This essential, authoritative handbook provides clear, accurate coverage of zoonoses — diseases that can spread from animals to humans. The consistent format helps you quickly locate key information, such as how each disease affects the host, how it is spread, how it is treated, and necessary safety precautions. It also discusses the importance of educating animal owners about the public health implications of zoonoses and how to prevent them from spreading.
Key Features
- Clear, concise coverage helps you respond quickly when presented with diseases that could potentially spread between patients, clients, and staff in the veterinary clinic.
- Each disease entry begins with a chart of its potential morbidity (the rate of incidence of a disease) and mortality (death rate), giving you at-a-glance access to the chance of contracting the disease and the severity of the disease if contracted.
- Clinically relevant coverage includes information on the etiology (bacterial, viral, parasitic, etc.), most common nonhuman hosts, transmission modes, course of the disease, clinical signs in animals and humans, diagnostic tests, prevention, and general advice.
- Essential information on preventing the spread of disease helps you educate clients about how to protect themselves and their animals from zoonoses.
- Coverage of diseases such as mad cow disease, West Nile virus, rabies, and anthrax, prepares you to answer client questions about diseases that are in the public eye.
Author Information
By Joann Colville, DVM, North Dakota State University, Fargo, ND, USA; David Berryhill, PhD, Director of Special Programs, College of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Natural Resources and Associate Professor, Department of Animal and Range Sciences, North Dakota State University, Fargo, ND, USA
PART ONE: Principles of Zoonoses
Introduction
Zoonotic Diseases
Hosts
Modes of Transmission
Direct Transmission
Indirect Transmission
Preventing Zoonotic Diseases
Morbidity and Mortality
PART TWO: Zoonotic Diseases
Anthrax
Babesiosis
Botulism
Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (Mad Cow Disease)
Brucellosis
Campylobacteriosis (Vibriosis)
Cat Scratch Disease
Colibacillosis
Dermatophytosis
Eastern Equine Encephalitis
Ehrlichiosis
Giardiasis (Giardia)
Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome
Hookworms
Influenza
La Crosse Encephalitis
Leptospirosis
Listeriosis
Lyme Disease
Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis
Tuberculosis (Mycobacterium Infections)
Pasteurellosis
Plague
Psittacosis
Q Fever
Rabies
Rat-Bite Fever
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
Roundworms
St. Louis Encephalitis
Salmonellosis
Scabies
Staphylococcus
Tapeworms (Cestodes)
Toxoplasmosis
Trichinosis
Tularemia
Vibriosis
West Nile Infection
Western Equine Encephalitis
Yersiniosis
The handbook has a simple and easy-to-follow style. The format for the sections on each of the zoonoses is readable and helpful, covering the basics of disease in animals (where relevant) and people, routes of transmission, diagnosis, treatment and prevention.
With the ever-increasing recognition that animals are major reservoirs of human diseases and that most emerging infections in people are zoonotic in nature, this handbook is a welcome tool.
The Veterinary Record, May 2008