Examples of outbreak in the following topics:
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- An occurrence of disease greater than would be expected at a particular time and place is called an outbreak.
- Two linked cases of a rare infectious disease may be sufficient to constitute an outbreak.
- Outbreaks may also refer to endemics that affect a particular place or group, epidemics that affect a region in a country or a group of countries, and pandemics that describe global disease outbreaks .
- Develop a hypothesis (if there appears to be a cause for the outbreak).
- Point source – Common source outbreak where the exposure occurs in less than one incubation period.
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- Epidemiologists often consider the term outbreak to be synonymous to epidemic, but the general public typically perceives outbreaks to be more local and less serious than epidemics.
- There are two types of epidemic outbreaks: (1) In a common source outbreak, the affected individuals had an exposure to a common agent.
- If the exposure was continuous or variable, it can be termed a continuous outbreak or intermittent outbreak, respectively.
- (2) In a propagated outbreak, the disease spreads person-to-person.
- Many epidemics will have characteristics of both common source and propagated outbreaks.
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- Both Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus have been implicated in large outbreaks of CHIKV.
- Human infections in Africa have been at relatively low levels for a number of years, but in 1999-2000 there was a large outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and in 2007 there was an outbreak in Gabon.
- Starting in February 2005, a major outbreak occurred in islands of the Indian Ocean.
- A large outbreak of chikungunya in India occurred in 2006 and 2007.
- In 2007 transmission was reported for the first time in Europe, in a localized outbreak in north-eastern Italy.
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- Analytical epidemiology attempts to determine the cause of an outbreak.
- In this way, other possible factors, e.g., genetic or environmental, might be identified as factors related to the outbreak .
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- Between November 2002 and July 2003, an outbreak of SARS in Hong Kong nearly became a pandemic, with 8,422 cases and 916 deaths worldwide (10.9% fatality), according to the World Health Organization (WHO).
- The last infected human case of the outbreak occurred in June 2003, and there was a laboratory-induced infection case in 2004.
- During the outbreak, the fatality of SARS was less than 1% for people aged 24 or younger, 6% for those 25 to 44, 15% for those 45 to 64, and more than 50% for those over 65.
- However, there was an outbreak in Algeria in 1994, with cases of WNV-caused encephalitis, and the first large outbreak in Romania in 1996, with a high number of cases with neuroinvasive disease.
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- The index case may indicate the source of the disease, the possible spread, and which reservoir holds the disease in-between outbreaks.
- The index case is the first patient that indicates the existence of an outbreak.
- In the eboloa outbreak of 2014, the Patient Zero was identified as a two year-old boy in Guinea who died on Dec. 2, 2013 of Ebolavirus during the fruitbat migration.
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- Genotyping of pathogenic isolates provides valuable support during investigations of suspected outbreaks and when tracing infectious diseases.
- It is well established that genotyping of pathogenic isolates provides valuable support for the investigation of suspected outbreaks, the detection of unsuspected transmission, the tracing of infectious agents within a community, and the identification of possible sources of infection for newly diagnosed cases.
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- Vaccination is a proven way to prevent and even eradicate widespread outbreaks of life-threatening infectious diseases.
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- Epidemiologists often consider the term outbreak to be synonymous to epidemic, but the general public typically perceives outbreaks to be more local and less serious than epidemics.
- The World Health Organization officially declared the outbreak to be a pandemic level 6 on 11 June 2009.
- However, the WHO's declaration of a pandemic level 6 was an indication of spread, not severity; the strain actually having a lower mortality rate than common flu outbreaks.
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- This was until an outbreak in Algeria in 1994, with cases of WNV-caused encephalitis, and the first large outbreak in Romania in 1996, with a high number of cases with neuroinvasive disease.