The novel follows a farming family's fight for survival in the aftermath of the foot and mouth epidemic. |
|
More important was the wine boom in Spain and Italy in the 1880s which took advantage of the phylloxera epidemic in France. |
|
The possible source of the SARS virus in that epidemic was agitated sewage water. |
|
Can Africa mount a prevention campaign successful enough to avert an epidemic of Western proportions? |
|
To talk about an epidemic of obesity is like talking about a plague of inactivity or a contagion of overeating. |
|
How is the epidemic deterred by airline passengers shuffling through trays of disinfectant? |
|
Eight months ago, he joined the growing epidemic of children diagnosed with autism. |
|
In Jakarta, the city worst hit by this epidemic, over 6,200 people have been afflicted by the disease and 50 of them have died. |
|
Once the epidemic has begun, the main mode of transmission is probably person-to-person. |
|
The problem is that we have things the wrong way round, and that leads directly to the obesity epidemic. |
|
In fact, consumerism has spread like an epidemic, corroding the civic fabric of our society. |
|
Penicillin kills most gram negative cocci that cause gonorrhea and epidemic spinal meningitis. |
|
In response to the growing crime epidemic, many states have passed laws related to identity theft. |
|
Our data may shed light on the role of diet in the allergy and asthma epidemic. |
|
Heart failure is a clinical syndrome which has reached epidemic proportions. |
|
The United States hyperbolized its own epidemic and waged multiple aggressive educational campaigns. |
|
The threat of a flu epidemic is one of many problems facing scientists and public health authorities. |
|
No one knew in advance that feeding livestock rendered meat and bone meal would cause an epidemic of mad cow disease, but it did. |
|
The Act was repealed in 1822 after Smith caused a smallpox epidemic in Tarboro, North Carolina. |
|
By 2015, heart-related ailments will assume epidemic proportions, world over. |
|
|
In the presence of parotitis and particularly during an epidemic, the diagnosis of mumps is straightforward. |
|
The CDC reported deaths as a whole from influenza hovering near epidemic levels. |
|
The epidemic of drowsiness was blamed on gases leaking from toxic waste dumped at the site. |
|
At first there is a case here and there, then suddenly this infectious intestinal disease assumes epidemic proportions. |
|
Fifty years ago, an epidemic swept across this nation affecting millions of people and lasting for many years. |
|
Health standards declined, malnutrition spread, scabies was rife, and that summer there was a typhoid epidemic. |
|
Storm flooding regularly kills tens of thousands and spreads epidemic diseases like cholera. |
|
Unhealthy lifestyles and childhood obesity is a modern epidemic of the western world. |
|
His commitment to revenge the death of his people was struck short by his own death in the next measles epidemic, five years later. |
|
However, I do get frustrated by what I would call an epidemic of overthinking everything. |
|
True to that, marketeers and police have from time to time clashed over market closures in the country in the face of epidemic outbreaks. |
|
This is an epidemic that is devastating the world and serves as a spotlight on the inequalities that are rife throughout the global economy. |
|
The other fundamental cause of the obesity epidemic is the over-consumption of high-fat, energy dense diets. |
|
The epidemic of heart failure and its costs to health services continue to grow. |
|
Recent well-publicised cases of the disease highlight the point that this epidemic will not go away on its own. |
|
Though often called stomach flu, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea occur in only about five percent of people with epidemic influenza. |
|
And he says the apathy of drivers, who have been unwilling to help since the foot and mouth epidemic two years ago, must carry some of the blame. |
|
Although captan and thiram are beneficial in suppressing leather rot, they will not provide adequate control if an epidemic develops. |
|
Brignell's book is a handy demolition of the science and statistics behind this epidemic of epidemiology. |
|
Levelling out the obesogenic slope is fundamental to slowing down the momentum of the obesity epidemic. |
|
|
Big food is the nouveau public health epidemic that has been targeted with phasers set on demonize. It began with the fast-food lawsuits. |
