Flies in Relation to Disease
Non-Bloodsucking Flies
- Author: G. S. Graham-Smith
- Date Published: January 2015
- availability: Available
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9781107458017
Paperback
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First published in 1914 as part of the Cambridge Public Health series and as a second edition of a 1913 original, this book examines how flies that do not suck blood can still transmit diseases from host to host. Graham-Smith examines the life histories and habits of various species of fly that are common in the United Kingdom as well as further afield, and suggests methods to prevent and control the fly population. The text is richly annotated with photographs, illustrations and charts, and will be of value to anyone with an interest in disease prevention and the history of public health.
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×Product details
- Date Published: January 2015
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9781107458017
- length: 460 pages
- dimensions: 216 x 139 x 26 mm
- weight: 0.5kg
- availability: Available
Table of Contents
1. Introduction
2. The species of non-bloodsucking flies found in houses
3. Life-history of the house-fly (M. domestica)
4. The internal anatomy of the house-fly
5. The structure and function of the proboscis
6. The functions of the crop and proventriculus
7. Habits of adult flies
8. Methods of observing flies in captivity
9. The ways in which flies carry and distribute bacteria
10. The bacteriology of city flies
11. The survival in the adult fly of micro-organisms ingested by the larva
12. Flies and specific diseases
13. Typhoid or enteric fever and diseases caused by allied organisms
14. Epidemic or summer diarrhoea
15. Cholera
16. Tuberculosis
17. Anthrax
18. Other bacterial diseases - diptheria, opthalmia, plague, staphylococcal infections
19. Non-bacterial diseases - infantile paralysis, small pox, typical sore, trypanosomiasis, yaws
20. On the part played by flies in the dispersal of the eggs of parasitic worms
21. Infection by non-biting flies of wounds caused by biting flies
22. Myiasis
23. The diseases of flies
24. The parasites of flies
25. Enemies of flies
26. Flies breeding in or frequenting human faeces
27. Prevention and control of flies
28. Summary and conclusions
Appendix
Bibliography
Authors' index
Subject index.-
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