Outbreak
in sentence
718 examples of Outbreak in a sentence
The rise of nationalism prior to the
outbreak
of World War I led to the widespread introduction of passports and ushered in stricter controls on the international movement of people.
The contrast between the Ice Bucket Challenge and this summer’s other major health story, the worst Ebola
outbreak
in recorded history, could not be more striking.
And on June 11, the capital, Rabat, was the site of the largest popular protest since the
outbreak
of the Arab Spring.
In 2003, we prevented a fresh
outbreak
of hostilities in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia through our diplomatic efforts and then deployed Operation Concordia.
And, as if conditions could not be worse, the country is facing a polio
outbreak.
At last count, more than 12,850 Congolese citizens have made their way across the border into Rwanda following the recent
outbreak
of hostilities.
Vaccines Versus SuperbugsLONDON – The
outbreak
of the Zika virus, like Ebola before it, has highlighted the risk that infectious diseases can pose to the health of entire countries – and the importance of vaccines to the fight against fast-moving epidemics.
Then, in 2010, with the
outbreak
of the European debt crises, it was America’s turn for schadenfreude, while Asian countries pointed to the over-extended welfare state as the root of the problem.
Consider the previous wave of globalization: the period between the mid-19 th century and the
outbreak
of the First World War.
Both conventions were signed by 24 governments and ratified by one, but the
outbreak
of World War II ensured that neither ever entered into force.
This is often the first question I ask when I visit the site of a cholera
outbreak
anywhere in the world.
Drafted in 2003, after the
outbreak
of the Iraq War, it includes only weak operational content and does not consider the Russian energy risk seriously.
But the war is not universal: since the
outbreak
of protests in 2011 against President Bashar al-Assad’s regime – and long before – one group of Syrians, the Kurdish community, has consistently sought peaceful change and respect for the rights of all.
The first type are those caused by major shocks, say an
outbreak
of war or a sudden, sharp increase in the price of petroleum.
This is partly due to unfortunate timing: the UfM’s launch coincided with the
outbreak
of the Gaza War and became entangled in the complexities of Arab-Israeli relations.
The Children’s RevolutionLONDON – Two tragic and haunting images have emerged this year: hooded Islamic State executioners holding their knives to the necks of innocent victims, and masked medical workers bravely fighting an uphill battle against an Ebola
outbreak
for which the world was not prepared.
The truth is that, in many places in Eastern Europe, the arrival of German troops during World War II prompted an immediate
outbreak
of homicidal anti-Semitism.
Financial Crisis and WarPRINCETON – The approach of the hundredth anniversary of the
outbreak
of World War I in 1914 has jolted politicians and commentators worried by the fragility of current global political and economic arrangements.
They can sustain relatively high growth rates in the face of weak and lengthy recoveries in the advanced countries, but not if there is a major downturn in North America or Europe (or both), a serious
outbreak
of protectionism, or instability in global financial markets.
Educating Against EbolaLONDON – This year’s Nobel Peace Prize winners, Malala Yousafzai and Kailash Satyarthi, who will collect their award in Oslo on Wednesday, have joined an urgent appeal to create safe schools in the three countries most affected by the ongoing Ebola outbreak: Liberia, Guinea, and Sierra Leone.
Nine months and more than 6,000 deaths since the Ebola
outbreak
began, it is clear that the current approach is not working.
During the 2002-2004
outbreak
of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), in Asia, twice-daily temperature checks conducted by teachers made a clear and immediate contribution to stopping the spread of the disease.
Some of the same factors at work in the recent Ebola
outbreak
drive the high rates of NCDs.
According to Johns Hopkins University virologist Donald S. Burke, “it may be possible to identify a human
outbreak
at the earliest stage, while there are fewer than 100 cases, and deploy international resources – such as a WHO stockpile of antiviral drugs – to rapidly quench it.
But the situation in Turkey is what the
outbreak
of a human to human pandemic could look like at its earliest stages: the rapid spread of confirmed cases (and deaths) from an initial site to nearby villages and cities.
It also planned to build a similar “counter-terrorism training compound” nearby in Osh, Kyrgyzstan, the site last June of the worst
outbreak
of fighting between ethnic Uzbeks and Kyrgyz in Central Asia's Ferghana valley since the break-up of the Soviet Union.
But all of this sensitive diplomacy could be wrecked if, in response to rising unemployment, there is an
outbreak
of trade protectionism involving America, Europe, and China.
But it was an
outbreak
of XDR-TB in HIV-infected people in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, that turned the global spotlight on issues of extensively drug-resistant organisms.
How did this localized
outbreak
of XDR-TB emerge?
The Prion PuzzleZURICH – The
outbreak
of mad cow disease in the United Kingdom, which ultimately led to the slaughter of 3.7 million cows and severely damaged the British cattle industry, began insidiously.
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