Expand mobile version menu

Public Health Director

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Communication

You are alerted by a public health nurse working in one of the city hospitals that several patients who recently visited a foreign country have tested positive for typhoid fever. Typhoid fever is rarely seen in industrialized countries anymore because of better sanitation systems.

However, the return of the disease could cause potential health problems in your community. You think that the issue is of a big enough concern that you should send a letter into the local newspapers alerting them of the outbreak.

"Communication skills are very important, and so are writing skills," says Tim Hilderman. He is a public health director. "You have to send messages to the public about continuing health issues and about such things as pools being closed."

This is some of what you write in your letter:

Typhoid fever is caused by Salmonella typhi, the typhoid bacillus. At present, there are 107 different strains of the bacteria.

Typhoid fever is characterized by the sudden onset of sustained fever, severe headache, nausea, severe loss of appetite, constipation or sometimes diarrhea. Severe forms have been described with mental dullness and meningitis.

Paratyphoid fever can be caused by any of three variations or bioserotypes of S. enteritidis Paratyphi A, B and C. It is similar in its symptoms to typhoid fever, but tends to be milder, with a much lower fatality rate.

Typhoid fever affects 17 million people worldwide every year, with approximately 600,000 deaths. The number of sporadic cases of typhoid fever has remained relatively constant in the industrialized world. And with the advent of proper sanitary facilities, it has been virtually eliminated in many areas. Most cases in developed countries are imported from endemic countries.

(Information for general distribution, courtesy of the World Health Organization)

Soon after you send the letter, you get a call from a local reporter. She has a few questions about typhoid that she would like answered.

  1. What are the symptoms of typhoid fever?
  2. How many people die of typhoid each year?
  3. Why has the number of cases in industrialized countries gone down so much?

What do you tell her?