|
Back on the dark streets of noughties Britain, underage drinking has become a modern epidemic. |
|
Readers looking for a straightforward narrative of the 1837 epidemic will find this account interesting. |
|
There are no plans to provide cheap generics to Russia or China where the epidemic is gathering pace. |
|
The Australian brush-tailed possum, put simply, is a pest of epidemic proportions. |
|
At first, the ban was due to an epidemic of rift valley fever, which killed more than 300 people in Saudi Arabia and Yemen. |
|
During the epidemic breakout, he recalls, cases were reported from Andhra Pradesh too. |
|
Frontline troops are finding their tours of duty extended, causing huge morale problems and an epidemic of breakdowns and mental health problems. |
|
The same story was repeated during another epidemic of brain fever in Assam. |
|
But the grand question was still unsettled of how this epidemic was generated and increased. |
|
Tourist attractions and companies in the north west are bouncing back from the brink of bankruptcy a year after the foot and mouth epidemic. |
|
Epidemic pleurodynia also is called Bornholm disease, Sylvest's disease, devil's grip and epidemic benign dry pleurisy. |
|
The federal government is concerned with an epidemic of overweight, unfit Canadians. |
|
The epidemic has left millions of agricultural workers dead, land unfarmed, and families with no money to buy food. |
|
An epidemic of criminal activities, murders, revenge killings and gang turf battles has resulted. |
|
Measles, mumps and rubella are unpleasant diseases and an epidemic in this country would be disastrous. |
|
As someone who can speak from multiple sides of the body-shaming epidemic, I thought my insight might prove helpful. |
|
It has been an American epidemic, an unspoken marketing strategy in boardrooms and front offices all over when it comes to cultivating buyers. |
|
An AIDS epidemic has claimed many of the country's most skilled professionals. |
|
Of the 41 counties with a history of blood flukes epidemic, the situation has not been controlled in 14, with a population of 5.95 million. |
|
|
It is simply not true that smoking is solely responsible for the current cancer epidemic. |
|
The hugely controversial contiguous cull of livestock to combat the foot-and-mouth epidemic was stoutly defended by the Government. |
|
Landowners have been struggling to control a mole epidemic which has resulted in an explosion in the number of molehills. |
|
Nor should there be any doubt that our society's fondness for binge drinking is related to the spreading epidemic of extreme casual violence. |
|
The body louse, Pediculus humanus corporis, is a vector of epidemic typhus, trench fever, and relapsing fever. |
|
When the town fell to the epidemic of vampirism that swept the world, it must have fallen quickly. |
|
In fact, if experts are to be believed, we are in the middle of a shyness epidemic. |
|
However, stress seems to be at an almost epidemic level, touching all levels of society. |
|
It is widely believed that the true picture of epidemic has still not emerged in China. |
|
And veterans of all ages continue to die at epidemic rates from suicides and other effects of the mental toll their wartime experiences took. |
|
All the four serotypes of dengue virus could be detected and isolated during this epidemic. |
|
She brings the historian's craft to bear on the study of the epidemic raging at that time, and her account is both enthralling and meticulous. |
|
An epidemic of tick fever in the late nineteenth century forced cattle raisers to seek public assistance in eradicating the disease. |
|
Before the 2000 epidemic wore itself out, there were six medevacs, although no one died. |
|
The harshness of these practices would suggest that we are in the throes of an epidemic of school violence. |
|
There was an epidemic when I was at university and as I think about it, the young folk still seem to indulge more than is seemly if you ask me. |
|
If it happens, the death toll could be many times that of the recent SARS epidemic. |
|
Individuals with chronic weight problems will be offered operations like gastric band surgery in a bid to halt the obesity epidemic in the town. |
|
There's no getting around the fact that we are a prediabetic society with an obesity epidemic. |
|
The epidemic affected primarily white spruce in old farm fields and balsam fir on the highlands. |
