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Topic:Public Health

The topic of Public Health and horses encompasses the study of interactions between equine populations and human health systems. It involves examining the transmission of zoonotic diseases, which are diseases that can be transferred between animals and humans, as well as the role of horses in the epidemiology of such diseases. This field also considers the impact of equine-related activities on public health, including injuries and environmental effects. Research in this area often explores preventive measures, management strategies, and policies to mitigate health risks associated with horses. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that investigate the intersection of equine and public health, focusing on disease transmission, risk assessment, and health management strategies.
Blind on Horseback? Why Not.
Journal of rehabilitation    July 1, 1964   Volume 30 17 
FIELD DA.No abstract available
U.S. Epizootic of Equine Influenza, 1963.
Public health reports (Washington, D.C. : 1896)    May 1, 1964   Volume 79, Issue 5 393-402 
SCHOLTENS RG, STEELE JH, DOWDLE WR, YARBROUGH WB, ROBINSON RQ.No abstract available
LEAD POISONING IN CATTLE AND HORSES IN THE VICINITY OF A SMELTER.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences    April 24, 1964   Volume 111 595-611 doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.1964.tb53128.x
HAMMOND PB, ARONSON AL.No abstract available
Studies of Arthropod-Borne Virus Infections in Queensland. IV. Further Serological Investigations of Antibodies to Group B Arboviruses in Man and Animals.
The Australian journal of experimental biology and medical science    April 1, 1964   Volume 42 149-164 doi: 10.1038/icb.1964.16
DOHERTY RL, CARLEY JG, GORMAN BM.No abstract available
A New Species of Euschoengastia of Potential Veterinary Importance (Acarina: Trombiculidae).
The Journal of parasitology    April 1, 1964   Volume 50 311-312 
BRENNAN JM, YUNKER CE.No abstract available
Antigenic Variants of Eastern Equine Encephalitis Virus.
The Journal of experimental medicine    April 1, 1964   Volume 119, Issue 4 547-565 doi: 10.1084/jem.119.4.547
CASALS J.A study by hemagglutination-inhibition test showed that 19 strains of eastern equine encephalitis virus grouped themselves in two main types, which have been designated North American and South American. The former consists of ten strains from the eastern half of the United States, from Massachusetts to Florida; Jamaica, the Dominican Republic, and, subject to confirmation, Thailand. The South American type comprises nine strains from Panama, Trinidad, British Guiana, Brazil, and Argentina. The strains were isolated from different natural hosts over a period of 30 years.
Personal experience of onchocerciasis in Central America, Africa and the British Isles, with a note on O. cervicalis in horses.
Transactions of the ophthalmological societies of the United Kingdom    January 1, 1964   Volume 84 371-406 
Choyce DP.No abstract available
Occurrence of Equine Encephalomyelitis in Itaporanga, State of São Paulo, Brazil. II. Serological Studies.
Revista do Instituto de Medicina Tropical de Sao Paulo    January 1, 1964   Volume 6 1-4 
PEREIRA OA, NILSSON MR, SUGAY W, TRAPP EE.No abstract available
Contribution to the Knowledge of Leptospirosis in Horses, Sheep, and Goats in Portugal.
Jornal do medico    December 7, 1963   Volume 52 709-714 
FRAGADEAZEVEDO J, PALMEIRO JM.No abstract available
Natural and Experimental Infection of Egyptian Equines with West Nile Virus.
Annals of tropical medicine and parasitology    December 1, 1963   Volume 57 415-427 doi: 10.1080/00034983.1963.11686194
SCHMIDT JR, ELMANSOURY HK.No abstract available
The 1963 Equine Influenza Epizootic.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 15, 1963   Volume 143 1108-1110 
KITCHEN RH, KEHLER WH, HENTHORNE JC.No abstract available
An Outbreak of Type A(2) Influenza Among Horses.
Canadian journal of comparative medicine and veterinary science    November 1, 1963   Volume 27, Issue 11 257-260 
Marois P, Pavilanis V, Boudreault A, Di Franco E.The clinical diagnosis of equine influenza was first based on the spectacular contagiousness of the disease, the general clinical resemblances to human influenza and the almost complete absence of complications usually observed in infectious viral arteritis, viral rhinopneumonitis or in other respiratory infections of the horses. The specific viral etiology of the epizootic was ascertained through the isolation of a type A influenza virus and further substantiated by evaluation of the immunological response of the sick horses, as demonstrated by complement fixation and hemagglutination-inhibit...
An epizootic of Trichophyton equinum infection on horses in Brazil.
