three occurred in the 20th century. The pandemic of “Spanish” influenza in 1918–1919 caused an estimated 21 million deaths worldwide. “According to the National Institutes of Health, between5% and 20% of Americans get the flu each year. More than 200,000 people are hospitalized

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    Disease in the News

    com) You cannot get H1N1 swine flu virus from eating pork or any other food, drinking water, swimming in pools, or using a hot tubs or saunas. (http://www.righthealth.com) It is called Swine Flu because it originates from a transfer of an influenza virus from a pig to a human being. There are different strains that can jump from pig to human. In 1918 a version of the Swine Flu became pandemic. In 1976 there was another outbreak. In 2009 it reared its head in quantity of those who

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    Jesus

    ingredients, major health organizations say that vaccines are safe, reactions to vaccines are rare, and that vaccines can protect the communities. To begin with, vaccines save children by 2.5 million per year. 285 children are saved from diseases for every hour due to vaccines. The CDC has said that 732,000 children were saved from death and that 322 million diseases were prevented from the years of 1994 and 2014. In addition, the ingredients in vaccines are safe in the amount used. Thimerosal, formaldehyde

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    H1N1

    H1N1 flu pandemic Generally we know Influenza viruses cause annual endemics and infrequent endemics that have asserted the lives of many peoples. Appreciating the function of particular awareness in encouraging people to engage in preventive activities may help health communicators to progress their messages about epidemics of new contagious infection usually and swine flu in particular. Due to the swine-flu virus called novel swine-origin influenza A (H1N1) the eruption of human infection began

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    Emerging Disease

    6. Emerging and Re-emerging Diseases Chapter 8 Disease is not constant • Emerging Diseases – are recently “discovered” diseases, or diseases that have become increasingly important. • Some are old diseases just discovered – like Hepatitis C • Some are truly new like HIV • Many are taking advantage of some niche – like air conditioners in large buildings – Legionella pneumophila • Diseases moving to new parts of the world – West Nile Virus • Re-emerging Diseases – are diseases that became less

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