|
|
But if the present situation with garbage disposal continues, our city is going to face a major epidemic in the not too distant future. |
|
During the Bristol mange epidemic, we found that casualties had their territory invaded by new foxes within days. |
|
Your article about cyberbullying is a much-needed update for parents and schools on an increasingly epidemic problem. |
|
The epidemiology of cryptococcosis has changed over the years because of the AIDS epidemic. |
|
The system, called GitHub, was also used to crowdsource expertise during the 2011 E. coli epidemic in Germany. |
|
The soaring burglary rate is coupled with a drug abuse epidemic that adds more violence to even the simplest of burglaries or muggings. |
|
It's an epidemic, I thought, standing in the sun outside while I sorted my bag of bits and pieces. |
|
The spring saw the quick end of major combat abroad, while the threat of a widespread SARS epidemic abated. |
|
We had been aware that the epidemic in Papua is more developed than in other parts of Indonesia. |
|
All of this evidence flatly contradicted the claims that there was a wave, trend, or epidemic of school violence. |
|
Predictably, there are now encouraging signs that the epidemic is on the wane as sales slowly begin to pick up again. |
|
It's been described as an epidemic, and I think that's an accurate representation, at this point. |
|
It's not as if false accusals are occurring at dangerously epidemic proportions. |
|
Unless works were initiated on a war footing, epidemic might break out in waterlogged areas, he warned. |
|
In England in the 1590s, poetical lovemaking seems to have become a kind of epidemic. |
|
Vaccination has a potential role in disease and epidemic management, at the risk of jeopardizing the trade status of a country. |
|
In order to cure an epidemic there must be involuntary, mandatory and humane treatment of people who are engaged in abuse. |
|
An epidemic of jewel heists is plaguing stores in malls from Connecticut to Florida. |
|
By then, over 30,000 people had already contracted AIDS, and it was too late to stop the epidemic. |
|
It would have been hard to say otherwise of what is obviously an intercontinental epidemic. |
|
|
As baby boomers age and life expectancy rises, dementia threatens to become epidemic. |
|
An epidemic of tick fever forced cattle raisers to seek public assistance in eradicating the disease. |
|
It's everywhere, saturating airwaves and club sound systems at an epidemic rate. |
|
The credit bug has become an epidemic that most householders receiving junk mail know only too well. |
|
On Bastille Day, there would be a sartorial epidemic of clothes coloured red, white, and blue. |
|
An epidemic of pneumonic plague has hit the Congo among diamond miners recently. |
|
During the years of 1616-1619 an epidemic, perhaps either bubonic or pneumonic plague, ravaged the coast of New England from Cape Cod to Maine. |
|
Pearl can also pluck vivid pictures out of the past of the polio epidemic, or infantile paralysis epidemic, as it was called in her day. |
|
The school would have sat empty for the first four months of 1925 as an infantile paralysis epidemic swept across the country. |
|
In the long run, I'm optimistic that, as mankind, we shall succeed in curing this problem of epidemic, or endemic decadence, which causes these cyclical behaviors in cultures. |
|
This statement, interpreted by many in the media as a sign that the epidemic is abating, prompts more questions than answers. |
|
Far from being limiting, this acknowledgement allowed her to make a series that speaks directly to the epidemic as it is today. |
|
And The Prize Is Death, a cartoon by Albert Levering, attacks an epidemic of reckless driving. |
|
But as he worked on the epidemic locally in Amsterdam and Western Europe, Lange also was thinking globally. |
|
With a mortality rate of 70 percent, the more cases that arise, the deadlier this epidemic becomes. |
|
The bare bones of an already-anemic effort to fight the epidemic in West Africa that is threatening to destroy the entire region. |
|
While some may say that our exploding obesity epidemic is a hyperbole, fat does beget fat. |
|
After following the epidemic closely from his native Belgium, Colebunders is extremely hopeful that the answer will be the blood. |
|
Good news, in an epidemic as unpredictable as this one, must be met with caution. |
|
