Title of article :
Africa CDC: Establishing Integrated Surveillance and Laboratory Networks for Rapid Disease Detection and Response, Control, Prevention, and Clinical Care in Africa
Author/Authors :
Amukele, Timothy Department of Pathology - Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, United States
Pages :
3
From page :
1
To page :
3
Abstract :
here is little similarity between asbestos, HIV, and the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus. However, their histories illustrate the three keys for effective detection and control of disease: clinical identification, laboratory detection, and public response. In diseases where all elements of this three-step framework were in place, the time from initial observation to appropriate public response tended to occur quickly. For example, in late November 2002, an atypical pneumonia that ultimately came to be known as severe acute respiratory syndrome made its appearance in China and a few other countries in East Asia. Once the World Health Organization was notified in February 20031, a massive coordinated response was deployed. The causative agent was identified within two weeks2 and the disease was halted by effective quarantine in 42 days ...
Keywords :
Africa CDC , Establishing Integrated Surveillance , Laboratory Networks , Rapid Disease Detection , Response , Control , Prevention , Clinical Care in Africa
Journal title :
African Journal of Laboratory Medicine
Serial Year :
2017
Full Text URL :
Record number :
2622222
Link To Document :
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