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News Release 11-191

Investigating the Spread of Infectious Diseases With NSF, NIH, U.K. Funding

How diseases are transmitted among humans, other animals, the environment is focus

This material is available primarily for archival purposes. Telephone numbers or other contact information may be out of date; please see current contact information at media contacts.

Photo of a capuchin monkey.

EEID scientists work to answer questions like how HIV spread from monkeys to humans.

Credit: Tony Goldberg, University of Wisconsin-Madison


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Photo of facility in Haiti where cholera outbreak is being studied by EEID scientists.

Deadly outbreaks of cholera in Haiti are being studied by EEID scientists.

Credit: Joseph Tien, Ohio State University


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Photo of biologist Samantha Forde who researches E. coli.

Biologist Samantha Forde researches E. coli bacteria and viruses as a model of infection.

Credit: University of California-Santa Cruz


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Photo of bats infected with White-Nose Syndrome.

The disease White-Nose Syndrome is devastating bat populations across eastern North America.

Credit: Tom Kunz, Boston University


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Mathematical model of parasitic diseases in estuaries and elsewhere.

Scientists are developing mathematical models of parasitic diseases in estuaries and elsewhere.

Credit: Armand Kuris, University of California-Santa Barbara


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Photo of forest covered hills in western U.S. wildfire with smoke from wildfires in distance.

Sudden oak death, a disease of western U.S. trees, may be regulated by drought and wildfire.

Credit: Dave Rizzo, University of California-Davis


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