Most Lebanese parties are genuinely trying to avoid an epidemic of sectarianism. |
|
|
Until the epidemic is brought under control, the CDC predicts the numbers will continue to climb at that rate. |
|
But in order to commence rebuilding them from the ground up, the world must first put out the fires of this current epidemic. |
|
When a piece of illusory knowledge spreads to epidemic proportions and turns into common knowledge, bubbles and panics can result. |
|
With an unprecedented epidemic spreading across countries and continents, including our own, it should give us reason, too. |
|
In the seven months since the epidemic began, Ebola has spread across borders, countries, and now continents. |
|
While public interest in Ebola continues to dwindle, the epidemic itself continues to soar. |
|
In 1925, Nome, Alaska, was ravaged by a diphtheria epidemic. |
|
Before you go about calling me a reactionary, it could be that future generations will view the horror of the music culture in the same light as the crack epidemic. |
|
The consumption of recreational drugs has reached epidemic proportions. |
|
This has been hailed as good news in the media but like other write-ups on the epidemic, this has been done from the terraces and not in the ring as should be the case. |
|
The 19th century, though, was a 100-year dirge from one horrid epidemic to another. |
|
Finding the true culprit for the epidemic of scalping in the digital age is a little like figuring out who killed Davey Moore. |
|
The danger of an epidemic here is high, as sanitation is simply lacking. |
|
Let it be hoped that we can refrain from relapsing into the bad old habits once the dreaded epidemic is over, so a new Shanghai with a new outlook will emerge in the long run. |
|
In addition, endemic diseases, such as yaws, and epidemic diseases, such as measles and smallpox, may have increased the incidence of stillbirths and miscarriages. |
|
Since the outbreak began in March, global mobilization efforts to combat the epidemic have been severely delayed. |
|
One symptom is the inability to speak outside the echo chamber, epidemic in the current conservative movement. |
|
Liberia, the epicenter of the epidemic, was relying on just 50 doctors to care for the entire nation before the outbreak occurred. |
|
In mid-summer, as the epidemic swept through the region, schools closed one by one. |
|
Rape and sexual assault may be less of an epidemic than other studies suggest. |
|
|
It is important to note that for a homogeneous population our results, in terms of epidemic type and outcome, are as anticipated from the deterministic theory. |
|
The epidemic was flaring anew last month, when Spencer left New York for Guinea. |
|
She also worked at the Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel, where she covered the AIDS epidemic. |
|
Of course, when an entire throng is trying to rise above itself, an epidemic of free-form vulgarity and solipsism ensues. |
|
It is that last hazard that has assumed epidemic proportions recently. |
|
That suggests that HFCS may be partly responsible for the obesity epidemic. |
|
The present epidemic of scabies in the United Kingdom originated in the catchment population of this hospital in early 1990 and continues to be a problem. |
|
In West Africa, where the epidemic began, the number of cases has been soaring for eight straight months. |
|
If Aboriginal numbers in 1788 were at the higher end of the estimated range, this epidemic would have been the chief killer, but information is scanty in the extreme. |
|
His invention of facts surrounding the smallpox epidemic among the Mandan Indians in 1837 is more reprehensible than his misrepresentation of the Dawes Act. |
|
He invented a story about the US Army deliberately creating a smallpox epidemic among the Mandan people in 1837 by distributing infected blankets. |
|
Isaacs says that the epidemic is inciting panic worldwide that, in his opinion, may soon be warranted. |
|
But with no sign of an epidemic in the U.S. it seems, at the very least, irrational. |
|
Even vegetarians and vegans are not safe from the food scare epidemic. |
|
The response to the Ebola epidemic in West Africa has surged in the past few weeks, delivering more money, supplies, and doctors. |
|
But the arguments over drug testing may cease to matter if the synthetic drug epidemic continues. |
|
Because of the dearth of wives, ling says that trafficking of child brides is epidemic. |
|
