The purpose of this document is to present concise information on the current case definitions for dengue, chikungunya, and Zika proposed by PAHO, as well as information on the clinical phases and severity classification of dengue and chikungunya.
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR):
The WHO Effective Communications Participant Handbook was created to support WHO staff around the world in enhancing their communications skills as part of the global communications capacity-building efforts of the WHO Department of Communications (DCO)
This manual is both a guide to treatment and a workbook for persons who suffer from genalized anxiety disorder.
Other disorders
Chapter H.5
Integrated Management of Adolescent and Adult Illness (IMAI)
July 2008
2nd edition.
Like the original, this second edition of the guidance aims to inform the revision of existing national guidelines and standards for managing Tuberculosis (TB), many of which include guidance on children. It includes recommendations, based on the best available evidence, for improving ...the management of children with TB and of children living in families with TB. National and regional TB control programmes may wish to adapt these recommendations according to local circumstances
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Its main objectives are: to explain the educational approach underlying the Guide; to explain how to teach pharmacotherapy with the Guide; to give practical advice on how to assess the students, the teachers and the course; and to assist in mobilizing support for problem-based pharmacotherapy teachi...ng.
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A handbook for district and health facility staff
Jeder ehrenamtliche Helfer in und um Würzburg kann sich an Standpunkt e.V. wenden und kostenlos Skripte bekommen. Schreibt dazu bitte eine Mail an info@standpunkt-ev.de
SUI supporting material
• Person stories
• Role plays
• Multiple choice questions
• Video link
Epilepsia, 55(4):475–482, 2014
doi: 10.1111/epi.12550
Dermatologic Clinics Volume 29, Issue 1p1-8January 2011
recommandations à l’intention des agents de santé
Scientists have known for more than half a century that patients could develop resistance to the drugs used to treat them. Alexander Fleming, who is credited with creating the first antibiotic, penicillin, in 1928, cautioned of the impending crisis while accepting his Nobel prize in 1945: “There ...is the danger that the ignorant man may easily underdose himself and by exposing his microbes to non-lethal quantities of the drug make them resistant.” Since then antibiotics have proved one of the most effective interventions in human medicine. Sadly, the overuse and misuse of this precious resource have brought us to a global crisis of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). To address this crisis nearly seven decades after Fleming’s lecture the first UN general assembly meeting on drug resistance bacteria was convened in September 2017.
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