INCUBATION PERIOD AND OTHER FEATURES OF FOOD-BORNE AND WATER-BORNE OUTBREAKS OF TYPHOID FEVER IN RELATION TO PATHOGENESIS AND GENETICS OF RESISTANCE

The Lancet ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 321 (8329) ◽  
pp. 864-866 ◽  
Author(s):  
G.R.E Naylor
Author(s):  
Said Sajjad Ali Shah ◽  
Adnan Khan

One health is a collective term used to address human and animal health issues under one platform. More than half of the diseases of humans are directly or indirectly related to animal health and spread from animals to humans or vice versa. Etiological agents of zoonotic diseases may be bacterial, viral, or parasitic in origin. Among them, parasitic agents are very important because they are either directly involved as etiological agents or as vectors of other pathogenic organisms. Parasitic zoonoses are transmitted to humans through vectors, food, or drinking water, and thus categorized as vector borne, food borne, and water borne parasitic zoonoses. Food borne and water borne parasitic zoonoses include all those parasitic diseases which are transmitted to humans by consuming contaminated food and water. An extensive alliance is necessary amongst physicians, veterinarians, and public health workers for timely response and approach to guarantee the prevention and management of infections.


2019 ◽  
Vol 94 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.T. Galán-Puchades

Abstract Dracunculiasis is the first parasitic disease set for eradication. However, recent events related to the Dracunculus medinensis epidemiology in certain African countries are apparently posing new challenges to its eradication. Two novel facts have emerged: the existence of animal reservoirs (mainly dogs but also cats and baboons), and possibly a new food-borne route of transmission by the ingestion of paratenic (frogs) or transport (fish) hosts. Therefore, instead of being exclusively a water-borne anthroponosis, dracunculiasis would also be a food-borne zoonosis. The existence of a large number of infected dogs, mainly in Chad, and the low number of infected humans, have given rise to this potential food-borne transmission. This novel route would concern not only reservoirs, but also humans. However, only animals seem to be affected. Dracunculus medinensis is on the verge of eradication due to the control measures which, classically, have been exclusively aimed at the water-borne route. Therefore, food-borne transmission is probably of secondary importance, at least in humans. In Chad, reservoirs would become infected through the water-borne route, mainly in the dry season when rivers recede, and smaller accessible ponds, with a lower water level containing the infected copepods, appear, whilst humans drink filtered water and, thus, avoid infection. The total absence of control measures aimed at dogs (or at other potential reservoirs) up until the last years, added to the stimulating reward in cash given to those who find parasitized dogs, have presumably given rise to the current dracunculiasis scenario in Chad.


1898 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 243-264
Author(s):  
Christopher Childs
Keyword(s):  

2000 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 240-258 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.N.L. MACPHERSON ◽  
B. GOTTSTEIN ◽  
S. GEERTS
Keyword(s):  

1919 ◽  
Vol 34 (13) ◽  
pp. 597
Author(s):  
Theodore Horton
Keyword(s):  

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