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Answer this following questions
index case
Suspect. As I "I suspect he is wrong" or "we suspected that was not the case"
In general, no - an outbreak is a sudden increase in cases above the normal level of disease in a population. Since there are usually some cases of any given disease happening in a population, one case is usually not enough to qualify as an outbreak.
1. Staphylococcus aureus 2. Staphylococcus epidermidis 3. Staphylococcus saprophyticus
The plural form of staphylococcus is staphylococci.
No, chlamydia is not a species of staphylococcus. Chlamydia is a genus of bacteria that causes various diseases in humans, while staphylococcus is a separate genus of bacteria that includes species such as Staphylococcus aureus.
Guidelines set safety for foods. Prevention is cheaper and easier to implement, rather than testing during a suspected widespread case of unsafe food. For example, suspected E Coli bacteria in food can shut a restaurant down for days to weeks. However, prevention (especially teaching about handwashing) could have kept the restaurant free from an E Coli outbreak.
Bernie Madoff case
in case of suspected cervical spine trauma or other pathology.
biological
It takes 2 cases of people with the same causative agent to be classified as an outbreak. Once upon a time, just one case of botulism was considered an outbreak.