typhoid cholera - перевод на арабский
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typhoid cholera - перевод на арабский

URBAN LEGEND
Typhoid fever and cholera in Chicago

typhoid cholera      
‎ كوليرا تيفِيَّة‎
typhoid         
  • [[Almroth Edward Wright]] developed the first effective typhoid vaccine.
  • Moderately endemic areas}}
  • A 1939 conceptual illustration showing various ways that typhoid bacteria can contaminate a [[water well]] (center)
  • right
  • Pathogenesis of typhoid fever
  •  doi = 10.4269/ajtmh.19-0624 }}</ref>
  • New Typhoid carrier cases reported in L.A. County between 2006 and 2016<ref name="LA county typhoid 2016" />
  • Doctor administering a typhoid [[vaccination]] at a school in [[San Augustine County, Texas]], 1943
  • Vivotif - oral typhoid vaccine of live-attenuated ''S. enterica'' Typhi strain Ty21a
  • Widal test card
BACTERIAL INFECTIOUS DISORDER CONTRACTED BY CONSUMPTION OF FOOD OR DRINK CONTAMINATED WITH SALMONELLA TYPHI. THIS DISORDER IS COMMON IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES AND CAN BE TREATED WITH ANTIBIOTICS.
Typhoid Fever; Enteric fever; Typhoid; Yellow jack (bacterial disease); Slow fever; Westminster fever; Westminster Fever; Typhus abdominalis; Typhus cerebralis; Pneumo-typhus; Gastric fever; Abdominal typhus; Infantile remittant fever; Nervous fever; Pythogenic fever; Drain fever; Low fever
التِّيفِيَّة؛ التِّيفود
chicken cholera         
BIRD DISEASE
Chicken cholera; Avian cholera; Avian pasteurellosis; Avian hemorrhagic septicemia
‎ كوليرا الدَّجاج‎

Определение

chicken cholera
an infectious form of pasteurellosis affecting fowls.

Википедия

Chicago 1885 cholera epidemic myth

The Chicago 1885 cholera epidemic myth is a persistent urban legend, stating that 90,000 people in Chicago died of typhoid fever and cholera in 1885. Although the story is widely reported, these deaths did not occur.

Lake Michigan was the source of Chicago's drinking water. During a tremendous storm in 1885, the rainfall washed refuse from the Chicago River far out into the lake. Citizens feared that sewage run-off from the storm would reach the intake cribs of the Chicago lake tunnels (built in 1866 and 1874) and pollute the city’s drinking water.

According to the legend, typhoid, cholera and other waterborne diseases from the contaminated drinking water killed up to 90,000 people. The Chicago Sanitary District (now The Metropolitan Water Reclamation District) was said to have been created by the Illinois legislature in 1889 in response to a terrible epidemic which killed thousands of residents of this fledgling city.

However, analysis of the deaths in Chicago shows no deaths from cholera and only a slight rise in typhoid deaths. In fact, no cholera outbreaks had occurred in Chicago since the 1860s. Typhoid deaths never exceeded 1,000 in any year in the 1880s. The supposed 90,000 deaths would have represented 12% of the city's entire population and would have left numerous public records as well as newspaper accounts. Libby Hill, researching her book The Chicago River: A Natural and Unnatural History, found no newspaper or mortality records and, at her prompting, the Chicago Tribune issued a retraction (on September 29, 2005) of the three recent instances where they had mentioned the epidemic.

Примеры употребления для typhoid cholera
1. Like typhoid, cholera is extremely rare in the US and is unlikely to cause an epidemic.
2. And soon we may face the problem of epidemics – typhoid, cholera, diarrhoea." There was some hope.
3. But Health Minister Siti Fadillah Supari told reporters that authorities were on alert for outbreaks of more serious cases of diarrhea or diseases such as typhoid, cholera and measles.