Can Transcendental Meditation cut epidemic levels of stress for students? |
|
Few biologists doubt that some strains common in domestic sheep are lethal to bighorns, but what actually happens during a bighorn epidemic is still far from clear. |
|
Schistosomiasis, also known as bilharzia, is an epidemic disease characterized by the gradual destruction of the kidneys, liver and other organs by a parasitic worm. |
|
|
Kenya continues to suffer from tribalism and corruption, as well as high population growth, unemployment, political instability, and the AIDS epidemic. |
|
The Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome epidemic in China is a modest measure of what might occur after serious biological weapon attack in the United States. |
|
The entire vaccine debate has been stirred up for the umpteenth time this week by our national influenza epidemic. |
|
But even without these changes bioterrorists could readily infect themselves with a lethal agent and start an epidemic by walking among us for example, in an airport. |
|
The range of threats from bioweapons can come from bacteria, viruses, and toxins, each with their own levels of mortality and potential for epidemic spread. |
|
I think it's unlikely that we've had an undetected epidemic of seven-footers. |
|
As the Ebola epidemic began sweeping through the region, fear and mistrust of the health workers in West Point escalated. |
|
Increasingly AIDS was becoming an epidemic for black Americans, but Hollywood and news media alike turned a blind eye. |
|
So far, the government has failed dismally to respond to this epidemic. |
|
The respiratory disease first made headlines in April 2009, when an epidemic was discovered in the Mexican state of Veracruz. |
|
Even as he recounts over 30 years later that I lost one patient during that epidemic, one is conscious of the sense of regret which underscores the words. |
|
It's believed that the epidemic in Derry is only in its early stages, thus far involving only smoking joints and making bongs out of breathing apparatus. |
|
A whooping cough epidemic did little to turn the tide of the movement from 2011-12, according to a new study. |
|
Malaria spread quickly among the troops, and by August the hospitals filled to capacity, catching the medical personnel unprepared for such an epidemic. |
|
He added that about 80 pc of NFU members were opposed to vaccination, fearing it would prolong the epidemic and make meat and dairy products unsaleable. |
|
The early 1990s were the period of the crack epidemic, the zenith of American gun crime. |
|
The band names it The Tipping Point, based on the Malcolm Gladwell book, expecting the sum of their good work since 1987 to finally push them to their own epidemic of success. |
|
The government's push to lure private companies to buy its utilities has led to water shut-offs and the worst cholera epidemic in the nation's history. |
|
Last year, a polio outbreak in Deir ez-Zor raised concerns throughout the region about the spread of an epidemic. |
|
Now comes a documentary about its epidemic, premiering at the Tribeca Film Festival. |
|
|
Above any other area in the county the people of Ballon have faced tragedy after tragedy as the carnage on their local roads spirals to epidemic proportions. |
|
And yet when confronted with a bona fide epidemic in its southern desert, Arizona has chosen to punt. |
|
Children have also become more sedentary, frequently relying on junk food for nourishment, all of which adds to the growing epidemic of obesity in the United States. |
|
And they worry that it will spark risky sexual behavior that could cause a resurgence of the epidemic. |
|
Ministers have caved in to pressure from the farming industry over one of the most controversial proposals to prevent a repeat of last year's epidemic. |
|
Ad hoc guidelines developed in response to an outbreak of epidemic proportions in Great Britain have been implemented holus-bolus in response to one sick cow. |
|
In 1902, the American South was swept with an epidemic of pellagra. |
|
Despite this, inactive lifestyles and overeating remain the norm for most Americans, as illustrated by the rising epidemic of obesity over the past three decades. |
|
The epidemic peaked because contagious disease epidemics always do. |
|
Seems there's a world-wide epidemic of the common cold just now. |
|
Outlining its 10 lessons for Government, the Trust says the epidemic showed that the health of farming and the prosperity of rural areas were indivisibly linked. |
