ALPHABETICAL INDEX OF DISEASES
Alphabetical index of diseases
Acariasis ...... 178 Acute poliomyelitis...... 135 Acute viral gastroenteritis ...... 120,122 Amoebiasis ...... 123 Ancylostomiasis...... 155 Arboviral arthritis (mosquito-borne) ...... 194 Arboviral fevers (mosquito-borne) ...... 192 Arboviral fevers (sandfly-borne) ...... 204 Ascariasis ...... 159
Bacillary dysentery ...... 115 Bacterial enteritis ...... 107,109,111,113 Bacterial enteritis (caused by Escherichia coli) ...... 109 Balantidiasis ...... 129 Bancroftian filariasis ...... 187 Bartonellosis ...... 203 Bilharziasis ...... 142 Boutonneuse fever ...... 225 Breakbone fever ...... 185 Bwamba virus disease ...... 192
Calabar swelling ...... 207 Carrión disease ...... 203 Campylobacter enteritis ...... 107 Cat liver fluke infection ...... 149 Central Asian haemorrhagic fever ...... 229 Central European tick-borne encephalitis ...... 231 Chagas disease ...... 208 Changuinola virus disease ...... 204 Chikungunya virus disease ...... 194 Chinese liver fluke disease ...... 149 Cholera ...... 117 Classic typhus fever ...... 215 Clonorchiasis ...... 149 Conjunctivitis ...... 171 Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever ...... 229 Cryptosporidiosis ...... 127 Cysticercosis ...... 165
Dengue fever ...... 185 Dengue haemorrhagic fever ...... 185 Dermatomycosis...... 180 Dermatophytosis ...... 180 Diarrhoea ...... 107,109,111,113,120,122 Diphyllobothriasis ...... 151 Dracontiasis ...... 169 Dracunculiasis ...... 169 Dysentery (amoebic) ...... 123 Dysentery (Balantidial) ...... 129
281 CONTROLLING AND PREVENTING DISEASE
Eastern equine encephalitis ...... 189 Elephantiasis ...... 187 Encephalitis (Mosquito-borne arboviral) ...... 189 Encephalitis (Tick-borne arboviral) ...... 231 Endemic typhus fever ...... 213 Enteric fever ...... 131 Enterobiasis ...... 139 Eye worm disease ...... 207
Far eastern tick-borne encephalitis ...... 231 Fascioliasis ...... 147 Fasciolopsiasis ...... 145 Filariasis ...... 187 Flea-borne typhus ...... 213 Frambesia tropica ...... 175
Gastroenteritis ...... 107,109,111,113 Giant intestinal fluke infection ...... 145 Giardia enteritis ...... 125 Giardiasis ...... 125 Group C virus fever ...... 192 Guinea-worm infection ...... 169
Haemorrhagic fevers (Tick-borne arboviral) ...... 229 Hansen’s disease ...... 177 Hepatitis A, Infectious hepatitis ...... 133 Hepatitis E, non-A non-B hepatitis ...... 133 Hookworm disease ...... 155 Hydatid (cystic) disease ...... 140 Hymenolepiasis ...... 137
India tick typhus ...... 225
Japanese encephalitis ...... 189 Jaundice ...... 133
Kenya tick typhus ...... 225 Kyasanur forest disease ...... 229
Leishmaniasis cutaneous and muco-cutaneous (Oriental sore) ...... 201 Leprosy ...... 177 Leptospirosis ...... 167 Loa loa infection ...... 207 Loiasis ...... 207 Louse-borne typhus ...... 215 Lung fluke disease ...... 153 Lyme borreliosis ...... 233 Lyme disease ...... 233
Mediterranean tick typhus ...... 225 Mediterranean spotted fever ...... 225 Malaria ...... 196 Malayan filariasis ...... 187
282 ALPHABETICAL INDEX OF DISEASES
Mayaro virus disease ...... 194 Murray Valley encephalitis ...... 189
Necatoriasis ...... 155 North Asian tick fever ...... 225
Ockelbo virus disease ...... 194 Omsk haemorrhagic fever ...... 229 Onchocerciasis ...... 205 O’nyong-nyong ...... 194 Opisthorchiasis ...... 149 Oriental liver fluke disease ...... 149 Oriental sore ...... 201 Oropouche virus disease...... 192 Oroya fever ...... 203 Oxyuriasis ...... 139
Paragonimiasis ...... 153 Paratyphoid, Paratyphoid fever ...... 131 Phlebotomus fever ...... 204 Pinworm infection ...... 139 Plague ...... 210 Polio ...... 135 Powassan virus encephalitis ...... 231
Queensland tick typhus ...... 225
Relapsing louse-borne fever ...... 217 Relapsing tick-borne fever ...... 223 Rift valley fever ...... 192 Ringworm ...... 180 River blindness ...... 205 Rocio encephalitis ...... 189 Rocky mountain spotted fever ...... 227 Ross river fever ...... 194 Rural typhus...... 221 Russian spring-summer encephalitis ...... 231 Roundworm infection ...... 159
Salmonellosis ...... 111 Sandfly fever ...... 204 Sarcoptic itch ...... 178 Scabies ...... 178 Schistosomiasis ...... 142 Scrub typhus ...... 221 Sheep liver fluke infection ...... 147 Shigellosis ...... 115 Siberian tick typhus ...... 225 Sindbis virus disease...... 194 Sleeping sickness ...... 199 Strongyloidiasis ...... 157 St. Louis encephalitis ...... 189
