Vaccines against cholera, typhoid fever and shigellosis for developing countries.

CJAcosta; CMGalindo; JLDeen; RLOchiai; HJLee; Lvon Seidlein; RCarbis; JDClemens; (2004) Vaccines against cholera, typhoid fever and shigellosis for developing countries. Expert opinion on biological therapy, 4 (12). pp. 1939-1951. ISSN 1471-2598 DOI: 10.1517/14712598.4.12.1939
Copy

Enteric diseases, such as cholera, typhoid fever and shigellosis, still produce a significant burden, especially among the poor in countries where these illnesses are endemic. Older-generation, parenteral, whole-cell vaccines against cholera and typhoid fever were abandoned in many countries as public health tools because of problems with insufficient protection and/or inadequate safety profiles. Modern-generation licensed vaccines are available for cholera and typhoid fever, but are not widely used by those in greatest need. A number of experimental candidates exist for all three diseases. Future research should focus on generating the evidence necessary to obtain a consensus on the deployment of existing vaccines against cholera and typhoid fever, and on clinical evaluation of pipeline vaccine candidates against all three diseases.


Full text not available from this repository.

Explore Further

Find work associated with the faculties and division(s):

Find work associated with the research centre(s):

Find work from this publication: