Selected article for: "infectious disease and notifiable infectious disease"

Author: Cho, Hae-Wol; Chu, Chaeshin
Title: A Disease Around the Corner
  • Document date: 2016_2_24
  • ID: t6ni0ajj_6
    Snippet: Because both Korea and Japan are located above this winter temperate zone, A. aegypti cannot survive. However, A. albopictus, a secondary vector, is abundant in both countries [4, 5] . Thus, both countries could be at risk of dengue transmission. In Korea, no indigenous dengue cases have been confirmed up to 2015, and all reported cases were diagnosed among travelers returning from endemic or epidemic countries [6e8]. In Korea, DF has been classi.....
    Document: Because both Korea and Japan are located above this winter temperate zone, A. aegypti cannot survive. However, A. albopictus, a secondary vector, is abundant in both countries [4, 5] . Thus, both countries could be at risk of dengue transmission. In Korea, no indigenous dengue cases have been confirmed up to 2015, and all reported cases were diagnosed among travelers returning from endemic or epidemic countries [6e8]. In Korea, DF has been classified as notifiable infectious disease since August 2000. DF is also a notifiable infectious disease in Japan, designated by the Infectious Disease Control Law in 1999 [9, 10] . In Japan, there were DF outbreaks between 1942 and 1945; however, no domestic cases were reported prior to 2014 [9e11] when Japan experienced an unexpected small dengue outbreak in 2014 [12] .

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