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smallpox

Examples

  • Smallpox is an infectious disease unique to humans, caused by either of two virus variants named Variola major and Variola minor. The term "smallpox" was first used in Europe in the 15th century to distinguish variola from the great pox ( syphilis). — “Smallpox”, schools-
  • Overview: Smallpox is an acute contagious disease caused by the variola virus (Poxvirus variolae), a member of the Poxviridae family of the genus Orthopoxvirus. Virologists have speculated that it evolved from an African rodent poxvirus 10. — “Smallpox: eMedicine Infectious Diseases”,
  • Smallpox hasn't occurred in the U.S. since 1949, and routine vaccination against it ended here in 1972. However, it is believed that clandestine stocks of smallpox exist in 10 or more other countries. — “Smallpox Vaccine and Immunization Information”,
  • When smallpox cases were rampant, knowledge of disease and medical treatment was dramatically different than today. A number of eruptive diseases such as measles, chicken pox, scarlet fever etc. were regarded as smallpox before Dr. Sydenham differentiated between the various symptom-complexes. — “Smallpox”,
  • Smallpox is an infectious disease unique to humans, caused by either of two virus variants, Variola major and Variola minor.[1] The disease is also known by the Latin names Variola or Variola vera, which is a derivative of the Latin varius, meaning "spotted", or varus, meaning "pimple". — “Smallpox - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia”,
  • The history of smallpox is a success story for immunization and public health. Find out more about the rise and fall of smallpox. — “The History of Smallpox”,
  • Smallpox is a disease caused by the Variola major virus. Some experts say that over the centuries it has killed more people than all other infectious diseases combined. Worldwide immunization stopped the spread of smallpox three decades ago. The last case was reported in 1977. — “Smallpox - MedlinePlus”, nlm.nih.gov
  • Smallpox definition, an acute, highly contagious, febrile disease, caused by the variola virus, and characterized by a pustular eruption that often leaves perman See more. — “Smallpox | Define Smallpox at ”,
  • smallpox ( ) n. An acute, highly infectious, often fatal disease caused by a poxvirus and characterized by high fever and aches with subsequent. — “smallpox: Definition from ”,
  • Smallpox is a viral infection that is highly contagious, and historically has been associated with widespread epidemics among susceptible populations. Smallpox has an incubation period of about 12-14 days from the time of exposure to the onset of symptoms. — “Smallpox”, hmc.psu.edu
  • Smallpox is an acute contagious disease caused by variola virus, a member of the orthopoxvirus family. Smallpox, which is believed to have originated over 3,000 years ago in India or Egypt, is one of the most devastating diseases known to humanity. — “WHO | Smallpox”, who.int
  • Smallpox (also called variola) is the only disease that has been completely wiped out throughout the world. Smallpox is also potentially one of the most devastating biological weapons ever conceived. — “Smallpox”,
  • Smallpox is an acute, contagious, and sometimes fatal disease caused by infection with a Smallpox outbreaks have occurred from time to time for thousands of. — “Safety and Health Topics: Smallpox”, osha.gov
  • Smallpox is a serious infectious disease caused by the Orthopox virus, variola. Smallpox spreads from person to person mainly by aerosolized droplets that come from the coughing of infected patients. — “Fact Sheet on Smallpox”, healthvermont.gov
  • An overview of Variola virus (Smallpox), including its use as a biological weapon, transmission, infection control measures, signs and symptons, treatment and prophylaxis, and types. — “Smallpox Fact Sheet”, upmc-
  • Information from the National Immunization Program on current smallpox vaccine policies and recommendations. — “CDC: Smallpox”, bt.cdc.gov
  • Offers links to documents for the public and health professionals. From the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. — “Smallpox”, smallpox.gov
  • You're probably wondering what smallpox is and why people are worried about it. There seems to be a lot of fear and confusion about this disease - so it helps to learn the facts. — “Smallpox”,
  • Smallpox, or variola, is caused by a DNA orthopoxvirus and has been plaguing mankind for at least 3000 years. Smallpox was also used by the American government during its wars with Native Americans. — “Emergency Medicine”,
  • Some people also call smallpox Variola, named after the viruses' scientific name. A vaccine was developed and used to stop people getting smallpox. — “Smallpox - Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia”,

Images

  • in that we had to coordinate two border crossings in Austria for Soldiers with weapons We even have Carabinieri escorts up to the Brenner Pass he added There s still time for a last minute smallpox vaccination from Staff Sgt Stackhouse Vicenza Health Clinic as Spc Charles Ryan discovered It was hard leaving my wife and four kids
