This chapter is concerned primarily with situations where there are large numbers of deaths following a disaster, requiring organized services for handling the dead.
Introduction
Chapter A.13
Other
Chapter H.4
2015 edition
Anxiety disorders
Chapter F.1
2018 edition
Anxiety disorders
Chapter F.3
Substance use disorders
Chapter G.3
Other disorders
Chapter H.5
Other disorders
Chapter H.5.1
Psychiatry and Pediatrics
Chapter I.4
Miscellaneous
Chapter J.3
Miscellaneous
Chapter J.2
Miscellaneous
Chapter J.5
Miscellaneous
Chapter J.8
CHAPTER 206 | An Act to establish a national drug policy and a national drug authority to ensure the availability, at all times, of essential, efficacious and cost-effective drugs to the entire population of Uganda, as a means of providing satisfactory health care and safeguarding the appropriate us...e of drugs.
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CHAPTER 15:03 | Acts 14/1969, 62/1971, 35/1974, 20/1978, 41/1978 (s. 35) 39/1979, 7/1987, 11/1988, 18/1989 (s. 27), 1/1996, 6/2000, 22/2001; R.G.N. 899/1978.
Model Chapter for textbooks for medical students and allied health professionals
Chapter in: Reformed theology today: Practical-theological, missiological and ethical perspectives
This chapter addresses the biogeochemical cycles of carbon dioxide. (CO2), methane (CH4) and nitrous oxide (N2O)
This chapter discusses the antibacterial treatment of leprosy infections. Antibiotic treatment is
a key component of leprosy treatment, as it is vital to prevent the progression of the infection.
Treatment with rifampin and other antibiotics is highly effective and cures 98% of patients with
the ...leprosy infection. Furthermore, the relapse rate is very low, at about 1% over 5–10 years.
There is little M. leprae drug resistance in leprosy and few reports of multi-drug resistance (1, 2, 3,
4, 5, 6, 7, 8). An antibiotic treatment may take months or years to produce clinical improvement,
especially in patients with an initial high bacterial index (BI).
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