The question that came up for me reading your information about SARS has to do with numbers of cases. |
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A number of school pupils and restaurant staff are being put in quarantine as the north west battles to stop the Sars virus wreaking havoc. |
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As SARS infection could not be excluded the patient was transferred directly to an isolation ward on the same day. |
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In summary, SARS is a highly contagious and predominantly pneumonic illness. |
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The desertion hit us hard, largely because we already knew how difficult the situation was in Toronto's two downtown Chinatowns before SARS hit. |
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Researchers tested their SARS vaccine on four African green monkeys, with another four in the control group. |
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This picture of the two young lovers is the symbol of love in the SARS times. |
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Just as pandemic influenza is now considered a noneradicable zoonosis, the question arises whether SARS is, too. |
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Pandemic influenza remains a non-eradicable zoonosis, and SARS has made an unwelcome zoonotic incursion. |
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He expressed appreciation for the medical supplies provided by Japan to Taiwan during the SARS crisis. |
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If the vaccinated person ever encounters the actual SARS virus, his or her immune system will be primed to neutralize it. |
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The worst scenario for the current SARS epidemic would be if it stormed into China's vast rural areas. |
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At Singapore's Changi International Airport it has been adapted for use in the war on SARS, to scan human bodies for high temperatures. |
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Previously scheduled mainland expansion plans had been put on hold because of the Sars outbreak last year. |
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The spring saw the quick end of major combat abroad, while the threat of a widespread SARS epidemic abated. |
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A bunch of scientists are now theorizing that SARS might have arrived on Earth from another planet. |
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A day later the 500 bed Ditan Hospital, one of six in the city designated for SARS patients, was also quarantined. |
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In the two months following his warning, cases of SARS in Hong Kong leapt sevenfold, from 260 to over 1,700 infections. |
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If it happens, the death toll could be many times that of the recent SARS epidemic. |
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Ma broached the idea of Toronto and Taipei joining hands to inform each other on the latest SARS information. |
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The world has recently seen an emergence or re-emergence of infectious diseases such as smallpox, SARS, West Nile virus, and monkeypox. |
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Radiographically, SARS is closely mimicked by bacterial bronchopneumonia or other viral pneumonias. |
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When the Chinese embassy in Belgrade was bombed, during SARS, when the US spy plane came down. |
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In the liver, varying degrees of centrilobular necrosis and steatosis and a mild portal inflammatory infiltrate were seen in the SARS patients. |
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However, the arrival of SARS changed that and his name has become a household word around the country. |
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The night before, for the first time since the Sars outbreak in Singapore, I felt cold fear. |
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The spread of SARS was a concentrated exposure of the problem concerning the inharmonious economic and social development in China. |
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The successful containment of the SARS outbreak was therefore due to both the efficiency of quarantine and the nature of the virus itself. |
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The possible source of the SARS virus in that epidemic was agitated sewage water. |
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Everywhere SARS has struck, healthcare workers have been its primary victims. |
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A confirmed outbreak would be a shock for the government following the recent reemergence of SARS in southern China. |
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They discovered the SARS virus in lung tissue, but most surprisingly, they were able to find the presence of the virus in sweat glands, intestines and several other organs. |
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There is no question that the outbreak of SARS has focused the world's attention on the dangers of how easily a virulent disease can spread around the globe. |
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The scientists working on the cause of SARS have already focused their attention on a coronavirus after an initial suspicion that a paramyxovirus might be the cause. |
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He said he was keeping away from public places where the deadly SARS virus could spread but had not taken to wearing a face mask to protect himself. |
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The air, however, holds the suspended product of untold sneezes, coughs and wheezes, many of them, we must remember in the time of SARS, from Chinese Canadians. |
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Avian influenza, unlike SARS, can pass through gauze face masks. |
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Protesters blame him for mismanaging the economy, bungling the fight against SARS, and listening too carefully to Beijing and not enough to local opinion. |
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A secondary goal is to assess how well the vaccine stimulates the immune system to produce antibodies and cellular immunity, in this case, focusing on the SARS spike protein. |
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I know a woman who believes that the SARS virus was caused by Asians double dipping in their soy sauce. |
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The animal reservoir for SARS is bats, whereas the reservoir for MERS is primarily camels. |
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What will happen if bioengineering, cloning, global epidemics such as SARS and splitting of society into haves and have nots are taken to extremes? |
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In the space of only a few months, the word SARS has rolled around the world, bringing panic and fear to some places and a sense of foreboding to others. |
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That said, SARS is much more communicable than Ebola, meaning it is easier to catch. |
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If you're in West Africa, it's a nightmare and very serious, and far more deadly already than SARS was. |
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I think the biggest problem which we face is the next pandemic of influenza, and I think in a sense the SARS has given us a wake-up call for that. |
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That is a strong signal of the positive move of the SARS situation. |
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The Sars virus alert in 2003 gave a foretaste of what could happen. |
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Policemen will no longer accept SARS as a legitimate excuse. |
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The institute is engaged in research involving the SARS coronavirus. |
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In sum, SARS spread to many more countries than Ebola has so far. |
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Sars and Gustav Storm, the aristocracy saw the king as a tool by which they governed the country. |
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Another SARS superspreader took the invader by the hand to Singapore's 1200-bed Tan Tock Seng Hospital. |
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The preliminary conclusion was that the SARS virus crossed the xenographic barrier from palm civet to humans. |
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For the control group, the 39 non-SARS patients were those who had symptoms similar to those for the SARS patients. |
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Economic activities slowed down and schools were closed for weeks at the height of SARS epidemic. |
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The SARS coronavirus, sometimes shortened to SARS-CoV, is the virus that causes severe acute respiratory syndrome. |
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EcoHealth Alliance is now a leading voice calling for better tracking and data collection to prevent the next SARS or monkeypox outbreak. |
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The exotic cladoceran, Daphnia lumholtzi Sars, possesses cyclomorphic features which are widely assumed to deter gape-limited predators. |
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This model does not take into account spatial and stochastic processes of SARS transmission. |
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The SARS coronavirus propagated in Vero-E6 was used as an antigen to test whether SARS-coronavirus antibodies were raised in sera. |
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Had we had access to the WHO and WHA observership, we would have been able to handle SARS more effectively,'' Ma said. |
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Nevertheless, these data support current recommendations for use of N95 masks and for special precautions when performing intubations on SARS patients. |
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FinCEN already requires a range of financial institutions to report SARs, which are essentially formal tips about suspicious financial transactions. |
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Chinese horseshoe bats carry two viruses that are closely related to the coronavirus that causes severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, in people. |
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For example, NEUGENE compounds targeting SARS, WNV and Ebola were developed within days to weeks of obtaining the appropriate genetic sequences for the viruses. |
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Sixteen percent also said they were less concerned about global conflicts, and three percent said they were more confident about health matters such as SARS and Norwalk Virus. |
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Last week, Yuen's team, in collaboration with the Center for Disease Control and Prevention of Shenzhen, successfully isolated the SARS coronavirus from masked palm civets. |
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By June 5, 2003, there were 8,400 cases of SARS worldwide and 775 deaths. |
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After the SARS outbreak in 2003, China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan launched campaigns to discourage public spitting by issuing fines to public spitters. |
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Hong Kong financial centre matured in the 1990s, but was greatly affected by the Asian financial crisis in 1998, and again in 2003 by the SARS outbreak. |
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