283 CONTROLLING AND PREVENTING DISEASE
Taeniasis ...... 163 Tapeworm (beef)...... 163 Tapeworm (dwarf) ...... 137 Tapeworm (fish) ...... 151 Tapeworm (pig)...... 165 Threadworm infection ...... 157 Tinea (capitis, favosa, corporis, barbae) ...... 180 Trachoma ...... 173 Trench fever ...... 219 Trichuriasis ...... 161 Trypanosomiasis (African) ...... 199 Trypanosomiasis (American)...... 208 Tsutsugamushi disease ...... 221 Typhoid ...... 131 Typhus (African tick) ...... 225 Typhus (epidemic louse-borne) fever ...... 215 Typhus (mite-borne) fever ...... 221 Typhus (murine) fever ...... 213 Typhus (tick-borne) fever ...... 227
Unilocular echinococcosis...... 140
Venezuelan equine encephalitis...... 189 Verruga peruana ...... 203 Vesicular stomatitis virus disease ...... 204 Viral diarrhoea ...... 120 Viral enteritis ...... 120 Viral enteritis (epidemic) ...... 122 Viral gasteroenteropathy ...... 122 Visceral leishmaniasis (Kala-azar) ...... 201
Weil’s disease ...... 167 Western equine encephalitis ...... 189 West Nile fever ...... 192 Whipworm infection ...... 161
Yaws ...... 175 Yellow fever ...... 182 Yersiniosis...... 113 Yersinia pestis ...... 210
284 ALPHABETICAL INDEX OF DISEASES
Other titles in this series
Emergency Sanitation Assessment and programme design Peter Harvey, Sohrab Baghri and Bob Reed This book is designed to assist those involved in planning and implementing emergency sanitation programmes. The main focus of the book is a systematic and structured approach to assessment and programme design. It provides a balance between the hardware (technical) and software (socio-cultural, institu- tional) aspects of sanitation programmes, and links short-term emergency re- sponse to long-term sustainability. The book is relevant to a wide range of emergency situations, including both natural and conflict-induced disasters, and open and closed settings. It is suitable for field technicians, engineers and hygiene promoters, as well as staff at agency headquarters. Included free with each book is a mini CD and an ‘aide-memoire’ to the process of planning and implementation. 384pp. (250/176) 2002 Price: £29.95 ISBN: 1 84380 005 5 http://www.lboro.ac.uk/wedc/publications/es.htm
Emergency Vector Control Using Chemicals Christophe Lacarin and Bob Reed The control of vectors that transmit diseases in emergencies is critical to the prevention of epidemics. This handbook describes how such vectors can be identified and controlled using chemicals. Aimed at non-specialists such as logisticians, engineers and health workers, it provides advice on identifying the responsible vector, selecting the appropriate control chemical and the means of application, together with advice on planning an implementation programme. 134pp. (250/176) 1999 Price: £19.95 ISBN: 0 906055 65 2 http://www.lboro.ac.uk/wedc/publications/evc.htm
285 CONTROLLING AND PREVENTING DISEASE
Emergency Water Sources Guidelines for selection and treatment Sarah House and Bob Reed These guidelines have been designed to help those involved in the assessment of emergency water sources to collect relevant information in a systematic way, to use this information to select a source or sources and to determine the appropriate level of treatment required to make the water suitable for drinking. The book is relevant to a wide range of emergency situations, including both natural and conflict-induced disasters. 320pp. (250/176) 2000 Price: £25.95 ISBN: 0 906055 71 7 http://www.lboro.ac.uk/wedc/publications/ews.htm
Out in the Cold Emergency water supply and sanitation for cold regions
Mark Buttle and Michael Smith During the 1990s, events in the Balkans, countries of the former Soviet Union, Afghanistan and Northern Iraq have demonstrated that humanitarian disasters are not confined to ‘the South’ but may strike anywhere in the world. As a result, relief agencies have been tested in ways previously unimaginable. Aid workers have to be ever more adaptable in order to provide life-saving water supply and sanitation facilities in areas where freezing conditions occur.
This revised handbook is designed for aid workers working in cool temperate or cold regions. It is designed to provide specific supplementary information that can be used together with the information given in more general emergency manuals. 120pp. (250/176) 2002 Price: £19.95 ISBN: 0 906055 91 1 http://www.lboro.ac.uk/wedc/publications/oitc.htm
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