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There are no reported cases of the Solanum virus or the zombie virus as of July of 2014. This virus is actually a fictional disease.
On the basis of extrapolations from past serosurveys, an estimated 41,750 cases of West Nile Virus disease occurred in 2006; of these cases, 2,770 were reported.
On the basis of extrapolations from past serosurveys, an estimated 41,750 cases of West Nile Virus disease occurred in 2006; of these cases, 2,770 were reported.
Sometimes. It doesn't always show up in a blood test. However, only cases where it does show up in a blood test are reported to the CDC. Therefore, there are many more cases of Lyme disease than are reported to the Center for Disease Control.
"During 2002, a total of 23,763 LD cases were reported to CDC, more than in any previous year." http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5317a4.htm
Incredibly rare, there have been about 100 reported cases in the history of the disease.
The CDC reports 7,091 cases of chlamydia reported in Broward County in 2011, giving the county a rate of 405.6 cases per 100,000 population. (see related link).
92% of the 17,730 cases reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in 2000 were from only nine states (Connecticut, Rhode Island, New York, Pennsylvania, Delaware, New Jersey, Maryland, Massachusetts, and Wisconsin
Every year 5,800,000 cases of malaria are reported and 3,366 deaths caused by malaria in Mozambique.
No. There are still cases that occur both in Canada and the USA, even though the cases that do occur in the states are never reported.
Lyme Disease is still an ongoing problem, and the number of cases per year have doubled since 1991, with approximately 20,000 cases reported each year. (Source: Science Daily)