Sabouraudia    October 1, 1963   Volume 3, Issue 1 14-15 
Londero AT, Fischman O, Ramos CD.No abstract available
Viability of Coliform Bacteria in Antarctic Soil.
Journal of bacteriology    May 1, 1963   Volume 85, Issue 5 1121-1123 doi: 10.1128/jb.85.5.1121-1123.1963
BOYD WL, BOYD JW.Boyd, William L. (Ohio State University, Columbus) and Josephine W. Boyd. Viability of coliform bacteria in antarctic soil. J. Bacteriol. 85:1121-1123. 1963.-The distribution of coliform bacteria in soils of Ross Island and the nearby mainland was studied. None was found in almost all of the samples collected, including some from the Adelie penguin rookeries at Cape Royds and Cape Crozier and in soil at the McMurdo Base which had been recently contaminated by human sewage. Samples of pony manure left from previous expeditions were also negative, with one exception where Escherichia coli were p...
Transmission of equine piroplasmosis by Dermacentor nitens Neumann.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 1, 1963   Volume 142 768-769 
ROBY TO, ANTHONY DW.No abstract available
Equine viral abortion in western Montana.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    March 1, 1963   Volume 142 506-509 
HADLOW WJ, WARD JK.No abstract available
[Research on the Incidence of Anti-Ornithosis Antibodies in Horses and Men].
Studii si cercetari de inframicrobiologie    January 1, 1963   Volume 14 131-135 
SARATEANU D, SURDAN C, SORODOC G, ANAGNOSTE B, STEFANESCU I.No abstract available
Equine Infectious Anemia or Swamp Fever.
Advances in veterinary science    January 1, 1963   Volume 8 263-298 
ISHII S.No abstract available
[COMPARATIVE STUDIES ON THE SIZE OF GRANULES OF DUSTS RETAINED IN THE LUNGS OF MAN AND ANIMAL].
Grundfragen aus der Silikoseforschung    January 1, 1963   Volume 6 491-495 
EINBRODT HJ, KLOSTERKOETTER W, METZE H.No abstract available
Epizootiology of equine viral rhinopneumonitis.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 1, 1963   Volume 142 31-37 
DOLL ER, BRYANS JT.No abstract available
Equine piroplasmosis in the United States.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 15, 1962   Volume 141 694-698 
SIPPEL WL, COOPERRIDER DE, GAINER JH, ALLEN RW, MOUW JE, TEIGLAND MB.No abstract available
Equine piroplasmosis–another emerging disease.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 15, 1962   Volume 141 699-702 
MAURER FD.No abstract available
[Occupational dermatitis due to tuberculin, in a patient handling tuberculin of equine origin]. BAZEX A, SALVADO RR, DUPRE A.No abstract available
[Can the study of the ocular lesions of Onchocerca cervicalis infection in the horse provide interesting data on the pathogenesis of human ocular onchocerciasis?].
Bulletin de la Societe de pathologie exotique et de ses filiales    May 1, 1962   Volume 55 417-422 
LAGRAULET J.No abstract available
[Equine encephalomyelitis in Conchas, Sao Paulo, Brazil: incidence of hemagglutination-inhibiting antibodies in humans and horses].
Revista do Instituto de Medicina Tropical de Sao Paulo    May 1, 1962   Volume 4 149-151 
PEREIRA OA, MOREIRA LP, ROJAS E.No abstract available
African horse sickness in the Middle East.
Military medicine    February 1, 1962   Volume 127 143-146 
MASSIE EL.No abstract available
Observations on eastern equine encephalitis in Maryland in 1959.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 15, 1961   Volume 139 661-664 
BYRNE RJ, HETRICK FM, SCANLON JE, HASTINGS JW, LOCKE LN.No abstract available
Eastern equine encephalomyelitis vaccine prepared in cell cultures.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    August 25, 1961   Volume 134, Issue 3478 565-566 doi: 10.1126/science.134.3478.565
LOWENTHAL JP, BERMAN S, GROGAN EW.Protection tests in guinea pigs indicate that vaccines prepared from virus propagated in chick embryo cell cultures are as effective as the purified whole chick embryo vaccines which are currently used for human immunization against eastern equine encephalomyelitis.
Tuberculosis in Horses.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    June 1, 1961   Volume 2, Issue 6 229-230 
Zajac RD.No abstract available
[Existence of an endemic focus of rhinosporidiosis in the province of Chaco. II. Study of new cases, human and equine].
Prensa medica argentina    May 19, 1961   Volume 48 1470-1476 
NINO FL, FREIRE RS, SERRAL O.No abstract available