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Related Concept Videos

Data Reporting and Recording01:24

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Reporting and recording are crucial in data documentation. The timely, thorough, and accurate documentation of facts is essential when recording patient data. Failure to record findings during an assessment or interpretation of a problem will result in loss of information and make the patient document unreliable. The reader is left with general impressions if the information is not specific. A recording is documenting data of the individual's health information in a traceable, secure, and...
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An Incident or Occurrence Report in a healthcare setting is a crucial document used to record any unexpected occurrence that may or may not have affected a patient, employee, or visitor. Such reports are critical to improving patient safety and include all details leading up to and including the event.
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Reporter Genes02:11

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[Tularemia: A case report].

A Kervyn1, A Le Guern1, M Gillard1

  • 1Service de dermatologie, université catholique Lille, hôpital Saint-Vincent de Paul, boulevard de Belfort - BP 387, 59020 Lille cedex, France.

Annales De Dermatologie Et De Venereologie
|January 15, 2019
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Tularaemia, a rare zoonotic disease caused by Francisella tularensis, can manifest with dermatological signs after a tick bite. Early antibiotic treatment ensures a favorable outcome for this potentially lethal infection.

Keywords:
AdenopathyAdéniteInoculationTularaemiaTularémieUlcerationUlcérationZoonoseZoonosis

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Area of Science:

  • Infectious Diseases
  • Bacteriology
  • Zoonoses

Background:

  • Tularaemia is a rare zoonotic disease caused by Francisella tularensis, a Gram-negative coccobacillus.
  • First described in the US in 1911, it has a low incidence in France (0.07 cases/100,000 inhabitants).
  • Human tularaemia reporting has been mandatory in France since 2003.

Observation:

  • This report details a case of tularaemia in northern France.
  • The patient presented following a tick bite.

Findings:

  • Tularaemia can present with varied clinical manifestations, including dermatological signs.
  • Diagnosis is confirmed via bacterial serology.
  • Prompt antibiotic therapy leads to favorable outcomes in most tularaemia cases.

Implications:

  • Tularaemia should be considered in cases of unexplained adenitis.
  • Francisella tularensis is a potentially lethal bacterium classified as a bioterrorism agent.
  • Awareness and prompt diagnosis are crucial for managing tularaemia effectively.