Cholera is an infectious disease caused by the bacterium Vibrio cholerae, primarily characterized by severe diarrhea and dehydration. Three notable examples of cholera outbreaks include the 1832 cholera pandemic, which spread across Europe and North America; the 1961 pandemic that originated in Indonesia and affected many countries; and the 2010 Haiti cholera outbreak, which resulted in thousands of cases following a devastating earthquake. Each of these outbreaks highlighted the importance of sanitation and access to clean drinking water in preventing the spread of the disease.
Cholera, bronchitis, and chickenpox.
first three that come to my mind is Cholera Diphtheria smallpox.
Three anaerobic bacteria that causes diseases are C. perfringens, C. Tetani, and C. botulinum.
Type your answer here... viral infection
Some examples of diseases caused by improper sanitation are: cholera, the plague, dysentery and others.
Cholera is still common in developing countries. It is common to get the patients of cholera like syndrome in your clinical practice and at times of severe case of cholera. The picture has changed on positive side over last three decades, due to improved sanitation and public awareness of water born diseases.
cholera, typhoid, infectious hepatitis, polio
The one that has probably been the most iconic, at least in this decade, is the earth quake in Haiti. A major outbreak of Cholera, as well as other diseases that are extinct in civilized, clean societies.
Vibrio cholera-01Vibrio cholera-0139Vibrio cholera-non-01Vibrio cholera-non-0139
HIV, ringworm, and bacterial endocarditis.
cholera is poopy.
In cholera vaccination you are injected the dead cells of cholera. So you get antibodies to cholera. This vaccine is not very effective. The protection rate is some where 50 to 60 % only. So you can not keep faith on the vaccine for protection from cholera.