|
The conquest of major epidemic diseases such as the plague and smallpox was an important contribution, but vulnerability to disease had persisted as a result of poor health. |
|
Lin suggested that the legislature could initially review only funds to control the epidemic and leave more contentious issues for further discussion. |
|
The frailty of memory in general is an important theme, but how an epidemic of that proportion gets virtually wiped out of the collective memory is still a mystery. |
|
He died at age 65 on September 1, 1557, during an epidemic, possibly of typhus, though many sources list his cause of death as unknown. |
|
A major plague epidemic struck the Mediterranean, and much of Europe, in the 6th century. |
|
The bacterial leaf scorch epiphytotic, a plant epidemic among oleanders, continues. |
|
The epidemic reached Constantinople in the late spring of 1347, through Genoese merchants trading in the Black Sea. |
|
Has L.A. figured out how to stop the epidemic it set loose on the world? |
|
Estimates of the death rate caused by this epidemic range from one third to as much as sixty percent. |
|
|
Previously, Smith had linked a terrestrial fungus, Aspergillus sedowii, to a devastating Caribbean sea fan epidemic. |
|
The only known documentation of this event was written by Dr Thomas Shapter, one of the medical doctors present during the epidemic. |
|
In England, it was not until 1823, that the medieval epidemic was first called the Black Death. |
|
But experts say the true figures are much higher and fear there is a hidden epidemic of young self-harmers who don't end up in hospital. |
|
He said such meat contain epidemic brucellosis virus which could easily transfer. |
|
This fourth edition discusses recent high-profile cases such as lead in children's toys and the Asian longhorn beetle epidemic. |
|
In a society where spiritual rootlessness is epidemic, it may be that some will be attracted to a church with deep spiritual roots. |
|
The growing tendency to burn the candle at both ends may be a significant contributor to the current epidemic of diabetes. |
|
This rise was not related to any epidemic, but showed the interest of healthcare workers in microbiologic surveillance of meningitis. |
|
It takes about 30 seconds to catch the enthusiasm epidemic Luz Robles spreads around. |
|
As Melosi recounts in Part II of The Sanitary City, the bacteriological revolution provided the means to effectively combat epidemic disease. |
|
The Ebola epidemic is containable, but it has not been contained. |
|
Peter and stole a blanket from an infected passenger, thus starting the epidemic. |
|
In the northern district of Kabala, the only part of Sierra Leone not to be touched by the epidemic, residents were upbeat about the campaign. |
|
New Zealand is facing the outbreak of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis, which has been described as a food poisoning epidemic. |
|
Alcohol abuse among young people continues to be a serious nationwide epidemic. |
|
When the second population dies, the fleas move on to other hosts, including people, thus creating a human epidemic. |
|
It is outrageous that certain inner-city suburbs virtually get special collections at will as it is these areas where fly-tipping is epidemic. |
|
For more than 2 decades, their island has hosted an inexplicable epidemic of premature breast development, or thelarche. |
|
In Anhui Province, China, there has been a previously high risk for epidemic cerebrospinal meningitis. |
|
|
The HIV epidemic has increased the burden and severity of childhood pneumococcal pneumonia and invasive disease fortyfold. |
|
In October 2012, it was reported that there was a dengue fever epidemic on the island. |
|
Ten Tors was cancelled in 2001 due to the foot and mouth epidemic, but went ahead the next year. |
|
The death toll is unknown but 80 people died at Batty Green alone following a smallpox epidemic. |
|
Effective sanitation practices, if instituted and adhered to in time, are usually sufficient to stop an epidemic. |
|
In epidemic situations, a clinical diagnosis may be made by taking a patient history and doing a brief examination. |
|
Whims, which at first are the aberrations of a single brain, pass with heat into epidemic form. |
|
I used to give coeliacs wine from the chalice instead of host but after the swine flu epidemic we stopped that. |
|
