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Journal of Veterinary Medicine may refer to several publications: . Journal of Veterinary Medicine (Hindawi journal) a journal published by Hindawi; Journal of Veterinary Medicine, Series A, originally known as Zentralblatt für Veterinärmedizin Reihe A, now known as Transboundary and Emerging Diseases, published by Wiley
This is a list of academic journals published by Hindawi. [1 ... Autoimmune Diseases; B ... Human Behavior and Emerging Technologies; I
A foreign animal disease (FAD) is an animal disease or pest, whether terrestrial or aquatic, not known to exist in the United States or its territories. [1] When these diseases can significantly affect human health or animal production and when there is significant economic cost for disease control and eradication efforts, they are considered a threat to the United States. [2]
The term emerging disease has been in use in scientific publications since the beginning of the 1960s at least [18] and is used in the modern sense by David Sencer in his 1971 article "Emerging Diseases of Man and Animals" [19] where in the first sentence of the introduction he implicitly defines emerging diseases as "infectious diseases of man ...
Pages in category "Hindawi Publishing Corporation academic journals" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 336 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. (previous page) *
The disease is endemic in the Indian subcontinent and is a major threat to fast-growing goat husbandry in India, causing an annual loss of around 1800 million Indian rupees. In North Africa , only Egypt was once hit, but since summer 2008, Morocco is suffering a generalized outbreak with 133 known cases in 129 provinces , mostly affecting sheep ...
The Regional Animal Health Center for North Africa (RAHC-NA) is a facility run by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization Emergency Centre for Transboundary Animal Diseases (FAO-ECTAD). It has been in action since May 2007.
In the case of diseases transferred from arthropod vectors such as urban yellow fever, dengue, epidemic typhus, tickborne relapsing fever, zika fever, and malaria, [2] the differentiation between terms becomes ever more hazy. For example, a human infected with malaria is bitten by a mosquito that is subsequently infected as well.