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Many zoonoses are associated with the poor cooking and preparation of food.
2
Epidemiological data on food-borne parasitic zoonoses of Mediterranean and African regions are fragmentary.
3
Serology is a core component of the surveillance and management of viral zoonoses.
4
Among the protozoan zoonoses, most of the cases were reported in patients with visceral leishmaniasis.
5
Till now very few control projects against food-borne parasitic zoonoses have been developed in Africa.
6
It reveals the potential economic and health impact of these two major zoonoses in the study area.
7
Up to 75 % of emerging human diseases are zoonoses, spread from animals to humans.
8
Both patterns co-exist and have many peculiarities affecting the life cycles of zoonoses and their social impact.
9
But even more important are the "classical" zoonoses such as bovine TB or pig tapeworm.
10
The plausibility of zoonoses as poverty traps is strengthened by landmark studies on disease burden in recent years.
11
This study provides consistent evidence that sexually transmitted infections and zoonoses are not risk factors for non-Hodgkin lymphoma.
12
Although many endemic zoonoses can be treated, timely diagnosis and appropriate clinical management of human cases is often challenging.
13
Epidemic zoonoses are more likely to elicit official responses, but these can have unintended consequences that deepen poverty traps.
14
Ecohealth approaches are well suited to tackling the complex problem of assessing and managing emerging zoonoses in urban settings.
15
Endemic infectious diseases, including zoonoses, together with emerging and re-emerging diseases, are mostly shouldered by poor and vulnerable populations.
16
Populations living in poverty in the developing world suffer a heavy burden caused by infectious diseases, most of them zoonoses.