You are here

Feed aggregator

NEW: Japanese Translation of "Tsunamis: Sanitation and Hygiene".

CDC What's New - Fri, 04/15/2011 - 17:00
It is critical for you to remember to practice basic hygiene during the emergency period. Always wash your hands with soap and water that has been boiled or disinfected. Warm water is best.
Categories: CDC News

NEW: Japanese Translation of "Food Safety After a Tsunami".

CDC What's New - Fri, 04/15/2011 - 17:00
To prevent foodborne diseases, wash your hands with clean water and soap before and after you eat or prepare food and after you use the latrine or bathroom. If you do not have clean water, use waterless hand sanitizers until clean water is available for washing.
Categories: CDC News

NEW: 12 New Japanese Translation Documents Are Now Available!

CDC What's New - Fri, 04/15/2011 - 17:00
12 new documents on Radiation Health and Safety are now available in Japanese. Learn more about Radiation and Health at http://emergency.cdc.gov/radiation/.
Categories: CDC News

NEW: Frequently Asked Questions About Iodine-131 Found in Milk

CDC What's New - Tue, 04/05/2011 - 21:00
Is it safe to drink milk? What are the levels that would start to affect my thyroid? How long will there be traces of iodine-131 from Japan in milk? and more.
Categories: CDC News

UPDATE: Frequently Asked Questions about a Radiation Emergency

CDC What's New - Tue, 03/29/2011 - 19:00
What Is Radiation? How Can Exposure Occur? What Happens When People Are Exposed to Radiation? What Types of Terrorist Events Might Involve Radiation? What Preparations Can I Make for a Radiation Emergency? How Can I Protect Myself During a Radiation Emergency? Should I Take Potassium Iodide During a Radiation Emergency? and more.
Categories: CDC News

UPDATE: Shelter-in-Place in a Radiation Emergency

CDC What's New - Tue, 03/29/2011 - 19:00
What Is Radiation? How Can Exposure Occur? What Happens When People Are Exposed to Radiation? In the event of a radiation emergency, such as a nuclear power plant accident or the explosion of a dirty bomb, you may be asked to stay home and take shelter rather than try to evacuate. This action is called “sheltering in place.”
Categories: CDC News

UPDATE: Population Monitoring After a Release of Radioactive Material

CDC What's New - Tue, 03/29/2011 - 19:00
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has prepared this fact sheet to help people understand how public health officials would monitor people following a radiological incident, and how this monitoring could be used to protect people’s health.
Categories: CDC News

UPDATE: Radiation and Pregnancy: A Fact Sheet for the Public

CDC What's New - Tue, 03/29/2011 - 19:00
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has prepared this fact sheet to help you understand the possible health effects to your fetus from exposure to radiation.
Categories: CDC News

NEW: Public Health Matters Blog post

CDC What's New - Mon, 03/28/2011 - 18:00
The JIC Never Sleeps - by Clarice Conley
Categories: CDC News

Monitoring for Increased Levels of Radioactive Material in the US as a Result of the Incident with the Fukushima Nuclear Incident in Japan

CDC Health Alert - Sun, 03/27/2011 - 01:20
As a result of the incident with the Fukushima nuclear plant in Japan, highly sensitive radiation monitors operated by EPA and others are detecting very low levels of radioactive material in the air in the United States. These levels were expected and consistent with estimated releases from the damaged nuclear reactors and are far below levels of public health concern.
Categories: CDC News

NEW: Spanish translation of "Radiation and Potassium Iodide (KI)" for the 2011 Japan Earthquake/Tsunami.

CDC What's New - Thu, 03/24/2011 - 21:00
This fact sheet from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) gives you some basic information about Radiation and Potassium Iodide (KI). It explains what you should think about before you or a family member takes KI.
Categories: CDC News

NEW: Spanish translation of "FACT SHEET: Prussian blue".

CDC What's New - Thu, 03/24/2011 - 21:00
Prussian blue can remove certain radioactive materials from people’s bodies, but must be taken under the guidance of a doctor.
Categories: CDC News

NEW: Spanish translation of "Acute Radiation Syndrome (ARS): A Fact Sheet for the Public".

CDC What's New - Thu, 03/24/2011 - 21:00
Radiation sickness, known as acute radiation syndrome (ARS), is a serious illness that occurs when the entire body (or most of it) receives a high dose of radiation, usually over a short period of time. Many survivors of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombs in the 1940s and many of the firefighters who first responded after the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant accident in 1986 became ill with ARS.
Categories: CDC News

NEW: Spanish translation of "Frequently Asked Questions about a Radiation Emergency".

CDC What's New - Thu, 03/24/2011 - 21:00
Answers to questions like: What is Radiation?, How Can Exposure Occur?, What Happens When People Are Exposed to Radiation?, What Types of Terrorist Events Might Involve Radiation?, and more.
Categories: CDC News

NEW: CDC Situation Awareness Maps – 2011 Japan Earthquake

CDC What's New - Tue, 03/22/2011 - 20:00
The Situation Awareness Section (SA) mission is to support CDC emergency response operations through strengthening public health information sharing between CDC, Federal, State, and local entities to monitor, collect, analyze, and develop critical information to support response actions and produce data, information, and geospatial information products supporting a User Definable Operating Picture (UDOP).
Categories: CDC News

NEW: Radiation and Potassium Iodide (KI)

CDC What's New - Fri, 03/18/2011 - 13:00
This fact sheet from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) gives you some basic information about Radiation and Potassium Iodide (KI). It explains what you should think about before you or a family member takes KI.
Categories: CDC News

NEW: Public Health Matters Blog post

CDC What's New - Tue, 03/08/2011 - 15:00
Haiti Cholera Response: Stories from the Field, Part 3 - by Molly McCollom
Categories: CDC News

NEW:CDC/ATSDR Guidance on the Interpretation and Use of Blood Laboratory Analyses for Volatile Organic Compounds

CDC What's New - Fri, 02/25/2011 - 16:00
CDC/ATSDR Guidance on the Interpretation and Use of Blood Laboratory Analyses for Volatile Organic Compounds
Categories: CDC News

NEW: Community Fact Sheet: Volatile Organic Compounds and Your Health

CDC What's New - Fri, 02/25/2011 - 16:00
Volatile Organic Compounds and Your Health Some people in the Gulf have had their blood tested for volatile organic compounds (VOCs) because they were worried about exposure to chemicals after the Gulf oil spill. CDC and ATSDR are working with Gulf residents and their doctors to help them understand what the results might mean
Categories: CDC News

Pages

Subscribe to District of Minnesota - COOP aggregator