Loading...
RSS feeds allow Web site content to be gathered via feed reader software. Click the subscribe link to obtain the feed URL for this page. The feed will update when new content appears on this page.
Sort By: Relevancy | Date | Type
Displaying items 37-46 of 46
» View wsbtradio.com items only
    Apr 24, 2012 |Story| KCPQ-LTV
  1. More than 1,000 whooping cough cases in Washington; epidemic continues

    The number of people with whooping cough in Washington state has reached epidemic levels, health officials said.
    Q13 FOX News reporter
    The number of people with whooping cough in Washington state has reached epidemic levels, health officials said. Since the start of 2012, 1,008 cases of the ailment have been reported as of April 21. This number is up drastically from the 94 cases...

    Tags: Epidemics and Plagues, Whooping Cough, Coughing, Symptoms, Diseases and Illnesses

  2. Apr 25, 2012 |Story| Petoskey News
  3. National Infant Immunization Week is April 22-28

    PETOSKEY — National Infant Immunization Week, which runs April 22-28, is an annual observance to highlight the importance of protecting infants from vaccine preventable diseases. Each year, thousands of children become ill from diseases that could...

    Tags: Whooping Cough, Immunization, Preventative Medicine, Diseases and Illnesses, Vaccines

  4. Jan 19, 2012 |Story| Herald Mail
  5. Eleven cases of whooping cough confirmed in Berkeley County since Nov.

    Health officials in Berkeley and Morgan counties in the Eastern Panhandle and Hancock County in the state's Northern Panhandle are investigating outbreaks of whooping cough.
    Health officials in Berkeley and Morgan counties in the Eastern Panhandle and Hancock County in the state's Northern Panhandle are investigating outbreaks of whooping cough. Berkeley County Health Officer Diana Gaviria told the Berkeley County Council...

    Tags: Whooping Cough, Health and Safety at School, Drugs and Medicines, Coughing, Symptoms

  6. Jan 31, 2012 |Story| KTUU
  7. Longtime Yup'ik Leader Leaves Many Legacies

    Communities across the Yukon Kuskokwim Delta are mourning the loss of a longtime Alaska Native leader.
    Communities across the Yukon Kuskokwim Delta are mourning the loss of a longtime Alaska Native leader. Joe Lomack of Akiachak died on Saturday at the age of 87.  He was the traditional chief of the Association of Village Council Presidents, which...

    Tags: Dog (animal), Customs and Tradition, Customs and Tradition, Game Playing, Arts and Culture

  8. Jan 19, 2012 |Story| KWCH
  9. Proposal would add more exemptions for childhood immunizations

    A committee in the Kansas legislature is now looking at a bill on whether immunizations should be required for children in Kansas.
    KWCH 12 Eyewitness News
    A committee in the Kansas legislature is now looking at a bill on whether immunizations should be required for children in Kansas. House Bill 2094 would add a parent's personal beliefs to the list of childhood immunization exemptions. The current list of...

    Tags: Whooping Cough, Health and Safety at School, Drugs and Medicines, Measles, Preventative Medicine

  10. Jan 30, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  11. That bad attitude? Blame the birth month

    If you don't believe in horoscopes, you're in step with science. But that's not the same as saying the season of your birth cannot affect your fate. Hundreds of studies, published in peer-reviewed journals, have suggested that the month a person is born in is associated with characteristics such as temperament, longevity and susceptibility to certain diseases.
    If you don't believe in horoscopes, you're in step with science. But that's not the same as saying the season of your birth cannot affect your fate. Hundreds of studies, published in peer-reviewed journals, have suggested that the month a person is born...

    Tags: Physical Conditions, Behavioral Conditions, Human Body, Schizophrenia, Physical Conditions

  12. Dec 4, 2011 |Story| AM News
  13. Looking Back: KSD students learned printing trade from its own newspaper

    In 1874, Kentucky School for the Deaf began publishing a weekly in-house newspaper, The Kentucky Deaf-Mute, to give the male students an opportunity to learn the printing trade. KSD published the newspaper continuously from 1874 to 2004, with only a name change in 1895, to The Kentucky Standard.
    In 1874, Kentucky School for the Deaf began publishing a weekly in-house newspaper, The Kentucky Deaf-Mute, to give the male students an opportunity to learn the printing trade. KSD published the newspaper continuously from 1874 to 2004, with only a...

    Tags: Whooping Cough, Religion and Belief, Regional Authority, Breads, Holidays

  14. Apr 17, 2012 |Story| Petoskey News
  15. News briefs: Congress grills government official over lavish Las Vegas event

    <span style=&quot;font-size: medium;"><strong>Norway killer Breivik defends massacre: 'I would have done it again'</strong></span>
    Norway killer Breivik defends massacre: 'I would have done it again' OSLO, Norway (AP) — Anders Behring Breivik on Tuesday defended his massacre of 77 people, insisting he would do it again and calling the bomb-and-shooting rampage the most...

    Tags: Unrest, Conflicts and War, Explosions, Space Programs, Cholera, Haiti

  16. Mar 27, 2012 | Allentown Morning Call
  17. State helping at child immunization deadline

    Health
    Parents that have, for whatever reason, put off getting their school-age children to the doctor for the mandatory immunizations are getting a last-minute chance to catch up from the state Department of Health. The state will open health centers the week...
  18. Apr 8, 2002 |Story| Allentown Morning Call
  19. Part 2: Hell on a ship, freezing in Manchuria

    <em>Army Air Corps Cpl. Joseph T. Poster had survived the Bataan Death March and four months of slave labor on Luzon island in the Philippines. It was still the early stage of U.S. invovlement in World War II. in August 1942, Poster's Japanese captors sent him to Camp 1 near the city of Cabanatuan, also on Luzon.</em>
    Of The Morning Call
    Army Air Corps Cpl. Joseph T. Poster had survived the Bataan Death March and four months of slave labor on Luzon island in the Philippines. It was still the early stage of U.S. invovlement in World War II. in August 1942, Poster's Japanese captors sent...

    Tags: Unrest, Conflicts and War, Tokyo (Japan), Entertainment, Indiantown, Explosions

< Previous1 2 3  4 
Original site for Diphtheria topic gallery.
Loading...
 
 

Date:

Credit:

User-submitted

Tags:

Rate:
Sending...

E-mail this photo

Error: malformed email address(es)
Both "from" and "recipient" email fields are required.

Recipient E-mail Addresses

(up to 3, separated by commas) Send me a copy.

From:

e-mail | buy this photo | link to photo
Diphtheria Photos
A medical worker administers a Tdap (Tetanus-Diphtheria...
(October 24, 2012)
Pertussis vaccine
Tdap is a combination vaccine with diphtheria and tetan...
(August 15, 2012)
Tdap
Medical assistant Bronte Brown administers a TDAP (comb...
(August 14, 2012)
TDAP shot