Engineering of Global Health

CONTENTS OF CURRICULUM UNIT 17.06.08

  1. Unit Guide
  1. Introduction
  2. Background
  3. Implementation Strategies
  4. Student Activities
  5. Bibliography
  6. Endnotes

Germs Attack!

Jessica Ralene Anderson

Published September 2017

Tools for this Unit:

Bibliography

Andrew T. Pavia; Germs on a Plane: Aircraft, International Travel, and the Global Spread of Disease. J Infect Dis 2007; 195 (5): 621-622. doi: 10.1086/511439

Avissar, Yael, Jung Choi, Jean DeSaix, Vladimia Jurukovski, and Connie Rye. Biology. Houston, TX: OpenStax College, Rice University, 2016.

Clark, David P., and David P. Clark. How infectious diseases spread. Upper Saddle River: FTPress Delivers, 2010. Print.

Genetic Science Learning Center. "Learn.Genetics." Learn.Genetics.January 7, 2015. Accessed July 13, 2017. http://learn.genetics.utah.edu/.

Harper, Douglas. "Germ." Online Etymology Dictionary, 2017. 2017. Accessed July 17, 2017. http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=germ.

Sachs, Jessica Snyder. Good germs, bad germs: health and survival in a bacterial world. New York: Hill and Wang, 2008. Print.

Saltzman, W. Mark. Biomedical engineering: bridging medicine and technology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016.

The global burden of disease 2004 update. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2008. Print.

The Great Courses, 2015.

[San Francisco, California, USA] : Kanopy Streaming, 2016.

Tierno, Philip M. The secret life of germs: what they are, why we need them, and how we can protect ourselves against them. New York: Atria , 2004. Print.

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