In August 2008 large areas of Zimbabwe were struck by the ongoing cholera epidemic. |
|
Later, the morbus cholera epidemic spread to the Costa Ricans troops and the civilian population of the city of Rivas. |
|
Between 1775 and 1782, a smallpox epidemic broke out throughout North America, killing 40 people in Boston alone. |
|
This rate is comparable to what is seen in West Africa, and is considered a severe epidemic. |
|
A great smallpox epidemic in the 18th century killed around a third of the population. |
|
The indigenous population dramatically collapsed due to exploitation, socioeconomic change and epidemic diseases introduced by the Spanish. |
|
Key disease threats include porcine epidemic diarrhoea virus and African swine fever. |
|
Others cite the end of the crack epidemic and demographic changes, including from immigration. |
|
A pandemic is an epidemic occurring on a scale which crosses international boundaries, usually affecting a large number of people. |
|
They disagreed on internal social policies such as the AIDS epidemic and abortion. |
|
Between 1775 and 1782 a smallpox epidemic swept across North America, killing 40 people in Boston alone. |
|
It may appear as an epidemic, as a hereditary complaint, or as an obstinate and incorrigible disease again and again recurring. |
|
|
In 2001 the UK parliament used primary legislation to delay for one month local elections in England during the Foot and Mouth Disease epidemic. |
|
Economic activities slowed down and schools were closed for weeks at the height of SARS epidemic. |
|
This study was a real eye-opener, because it's the first time anyone appreciated that resistant UTIs could be epidemic in the population. |
|
Benjamin Rush, whose advocacy of bleeding during the yellow fever epidemic may have caused many deaths. |
|
Genetic characterization of an epidemic of Plasmodium falciparum malaria among Yanomami Amerindians. |
|
At the same time, the city is in the grip of a drugs epidemic, with users of the highly addictive Valkyr experiencing terrifying hallucinations. |
|
In 1516, a smallpox epidemic killed an additional 8,000, of the remaining 11,000 Indians, in one month. |
|
After the year 750, major epidemic diseases did not appear again in Europe until the Black Death of the 14th century. |
|
Cuban physicians have played a leading role in combating the Ebola virus epidemic in West Africa. |
|
It is estimated that the plague killed about a third of England's population in one single epidemic. |
|
They argued that English witchcraft, like African witchcraft, was endemic rather than epidemic. |
|
At the same time as an epidemic of the flu broke out among the people, an epizootic of the swine flu broke out among their pigs. |
|
Sierra Leone suffers from epidemic outbreaks of diseases, including yellow fever, cholera, lassa fever and meningitis. |
|
Pathology of US porcine epidemic diarrhea virus strain PC21A in gnotobiotic pigs. |
|
The epidemic occurred as part of the wider Ebola virus epidemic in West Africa. |
|
The major reason for such an examination was to determine if any patterns uncovered seemed to be more epidemic than endemic. |
|
We're in the throes of an epidemic of a dangerous new strain of gonorrhoea that's become resistant to practically all antibiotics. |
|
The use of DDT for disinfectation of louse-infested communities is a primary control measure in epidemic situations. |
|
The epidemic began with an attack that Mongols launched on the Italian merchants' last trading station in the region, Caffa in the Crimea. |
|
However, demographic expansion continued until the arrival of the Black Death epidemic in 1347, when ca. |
|
|
She returned to London and had her daughter variolated in 1721 by Charles Maitland, during an epidemic of smallpox. |
|
However his wife, whom he had met in India, and two of his four children died in Egypt during an epidemic. |
|
However, Melville is keen that two so-called phantom withdrawals do not turn into an epidemic hence his letter to the tracks yesterday. |
|
Between 1865 and 1870 the council built sewers after more than 800 people died in a cholera epidemic. |
|
Making matters worse, a widespread epidemic spread across China from Zhejiang to Henan, killing an unknown but large number of people. |
|
Harriet's death in the cholera epidemic of 1834 was almost as great a blow to Wellesley as it was to her husband. |
|
The first epidemic was recorded in 1529 and killed the emperor Huayna Capac, the father of Atahualpa. |
|
