- published: 13 May 2010
- views: 328349
The tropics is a region of the Earth surrounding the Equator. It is limited in latitude by the Tropic of Cancer in the Northern Hemisphere at 23°26′13.9″ (or 23.4372°) N and the Tropic of Capricorn in the Southern Hemisphere at 23°26′13.9″ (or 23.4372°) S; these latitudes correspond to the axial tilt of the Earth. The tropics are also referred to as the tropical zone and the torrid zone (see geographical zone). The tropics include all the areas on the Earth where the Sun reaches a subsolar point, a point directly overhead at least once during the solar year.
The tropics are distinguished from the other climatic and biomatic regions of Earth, the middle latitudes and the polar regions on either side of the equatorial zone.
"Tropical" is sometimes used in a general sense for a tropical climate to mean warm to hot and moist year-round, often with the sense of lush vegetation.
Many tropical areas have a dry and wet season. The wet season, rainy season or green season, is the time of year, ranging from one or more months, when most of the average annual rainfall in a region falls. Areas with wet seasons are disseminated across portions of the tropics and subtropics. Under the Köppen climate classification, for tropical climates, a wet season month is defined as a month where average precipitation is 60 millimetres (2.4 in) or more.Tropical rainforests technically do not have dry or wet seasons, since their rainfall is equally distributed through the year. Some areas with pronounced rainy seasons see a break in rainfall during mid-season when the intertropical convergence zone or monsoon trough moves poleward of their location during the middle of the warm season.
Air - Tropical Disease
Tropical disease - Air
The Seven Neglected Tropical Diseases
AIR - Tropical Disease (LIVE@KCRW March 29, 2010) HD
Neglected Tropical Diseases
Hospital for Tropical Diseases
Neglected Tropical Diseases: a recipe for disaster
'ISIS dumped rotting bodies in Syrian streets' spreading disfiguring tropical disease
Tropical Diseases: Emerging Concerns
Treating River Blindness and Other Neglected Tropical Diseases
Canción de Air "Tropical Disease" - Love 2 (2009) Lyric Woman Woman Make me feel warm inside Woman Woman Make me feel warm inside
Constaté par l'ensemble des satellites et autres sondages de la communauté scientifique internationale, le réchauffement planétaire actuel n'est pas du tout naturel. Ce n'est pas non plus un complot judéo-maçonnique comme se plaisent à le dénoncer certains sites web négationnistes Ni un scénario monté de toutes pièces par des hommes d'affaires avides de richesses... Le Soleil est une naine jaune ordinaire au milieu de sa vie, en parfaite santé et d'une stabilité nucléaire exemplaire. Ses cycles sont connus et d'extrêmement faible amplitude depuis l'apparition du vivant terrestre. Dans l'ensemble, on pense que les minimums et les maximums solaires ne produisent pas plus de 0,1°C de rafraîchissement ou de réchauffement. L'orbite de la Terre autour de notre étoile est, quant...
An informational video to help spread awareness about neglected tropical diseases that are prevalent in the world today. Go to endtheneglect.org to help these people and donate today. I don't own any of these images. The song is 'To Build a Home' instrumental by Cinematic Orchestra. They own the song.
The French duo Air return to KCRW studios after a highly anticipated evening at Walt Disney Concert Hall to perform songs from their latest release Love 2.
On the 10th of November the Neglected Tropical Diseases unit of the Ministry of Public Health and Sanitation launched the Master Plan on tackling Trachoma, Intestinal worms, Bilharzia, Hydatid disease, Elephantiasis and Kala-azar in Kenya.
An introduction to the Hospital for Tropical Diseases
The perfect recipe for disaster: take the world?s poorest people in remote tropical places with little to no healthcare and add disease. What do you get? Neglected Tropical Diseases, also known as NTDs. SUBSCRIBE HERE: http://bit.ly/15M9M8v Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is an international, independent, medical humanitarian organisation that delivers emergency aid to people affected by armed conflict, epidemics, natural disasters and exclusion from healthcare. TOP PLAYLISTS EBOLA - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLpkLcO7nhYeSnSAln51JU4uuYXWGItkRR MSF is on the frontline in the fight against Ebola - one of the world’s most deadly diseases. Find out what we’re doing in our projects across West Africa. EYEWITNESS - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLpkLcO7nhYeTCXXtwR_jpA-JyPnVi...
A disfiguring tropical disease that had been contained to Syria has now spread across the Middle East as millions are displaced from the war-torn region. Cutaneous leishmaniasis is a parasitic disease spread by bites from infected sand flies. It can lead to severe scarring, often on the face, and regularly goes undiagnosed and untreated.The disease had been contained to Syria, particularly to regions under ISIS control such as Raqqa, Deir al-Zour and Hasakah. The civil war has devastated the country's medical facilities, seen thousands of health workers killed and hospitals destroyed. Along with the chronic lack of water and bombed out buildings, this created a ripe breeding ground for the sand flies and allowed the disease to thrive. It had previously been claimed by the Kurdish Red...
