Russell W. Steele has written: 'Clinical Handbook of Pediatric Infectious Disease, Third Edition (Infectious Disease and Therapy)' 'An atlas of pediatric infectious diseases' -- subject(s): Atlases, Communicable diseases, Communicable diseases in children, In infancy & childhood, Infection in children 'Clinical Manual of Pediatric Infectious Disease (Appleton Clinical Manuals)' 'An illustrated pocketbook of pediatric infectious diseases' -- subject(s): Child, Communicable diseases, Communicable diseases in children, Handbooks, Handbooks, manuals, Handbooks, manuals, etc, Infection in children, Methods, Pediatrics
The similarities in how children and older people contract and react to infectious diseases is that they catch them very easily. However older people have had more diseases so they can fight off a wider variety.
Biting and clawing is a greater hazard to young children than infectious disease when talking about Badgers.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases was created in 1904.
Clinical Infectious Diseases was created in 1979.
Any communicable disease is an infectious disease. See "Infectious and no Infectious Diseases what is the difference?" question .Common Cold Common cold and AIDS both are infectious diseases unless you take necessary precautions.
Pediatricians treat children. If they deal with infectious disease we are talking about contagious illness, that can spread from one person to another. Measles and chicken pox are two examples of contagious diseases that often affect children. There are many others. Meningitis, tuberculosis, scarlet fever, etc., are infectious diseases.
colds, and infectious diseases
There are many medicines for infectious diseases, too many to list.
Sarah Watstein has written: 'Statistical handbook on infectious diseases' -- subject(s): Communicable diseases, Epidemiology, Handbooks, Handbooks, manuals, Handbooks, manuals, etc, Statistics, Statistics & numerical data, Vaccination 'The encyclopedia of HIV and AIDS'
Nutritional diseases are not classified as infectious disease because they do not fit the definition of 'infectious'. They cannot be transmitted from one person to another and the causative agents come from the environment.
Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases was created in 1969.