Publication | Closed Access
Zoonoses: Infectious Diseases Transmissible from Animals to Humans, 3rd Edition
29
Citations
1
References
2004
Year
Unknown Venue
Parasitic DiseaseDisease OutbreakInfectious DiseaseInfectious Disease ControlInfectious Disease EcologyHealthcare-associated InfectionEmerging Infectious DiseaseInfection ControlPublic HealthParasitologyJoint InfectionsGeneral EpidemiologyInfectious Disease EpidemiologyVirologySoft TissueClinical Infectious DiseaseEpidemiologyZoonotic DiseasesRodent-borne DiseasesEmerging Infectious DiseasesZoonotic DiseasePathogenesisClinical InfectionDisease TransmissionMicrobiologyMedicine
form, I found variation in the quality and content of some of the chapters. For example, the chapters on respiratory tract infections (chapters 5–7), soft tissue (chapters 15 and 16), bone and joint infections (chapters 18 and 19), as well as travel medicine (chapters 27–29), were well written, with a concise, readable format. Unfortunately, I found that some of the other chapters were superficial and simply summarized the material from the standard textbooks of infectious diseases almost directly, with only limited references. Other topics were too broad to be included in this book, or were not truly “hot.” An example of the former is chapter 22, “Sexually Transmitted Diseases.” Although this may be a hot topic in primary care, the guidelines presented by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in May 2002 provide a more concise and equally satisfactory discussion [1]. To try to review the diagnosis and treatment of Lyme disease, as is attempted in chapter 24, is an overly ambitious goal and can only lead to a superficial and unsatisfying discussion. However, chapter 30, “The Principle Agents of Bio-Terrorism,” is a well-written summary that is certainly important to the entire medical community. I applaud Dr. Lo Re for attempting to put together a text that concisely describes so many of the clinical diseases that are encountered on a regular basis by practicing physicians and allied care personnel. However, I suspect that the infectious diseases specialist would have little use for this book. I encourage our infectious diseases fellows to read a standard textbook of infectious diseases rather than the type of condensed material presented in this text. Although it would have been useful to have illustrations included, particularly when discussing some of the skin and softtissue infections, appropriate references are made where these illustrations and photographs can be found. In summary, although each chapter has a different approach to the clinical issues reviewed, I find that most of the chapters were well written. Also, they were relatively well-referenced, which will help those looking for more detailed information. Thus, I would certainly recommend Infectious Diseases: Hot Topics for primary care physicians as a useful reference book for their daily practice when encountering patients with clinical infectious diseases.
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