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Infectious Diseases of Poverty | Home page - <p><i>Infectious Diseases of Poverty</i> is an open access, peer-reviewed journal publishing topic areas and methods that address essential public health questions relating to infectious diseases of poverty. These include various aspects of the biology of pathogens and vectors, diagnosis and detection, treatment and case management, epidemiology and modeling, zoonotic hosts and animal reservoirs, control strategies and implementation, new technologies and application. Transdisciplinary or multisectoral effects on health systems, ecohealth, environmental management, and innovative technology are also considered.</p><p><i>Infectious Diseases of Poverty</i> aims to identify and assess research and information gaps that hinder progress towards new interventions for a particular public health problem in the developing world. Moreover, it provides a platform for discussion of the issues raised, in order to advance research and evidence building for improved public health interventions in poor settings.</p>


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  • Phillip Campa - Great Reading

    In the process of reading it now and I have always been made fan of Bill Clinton. I find this book very interesting and honest.

  • TheHandsomeDan - More fun than expected

    In the early 2000's, I was pretty intensely into Dance Dance Revolution. And when this came around, I rolled my eyes at the franchise as a cheap clone. Turns out this is actually a really well done title. My only real beef has been with the "sing along" mode. You can't turn that OFF, and it keeps detecting the games own music as perfect singing, which it then gives to player one. Player one will always win because of this. Period. Very annoying design flaw.

  • courtney - Works good for two weeks.

    After two weeks of use keep frozee up, had to keep restarting it and when you think it is recording it's not.