Outbreaks
in sentence
279 examples of Outbreaks in a sentence
Complete eradication is in reach, but is still proving elusive, as small
outbreaks
have plagued one country or another in recent years.
Nor can one discount scenarios in which artificial genes disable beneficial natural genes, or even cause
outbreaks
of new diseases.
Otherwise,
outbreaks
among already vulnerable people could become even more common.
We also must develop tools to identify and halt
outbreaks
of resistant diseases at an early stage.
Data provided by diagnostic devices could be a potent weapon in containing these
outbreaks.
As the number of cases in West Africa rises, so does the potential for
outbreaks
outside of that context.
The years since then have seen the fastest global average income growth rate of any generation, as well as remarkably few
outbreaks
of mass unemployment-causing deflation or wealth-destroying inflation.
There is also the chance of another epidemic, as
outbreaks
of SARS, MERS, Ebola, and other infectious diseases have shown in recent years.
In Mongolia, rural herders receive information about disease
outbreaks
to help them maintain the health of their livestock.
Those who have used the prevailing economic fable about the 1970s to predict upward
outbreaks
of inflation in the 1990s, the 2000s, and now the 2010s have all been proven wrong.
It encompasses research initiatives and global public goods such as vaccines and emergency-preparedness programs for epidemic
outbreaks.
This is why, over the centuries, poor living conditions, malnutrition, and diabetes always accompanied TB
outbreaks.
In order to protect their achievements, the three countries’ governments, which comprise the Mano River Union, must buttress their response to the current epidemic with a coordinated strategy to prevent future
outbreaks.
Weak health-care systems must also be strengthened in order to tackle the endemic diseases that sap productivity, such as malaria, as well as improving preparedness for
outbreaks
of deadly epidemics.
Moreover, the economic impact of “superbug”
outbreaks
could top $100 trillion; low-income countries would suffer disproportionately.
Periodic
outbreaks
of instability impose high social costs on those who had the least to do with causing them.
If you can use patterns in Google searches to track flu
outbreaks
and predict a movie’s commercial prospects, can you also use it to forecast market movements or even revolutions?
This seasonality led a British physician to hypothesize that influenza
outbreaks
are affected by sunlight-related “seasonal stimulus.”
Such
outbreaks
are explosive, affecting the entire population in mere weeks.
Governments may also have to compensate communities affected by epidemics, fund research to treat illness or prevent future outbreaks, cover increased health-care costs, and sustain programs to help patients.
When the trap captures a mosquito of interest, it saves related data, such as the time, temperature, humidity, and light levels, in order to enhance researchers’ understanding of mosquito behavior and, thus, their ability to address potential
outbreaks.
And many high-income countries have experienced measles
outbreaks
in recent years, owing to fears about vaccinations that began with the publication of a fraudulent paper in the British medical journal The Lancet in 1998.
Where We Must VaccinateKARACHI/GANDHIDHAM-GUJARAT – With measles
outbreaks
currently spreading across Europe and the Midwestern United States, and meningitis infecting US college students, health experts are doing something they never thought they’d have to do in early 2017: reminding people in developed countries that vaccines save lives.
With the recent
outbreaks
in the US and Europe, parents are being reminded that foregoing vaccinations for their children is a deadly gambit.
Preventable disease outbreaks, rare as they are in Western countries, are all too frequent occurrences in a region that is home to the world’s largest number of unvaccinated children.
Foregoing vaccinations not only puts the health of individual children at risk; it also raises the likelihood of
outbreaks
that jeopardize the health of entire communities.
In contrast to unexpected, rapidly spreading
outbreaks
such as the Zika epidemic, antimicrobial resistance is like a slow-motion car crash that has already begun.
Similarly, the rotavirus vaccine could be used to prevent
outbreaks
of diarrheal diseases, a chief cause of child mortality in developing countries and a major driver of antibiotic use.
Cholera
outbreaks
are ongoing in Somalia, South Sudan, Haiti, and other countries across sub-Saharan Africa and Asia.
Implementing the plan will prove to be a cost-effective solution for countries saddled with responding to frequent cholera
outbreaks.
Back
Next
Related words
Disease
Countries
Health
Diseases
Could
Global
Where
Their
Infectious
Which
Other
World
There
Prevent
Control
Spread
Recent
About
Governments
Already