Eric K Noji

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, MI, USA

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Publications (4)13.91 Total impact

  • Article: Public health in the aftermath of disasters.
    Eric K Noji
    BMJ (Clinical research ed.). 07/2005; 330(7504):1379-81.
  • Article: Disasters: introduction and state of the art.
    Eric K Noji
    Epidemiologic Reviews 02/2005; 27:3-8. · 7.58 Impact Factor
  • Article: Public health issues in disasters.
    Eric K Noji
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: OBJECTIVE: This article outlines a number of important areas in which public health can contribute to making overall disaster management more effective. This article discusses health effects of some of the more important sudden impact natural disasters and potential future threats (e.g., intentional or deliberately released biologic agents) and outlines the requirements for effective emergency medical and public health response to these events. CONCLUSION: All natural disasters are unique in that each affected region of the world has different social, economic, and health backgrounds. Some similarities exist, however, among the health effects of different natural disasters, which if recognized, can ensure that health and emergency medical relief and limited resources are well managed.
    Critical Care Medicine 02/2005; 33(1 Suppl):S29-33. · 6.33 Impact Factor
  • Article: The Global Resurgence of Infectious Diseases
    Eric K. Noji
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    ABSTRACT: In an increasingly interdependent world, we face an array of new global challenges that transcend the traditional definition of national security. One important example is the resurgence of infectious diseases. In the 1960s and 1970s, powerful antibiotic drugs and vaccines appeared to have banished the major plagues from the industrialized world, leading to a mood of complacency and the neglect of programs for disease surveillance and prevention. Over the past few decades, however, infectious diseases have returned with a vengeance. Many factors, or combinations of factors, can contribute to disease emergence. New infectious diseases may emerge from genetic changes in existing organisms; known diseases may spread to new geographic areas and populations; and previously unknown infections may appear in humans due to changing ecological conditions that increase their exposure to insect vectors, animal reservoirs, or environmental sources of novel pathogens. Reemergence may also occur because of the development of anti-microbial resistance in existing infections (e.g., malaria) or breakdowns in public health measures for previously controlled infections due to civil conflict (e.g., cholera, tuberculosis). Not only does the re-emergence of infectious diseases threaten health directly, but devastating epidemics such as AIDS are spawning widespread political instability and civil conflict. This instability, in turn, will contribute to humanitarian emergencies and economic crises.
    Journal of Contingencies and Crisis Management 12/2002; 9(4):223 - 232.

Institutions

  • 2002–2005
    • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
      • National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases
      Atlanta, MI, USA