  • Smallpox Light Series
  • to have been a major cause of death in history with ranking based on fatality rates and impact worldwide However if a disease has been contained it will be lower on the list 10 Smallpox This variola virus had many forms and continues to be a required vaccination for many countries Smallpox in its worse forms hemorrhagic and flat had the highest fatality rates with
  • doctors who shares your beliefs and go see them if they re still practicing And if you still think that vaccines are ineffective in treating diseases I have one word for you smallpox
  • anyone for the smallpox vaccine
  • Source F Vaccination against smallpox in London s East End 1871
  • Cowpox was a mild disease evidenced by discomfort aching pustules some swelling symptoms that only lasted a few days In contrast smallpox was a very serious disease that resulted in massive disfigurement sometimes blindness and often death Jenner s First Vaccine
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  • CDC 1 in 4 US Children Not Protected Against Preventable Disease By Susan Duclos
  • Smallpox Image source For over 30 centuries smallpox viruses had existed as fatal pathogens but today the vaccination had completely eradicated this first global infectious disease In the past
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  • Figure 6 Death rates from smallpox and scarlet fever in England
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  • Kuniyasu Tametomo smallpox microbe5 jpg
  • Tuberculosis Mad Cow Disease SARS Smallpox or all the various forms of Cancer I ll be susceptible to are things you probably should Not be thinking about
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  • Abandoned Smallpox Hospital
  • どのマシンも一日1 3リザルトを返すのがやっとの様子 最近30日のグラフを見るとどこですもぽが終わったのかはっきりと分かりますね 笑
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  • Abandoned Smallpox Hospital
  • A few days ago I was listening to a snippet from a talk show where Bill Maher and Chris Matthews were debating the merits of H1N1 Vaccinations Bill Maher was on a rampage convinced that
  • Families of Greenwood Howarth and Marsden July 1903 Deaths From Flu
  • cette théorie n ont aucune preuve C est incroyable qu ils arrivent à prétendre quelque chose sans preuve Dr Robert Royal président du Ethics and Public Policy Center A travers les Amériques les maladies qui contaminaient les Européens se propagèrent de tribus en tribus voyageant bien plus vite que les Européens eux mêmes On estime que 95
  • Photograph Copyright © 2004 2008 by Dale H Cook A high resolution version of this photo 156k is available Street map Topographic map from TerraServer USA
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  • Smallpox
  • Abandoned Smallpox Hospital
  • Key pathogen smallpox variola Smallpox is contagious from when patients first begin to feel ill about 10 14 days after they were exposed to infection until the last scab falls off about three weeks after they
  • Photographs by Scott Gordon Bleicher for ontheinside info All rights reserved Photos
  • SMALL POX | MIXED MEDIA ON WOOD
  • Figura 21 Niño con varicela CDC Cheryl Tryon ctt1 cdc gov
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  • Smallpox Hospital
  • Abandoned Smallpox Hospital
  • Photographs by Scott Gordon Bleicher for ontheinside info All rights reserved Photos
  • 請不要用普遍的價值觀去解釋 萬惡的醫生不去 質疑為何有生老病死 卻去治天花 上帝既然 容讓他們死去 醫生何必做程咬金 本帖最後由 dye 於 2007 8 13 18 03 編輯

Videos

  • Smallpox part2 2m 11s 49 ajiya ^^
  • Smallpox Vaccine MTSU A group video about the history of the smallpox vaccine done for immunology class.
  • Edward Jenner and the Smallpox Vaccination
  • Smallpox patients Smallpox had been eradicated all over the world since last female patient found in Lab.Birmingham England 1978 September.Nevertheless,some professionals worried Smallpox virus could become a horrible bio-weapon since 911 attack.Will Smallpox make a comeback?
  • Smallpox This patient education video explains what smallpox is and discusses the benefits and risks of vaccination. People who should not be vaccinated are discussed. Self-care instructions are included for people who have received the smallpox vaccine.
  • Edward Jenner - Smallpox Vaccine Edward Jenner was an English country doctor who pioneered vaccination. In 1796 Jenner discovered that inoculation with cowpox gave immunity to smallpox. The video is set to the 'Size of a cow' by the Wonderstuff.
  • Jimmy Jazz - Small Pox Jimmy Jazz reads his poem live at The Casbah in San Diego Nov. 2, 2003 in a show with Michael Klam, Daphne Gottlieb, Hal Sirowitz and Lydia Lunch contact: jazz@pira***
  • DA Henderson, Leader in Global Smallpox Eradication In the 1960s and '70s, American physician and epidemiologist DA Henderson led the global campaign to eradicate smallpox. As VOA's Rosanne Skirble reports, the strategy he deployed changed the way health officials wage war against infectious diseases and biological threats.
