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- Risk Communicator
- Issue 3
- Emergency & Risk Communication
- Anthrax Scare
- Pan Flu Preparedness
- YouTube is Your Friend
- Additional Resources
- Contributors
- Issue 2
- Priceless Collaboration for Hurricane Preparedness
- Talking to WHO's John Rainford - New WHO Guidelines
- Emergency Communication Challenges in Hurricane Katrina Response
- Hurricane Readiness in High-Risk Areas: Survey Results
- Elements of a Successful Exercise: Functional vs Tabletop and Beyond
- Collaboration & Communication During Emergency Response
- Public Health Observances
- Calendar of Training Opportunities
- Contributors
- Issue 1
- Introduction to the Risk Communicator
- Social Media & Emergency Communication
- Messaging Is Matter of Trust
- Program Spotlight: Frontlines of the CA Wildfires
- Research Summaries: Summaries of Work from Deborah Glik and Craig Lefebvre
- Risk Communication Opportunities During National Observances
- Upcoming Conferences, Training, and Workshops of Interest to Risk Communicators
- Contributors
- About the Newsletter
- Communicating in the First Hours
- SNAPS
- Social Media
- What CDC Is Doing
- What You Can Do
- Blog: Public Health Matters
- What's New
- A - Z Index
Botulism: Prevention Overview for Clinicians
- There is no vaccine for botulism at this time, and antitoxins are not useful for preventive purposes.
- There is no natural immunity to botulism.
- Public health agencies are conducting the following activities to prevent or control botulism:
- Public education about botulism prevention is an ongoing activity. Information about safe canning is widely available for consumers.
- State health departments and CDC have botulism experts on-hand to consult with physicians 24 hours a day. If antitoxin is needed to treat a patient, it can be quickly delivered to a physician anywhere in the country.
- Suspected outbreaks of botulism are quickly investigated, and if they involve a commercial product, the appropriate control measures are coordinated among public health and regulatory agencies.
- Physicians should report suspected cases of botulism to a state health department.
- Botulism can be prevented.
- Foodborne botulism outbreaks have been reported from home-canned foods with low acid content, such as asparagus, green beans, beets and corn.
- Outbreaks have also been reported from commercial foods that were inadequately processed or contaminated after opening (chopped garlic in oil, chili peppers, cheese, tomatoes and improperly handled baked potatoes wrapped in aluminum foil).
- For information and guidelines on canning foods at home:
USDA Home Canning Guide
- For information and guidelines on canning foods at home:
For more information:
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- Page last reviewed October 06, 2006
- Page last updated June 14, 2006
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