Author: Miles D. Miller-Dickson; Victor A. Meszaros; Francis Baffour-Awuah; Salvador Almagro-Moreno; C. Brandon Ogbunugafor
Title: Waterborne, abiotic and other indirectly transmitted (W.A.I.T.) infections are defined by the dynamics of free-living pathogens and environmental reservoirs Document date: 2019_1_20
ID: d9mxtc8d_26
Snippet: • Consider how the WAIT reservoir interacts with hosts. How does this interaction occur? What parameters would define how effectively pathogens are transmitted into the reservoir? Note that the nature of this reservoir can be : it can be large or small, liquid or solid, mobile or immobile, and there could also be multiple reservoirs. It is generally abiotic in nature, as the transmitting reservoir isn't a living organism as in vector-borne dise.....
Document: • Consider how the WAIT reservoir interacts with hosts. How does this interaction occur? What parameters would define how effectively pathogens are transmitted into the reservoir? Note that the nature of this reservoir can be : it can be large or small, liquid or solid, mobile or immobile, and there could also be multiple reservoirs. It is generally abiotic in nature, as the transmitting reservoir isn't a living organism as in vector-borne diseases (one could consider some exceptions, but these descriptions hold for most cases).
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