Avian Diseases Transmissible to Humans
A "please wash your hands" sign affixed to chicken cages at the poultry exhibit during the 4H Livestock show.
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Keywords

PS019

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How to Cite

Davis, Michael A., Gary D. Butcher, and F. Ben Mather. 2015. “Avian Diseases Transmissible to Humans: PS23 PS019, Rev. 8 2015”. EDIS 2015 (8). Gainesville, FL:4. https://doi.org/10.32473/edis-ps019-2015.

Abstract

Anyone who keeps birds, whether as pets or as production animals, should be aware that certain avian diseases can be transmitted to humans. The seriousness of the disease in humans varies with human hosts’ age, overall health, and immune status as well as virulence of the organism, infective dose, and route of infection. This 4-page fact sheet is a major revision which discusses causes and symptoms of avian influenza (bird flu), chlamydiosis, salmonellosis, colibacillosis, encephalitis viruses, avian tuberculosis, Newcastle Disease, and cryptosporidiosis. Written by Michael A. Davis, Gary D. Butcher, and F. Ben Mather, and published by the UF Department of Animal Sciences. Original publication date: August 1997, revised August 2015.

PS23/PS019: Avian Diseases Transmissible to Humans (ufl.edu)

https://doi.org/10.32473/edis-ps019-2015
view on EDIS
PDF-2015
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