Also, the relatively low virulence allows its victims to travel long distances, increasing the likelihood of an epidemic. |
|
The sleeping sickness epidemic in Africa was arrested due to mobile teams systematically screening millions of people at risk. |
|
Mr Hunt may want to brace himself because I fear we're facing a minor epidemic of caft dunts. |
|
James's Palace, during an influenza epidemic that also claimed the life of Reginald Pole later the same day. |
|
The ministry confirmed in an email there was an outbreak of epidemic hemorrhagic fever at the university recently, but that it was not plague. |
|
During a recent burglary epidemic a police superintendent one night made a tour of inspection through the burglarised district. |
|
The three-day congress shed light on aACAyDiabesity', a portmanteau word to describe the epidemic of diabetes and obesity occurring together. |
|
The epidemic known as the Black Death and an associated famine caused demographic catastrophe in Europe as the population plummeted. |
|
We reviewed the recently posted plans of 49 states for vaccination, early epidemic surveillance and detection, and intraepidemic plans for containment of pandemic influenza. |
|
There may be an epidemic that causes widespread panic, or there could be rampant violence in the area that prevents people from going to work for fear of their lives. |
|
In this epidemic as in past Ebola outbreaks, survivors often face stigma, income loss, and both grief and survivor guilt over the loss of family and friends. |
|
When a smallpox epidemic occurred he advised the local cattle workers to be inoculated, but they told him that their previous cowpox infection would prevent smallpox. |
|
Virological epidemiology of the 1958 epidemic of Kyasanur Forest disease. |
|
|
The disease, more commonly known as the Black Death, created an epidemic that spread rapidly and wiped out a third of the population of the country. |
|
A government's ability to contain the disease before it extends to other areas can prevent a high death toll and the development of an epidemic or even pandemic. |
|
In addition, a major influenza epidemic spread around the world. |
|
At first, the Aztecs believed the epidemic was a punishment from an angry god, but they later accepted their fate and no longer resisted the Spanish rule. |
|
Historian Joseph Ellis suggests that Washington's decision to have his troops inoculated against the smallpox epidemic was one of his most important decisions. |
|
The cerebrospinal meningitis epidemic that struck Nigeria in 1996 took at least 12,000 lives over a six-month period, and affected more than 100,000 people. |
|
Now classified an epidemic in Japan, karoshi relates to a rash of stress-related heart attacks and strokes among workers in their twenties and early thirties. |
|
After the Peace of Bucharest, the rule of Jean Georges Caradja, although remembered for a major plague epidemic, was notable for its cultural and industrial ventures. |
|
While estimates vary, it is though that upwards of 400 children died of acute lead poisoning making this perhaps the largest lead poisoning fatality epidemic ever encountered. |
|
Chittenden blamed the American Fur Company for the epidemic. |
|
Between 1837 and 1838, another smallpox epidemic swept the region. |
|
The effects of hunger were often conjugated with epidemic disease. |
|
Similarly, some members of the Bay's black community, who feel that goin' dumb isn't particularly smart, have compared thizzin' to the crack epidemic. |
|
LinkTek has stepped up its fight against the growing epidemic of link rot. |
|
The war resulted in the deaths of tens of thousands of combatants as well as a couple of hundred thousand civilians, mostly from a cholera epidemic. |
|
Parents of drug addicted students have demanded the authorities of institutes, which take high fees, to take steps for prevention of this epidemic drug addiction. |
|
Various theories for the decline of the Native American populations emphasize epidemic diseases, conflicts with Europeans, and conflicts among warring tribes. |
|
The first relief assistance mission organized by the League was an aid mission for the victims of a famine and subsequent typhus epidemic in Poland. |
|
The malaria problem seems to be compounded by the AIDS epidemic. |
|
About 8,600 died in the largest German epidemic of the late 19th century, and the last major cholera epidemic in a major city of the Western world. |
|