  • Fugazi - Smallpox Champion
  • Fugazi - 4 - In On The Kill Taker - Smallpox Champion 4 of 12
  • Fugazi - Smallpox Champion Fugazi live in Louisville, Kentucky April 4 2002 Buy Fugazi's music directly from Dischord: bit.ly
  • Smallpox Vaccine 1955 The smallpox vaccine helps the body develop immunity to smallpox. The vaccine is made from a virus called vaccinia which is a pox-type virus related to smallpox. The smallpox vaccine contains the live vaccinia virus—not dead virus like many other vaccines. For that reason, the vaccination site must be cared for carefully to prevent the virus from spreading. Also, the vaccine can have side effects. In the past, about 1000 people for every 1 million people vaccinated for the first time experienced reactions that, while not life-threatening, were serious. These reactions included a toxic or allergic reaction at the site of the vaccination (erythema multiforme), spread of the vaccinia virus to other parts of the body and to other individuals (inadvertent inoculation), and spread of the vaccinia virus to other parts of the body through the blood (generalized vaccinia). These types of reactions may require medical attention. In the past, between 14 and 52 people out of every 1 million people vaccinated for the first time experienced potentially life-threatening reactions to the vaccine. Based on past experience, it is estimated that 1 or 2 people in 1 million who receive the vaccine may die as a result. Routine smallpox vaccinations were discontinued among US children in 1972, and among US healthcare workers in 1976 after the disease was eradicated in the United States and because of the side effects. Until recently, the US government provided the vaccine only to a few hundred ...
  • Smallpox(part2) Smallpox(part2):some photos
  • 2 Training Sessions on Smallpox part 1 - Imnius - 1:43's Name : Imnius Crew : Vieira-Squad Map : Smallpox Part 1
  • The History of Bioterrorism: Smallpox www.bt.cdc.gov These videos describe the Category A diseases: smallpox, anthrax, botulism, plague, tularemia, and viral hemorrhagic fevers. If these germs were used to intentionally infect people, they would cause the most illness and death. Watch these videos to learn how some of these agents have been or can be used as bioterrorist weapons. Note: Parts of this video were adapted from "Biological Warfare and Terrorism: The Military and Public Health Response," co-produced by the United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases (USAMRIID), the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 1999. **Note: An incident of deliberate infection of Native Americans with smallpox referred to in this video is incorrect. The incident to which the video refers occurred at Fort Pitt under Captain Simeon Ecuyer. General Jeffery Amherst never himself deliberately infected any Indians with smallpox blankets at Fort Ticonderoga. Moreover, the evidence that any successful epidemic resulted from this incident is very much in question by historians.**
  • New Smallpox Vaccine Licensed FDA recently licensed a new smallpox vaccine called ACAM2000 which is made by Acambis Inc. This new vaccine is not available for routine use, but will be stored in the country's Strategic National Stockpile. It could be used to inoculate people at high risk of smallpox exposure during a bioterrorist attack. ACAM2000 is derived from the Dryvax smallpox vaccine, which is no longer made and in limited supply. The new vaccine is made with modern cell culture technology, which allows the vaccine to be produced on a large scale with more consistent quality. The new vaccine was studied in two populations: those who'd never been vaccinated for smallpox and those who'd been vaccinated many years before. The percentage of unvaccinated people who had a successful immunization reaction was similar to that of the older vaccine. The new vaccine was also found to be acceptable as a booster for those previously vaccinated for smallpox. Because the new vaccine contains live vaccinia virus, vaccinated people must be careful not to spread the virus from the inoculation site to other parts of their body or to other people. People who receive the vaccine must be given a Medication Guide that explains how to care for the vaccination site properly and lists the serious side effects that can occur. FDA Patient Safety News: November 2007 For more information, please see our website: www.accessdata.fda.gov
  • Smallpox Vaccine Ethics For the preservation of smallpox samples
  • Old style smallpox vaccination scar Checking out my old smallpox vaccination scar for vaccine. Over fifty years ago a doctor scratched the skin of my upper left arm with a small knife and smeared the smallpox vaccine into the wound. This barbaric technique was common practice in those days amongst some older doctors and resulted in a very large scar. Why not post a video or picture of your vaccination scars? Comments welcome.
  • Small Pox and the Vaccine Steven Pavlakis MD Pediatric Neurology Medical School: Brown University Resident/Fellowship: Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center
  • Fugazi - Smallpox Champion Steve Albini Demo
  • Smallpox part2 (02:14:18) Game: Snowbound Spieler: Reljin Cours: Smallpox part2 Time: 2:14:18
  • PFOX Gives SMALLPOX Blankets to Natives The actual article from ***-Face... I mean PFOX, is located at: Be sure to read my commentary on my website at: Be sure to Favorite, Rate and Link this video so that people like this author and PFOX get called out on the bull*** that they are. ~E
  • Fugazi playing "Smallpox Champion" At 328 Performance Hall in Nashville, TN on April 6, 1993.
