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In the Press (all articles)

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Brill’s Disease. IV. Study of 26 Cases in Yugoslavia

November 9, 1954 //  by NPA

Department of Microbiology, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Mass.; Doboj, Grac'anica, Tuzla, and Sarajevo, Yugoslavia; and Department of Microbiology, Harvard School of Public Health. IN 1934 Zinsser defined Brill's disease as sporadic typhus occurring in the absence of lice among immigrants to the United States from the typhus-ridden areas of southeastern Europe.1 Subsequently, physicians in Switzerland,2 France,3' 4 England,5 and Portugal6 reported occasional cases of Brill's disease among immigrants and displaced persons from the typhus regions of Europe. There are no reports, however, that Brill's disease has been recognized as such in any area where typhus fever actually occurs in epidemics among the local population. If Brill's disease is indeed a recrudescence of typhus …

Brill’s Disease. IV. Study of 26 Cases in YugoslaviaRead More

Filed Under: Human Louse and Disease, In the Press (all articles)

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The NPA is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization dedicated since 1983 to protecting children, their families and their environment from the misuse and abuse of prescription and over-the-counter pesticide treatments for lice and scabies.

Pediculosis (the medical term for an infestation of lice) provides a public health opportunity to teach important lessons about communicable disease preparedness, responsible personal behaviors, environmental health, and the importance of learning about pharmaceutical remedies before using them on our children and ourselves.

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