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The Next Plague. Bruce Curran. The Next Plague. Top Five Historical Plagues. The Next Plague. Plague #5. The American Plagues 16th Century Smallpox and Measles Syphilis. The Next Plague. Plague #4. The Great Plague of London 1665-1666. The Next Plague.
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The Next Plague Bruce Curran
The Next Plague Top Five Historical Plagues
The Next Plague Plague #5 The American Plagues 16th Century Smallpox and Measles Syphilis
The Next Plague Plague #4 The Great Plague of London 1665-1666
The Next Plague Plague #3 Plague of Justinian 541-542
The Next Plague Plague #2 The Third Pandemic 1855 - 1950
The Next Plague Plague #1 The Black Death 1347 - 1351
Global Epidemiology List of WHO Preventable Diseases 1. Anthrax 2. Measles 3. Rubella 4. Cholera 5. Meningococcal 6. Influenza 7. Diphtheria 8. Mumps 9. Tetanus 10. Hepatitis A 11. Pertussis 12. Tuberculosis 13. Hepatitis B 14. Pneumoccocal disease 15. Typhoid fever 16. Hepatitis E 17. Poliomyelitis 18. Tick-borne encephalitis 19. Haemophilus influenzae type b 20. Rabies 21. Varicella and herpes zoster (shingles) 22. Human papilloma-virus 23. Rotavirus gastroenteritis 24. Yellow fever 25. Japanese encephalitis 26. Malaria 27. Dengue fever Others not on WHO List: 1. Anthrax 2. Plague 3. Q fever 4. Smallpox
The Next Plague Basic Epidemiology Travel Local Immunity and Adaptations Sickle Cell AIDS Immunity The Common Cold Somewhere Else
The Next Plague Prevention & Immunization: Pick One Ebola Swine Flu AIDS The Common Flu
The Next Plague What Are The Odds? One in 100 million One in 6 million One in a million One in 5000
The Next Plague Influenza Did You Get a Shot? Why Should You Get a Shot? Epitopes and Prevention Time of the Year and Distance
Influenza Pandemics 1918-1919 The Great Flu Epidemic • 25% of the world population was sick • 600,000-800,000 died in the United States • Worldwide 20-25 million died
Influenza Pandemics 1957-1958 • Worldwide 2 million people died • 70,000 died in the United States
Influenza Pandemics 1968 - 1969 The Hong Kong Flu • Worldwide 1 million people died • 34,000 died in the United States
Influenza Pandemics 2009 - 2010 H1N1 • Worldwide 289,000 people died • 12,000 died in the United States
History of AIDS 1900-2017
The History of AIDS Origin of the Disease San Francisco 1980s Jim Bunn & WHO Early Research
History of AIDS HIV Drug Availability 1993 - 0 1994- 1996 - 1 1996- 1998 - 3 1998-1999 - 6 2000-2017 - 30+
Hepatitis and Malaria 1900-2017
Hepatitis Hepatitis AHepatitis BHepatitis C
Hepatitis Hepatitis A Facts Transmission: Water Food Mollusk Institutional Clinical Outcomes: Recovery - Usual Outcome Prolonged - <5% Relapse - 10% - 15% Fulminant - 0.2%
Hepatitis The Hepatitis B Virus
Malaria Malaria
Malaria Climate change will allow malaria to spread into new areas. This map shows the new areas where the Malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum, will likely be able to spread by 2050 based on the Hadley Centre model's high scenario. Areas shown in yellow indicate the current distribution of malaria. Areas shown in red indicate areas where climate will be suitable for malaria by 2050. Other areas may become free of malaria as climate changes.Courtesy of Hugo Ahlenius, UNEP/GRID-Arendal
The Next Plague Tick Borne IllnessOr Lyme Syndrome Diseases
The distribution of tick sightings across the United States between 1907–1996 and 1907–2015.
Four Levels of Public Health Threats Public Health Advisory - a potential public health threat has been identified. Public Health Notice - a public health threat is spreading within a specific population or community. Public Health Alert - a public health threat has the potential to spread rapidly nationwide. Public Health Emergency – a public health threat has reached epidemic proportions requiring drastic public health measures.
The Next Plague Concluding Thoughts