  • A typical smallpox infection From -- DA Henderson describes a typical case of smallpox.
  • Whither Smallpox? Debate Over Destruction of Virus Stocks Dr. Jonathan Tucker, Senior Fellow at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies talks about the ongoing debate over the destruction of laboratory stocks of the smallpox virus after the disease was eradicated over 30 years ago.
  • Smallpox Really? We spent all meeting discussing it and this is the best we came up with? (Sorry to any YouTubers who saw this early with the audio error)
  • Infectious Disease - Smallpox Pt 1
  • Tommy Thompson Discusses Book, Smallpox: The Death of a Disease On Thursday, June 4, 2009, the University of Pittsburgh celebrated the publication of the book, Smallpox: The Death of a Disease, in which DA Henderson, MD, chronicles the 10-year fight to eliminate smallpox, the first infectious disease ever eradicated from the human species. The event was sponsored by the University of Pittsburgh Center for Global Health, headed by Donald S. Burke, MD, associate vice chancellor for global health and dean of the Graduate School of Public Health.
  • Elizabeth I catches smallpox In October 1562 Elizabeth I contracted smallpox and was fatally ill. She became unconscious and incapable to speak. After she recovered Elizabeth would say of her illness: "death possessed almost every joint of me, so as I wished then that the feeble thread of life, which lasted (methought) all too long, might by Clotho's hand have quietly been cut off". For a week she suffered from a high fever and there was panic as many feared she would die. The situation at the time was ambiguous -- Elizabeth's likely heir was her distant cousin Mary Stuart who was Catholic. In contrast Elizabeth had re-established a separate Church of England with herself as head of this, and there were fears amongst Protestants in England that Mary's accession would see a return to the situation under Mary I of England (ie a return to the Catholic Church). At the time Elizabeth lay ill, some members of the council were planning to secure the throne for Katherine Grey, the sister of Lady Jane Grey. Under Henry VIII's will, Katherine had the legal claim to the throne and she was Protestant which suited the Protestants in England. Yet other people at court, including Robert Dudley, appear to have favoured another individual -- Henry Hastings, earl of Huntingdon. Incidentally Henry was Robert Dudley's brother-in-law. Throughout most of her fever Elizabeth lay speechless but when she regained ability to speak, she is believed to have voiced concerns for Robert Dudley. Believing herself to be dying, she ...
  • Smallpox Vaccine Ethics Support for the human testing of smallpox vaccine samples as ethical.
  • Smallpox Safari Presents "The Death of Smallpox" No copyright infringement intended.
  • Lewis Black on Smallpox and Greedy People Lewis black rants about smallpox and greedy people.
  • Horizon : "Smallpox On Death Row" - Part 1 of 5 A BBC Horizon documentary from 1997, listed the the BBC Archives, but unavailable. A facinating account of the smallpox virus, erradicated by man, and reasons why the remaining isolated stocks should not be destroyed. Part 1 of 5 Warning! Contains scenes that may cause distress.
  • Edward Jenner's smallpox vaccination - Medicine through time History GCSE A video about Edward Jenner's smallpox vaccination that is studied in the 'Medicine through time' history GCSE.
  • Smallpox、viruela、variole(part1) This film shows the photos and statements of Smallpox ,which is worth watching.
  • Fugazi - Smallpox Champion Artist: Fugazi Song: Smallpox Champion Local: Bar do 3 City: Santos - SP Country: Brazil Date: 08/20/1997
  • SnowBound Online Smallpox 3. Player: CaRrErA Crew: Team.!mpuls
  • Smallpox sculpture.wmv Smallpox sculpture by artist
  • Smallpox This is for my class
  • Smallpox - The Greatest Battle of Mankind
  • 6. Smallpox (I): 'The Speckled Monster' Epidemics in Western Society Since 1600 (HIST 234) In the eigh***th century, smallpox succeeded plague as the most feared disease. The two maladies, however, are very different. While plague is a bacterial disease, smallpox is viral. Plague is spread by rats and fleas, smallpox is transmitted by contact and airborne inhalation. Unlike plague, smallpox can exist as an endemic as well as an epidemic disease. The dread of smallpox was a result of its agonizing and unpleasant symptoms, which, in the case of survival, often left victims permanently disfigured. Prior to the discovery and successful implementation of inoculation and vaccination regimes, a host of ineffective and often dangerous treatments were attempted, including bleeding, purging, and cauterization of affected areas. Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: open.yale.edu This course was recorded in Spring 2010.
  • Smallpox-what do you know? Smallpox history and insite into the future of smallpox