In today's climate, tropical diseases are a hot topic. Statistics are indicating an increasing prevalence of vector-borne and other diseases characteristic of the tropics, together with the re-emergence of certain communicable tropical diseases some of which are proving resistant to conventional drug treatments. The prevalence of tropical diseases has increased in Australia in the past ten to twenty years, due partly to an increase in international travel. The future impact of climate change is another consideration. With the recent flood disasters, they have also become a more immediate threat to public health. All health professionals need to be alert to the increasing incidence and changing spread of tropical diseases, as well as their relevance to special population groups, such as I...
In the villages of Senegal and Mali, and across a large area of rural Africa, 100 million people are no longer at risk of contracting River Blindness. River blindness causes severe itching and discomfort and eventual blindness among infected people. Forty years ago, this disease was rampant around Africa's rivers and lakes. Today, is it all but eradicated thanks to a partnership that has brought life-saving medicines to the areas where they are needed most.
Lectures on Tropical Diseases - Patrick MANSON Audiobook CHAPTER Time Principles Determining the Geographical Distribution of Tropical Diseases, Part 1 00:00:00 Principles Determining the Geographical Distribution of Tropical Diseases, Part 2 00:25:52 Dracontiasis: Endemic Hæmoptysis 00:43:50 Bilharziosis: Filariasis, Part 1 01:22:27 Bilharziosis: Filariasis, Part 2 01:41:27 Malaria 02:02:37 Trypanosomiasis and Sleeping Sickness 02:40:16 Febrile Tropical Spleno-megaly (Kala-Azar) 03:20:26 The Diagnosis of Tropical Fevers 03:54:19 The Diagnosis of Tropical Fevers (continued) 04:28:29 Treatment of Fevers and Fluxes 05:09:38 Problems of Tropical Medicine 05:45:17 Lectures on Tropical Diseases Patrick MANSON (1844 - 1922) This short volume consists of the ten lectures which ...
London | 30 January 2012 Featuring Bill Gates, Margaret Chan, 9 pharmaceutical company CEOs, senior government officials and others.
Etiology and treatment of four major tropical diseases (malaria, onchocerciasis, trypanosomiasis, and schistosomiasis) in Africa are shown. Shots include natives in villages working and being treated. Produced by Burch, Thomas A., 1918- Laboratory of Tropical Diseases (National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases) and National Institutes of Health (U.S.). Scientific Reports Branch. Photographic Section Learn more about this film and search its transcript at NLM Digital Collections: http://resource.nlm.nih.gov/9201467A Learn more about the National Library of Medicine's historical audiovisuals program at: https://www.nlm.nih.gov/hmd/collections/films
Lectures on Tropical Diseases - audiobook Patrick MANSON (1844 - 1922) This short volume consists of the ten lectures which Sir Patrick Manson, medical adviser to the Colonial Office, delivered in San Francisco in 1905. Valuable to this day are his clinical descriptions: the three foot Guinea worm, still treated by slowly winding it on a stick when its tail emerges from the patient's leg, filarial elephantiasis, malaria, sleeping sickness, the wasting sickness kala-azar, plus sound advice on how to diagnose puzzling tropical fevers. The book is also an inadvertent chronicle of British imperialism. - Summary by Pamela Nagami, M.D. Genre(s): Medical Language: English (FULL Audiobook)
In this episode of This Week in Global Health we talk about Neglected Tropical Diseases. The team interviews Ken Gustavsen (from Merck) and Donald Bundy (from the Gates Foundation) who provide incredible insight into the fight against neglected disease.
Given by Professor Sue Welburn (Director, Global Health Academy) as part of the Millennium Development Goals Seminar Series
(Visit: http://www.uctv.tv) Neglected tropical diseases like Chagas disease and schistosimiasis affect millions worldwide. Many not only cause physical symptoms but create a cycle of poverty difficult to overcome. James McKerrow, PhD, MD, dean of the UCSD Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, joins host David Granet, MD to discuss how pharmacists are working to develop new drugs to combat these diseases. He also shares how the role of the pharmacist in US healthcare is changing as patients increasingly look to them for not only novel treatments but primary health services. Recorded on 10/23/2015. Series: "Health Matters" [11/2015] [Health and Medicine] [Show ID: 30154]
Dr Carole Reeves, UCL Centre for the History of Medicine At its height the Black Death claimed the lives of 7,000 Londoners every week. The Museum of London excavated a plague cemetery in the 1980s but it was not until 2011 that technology revealed the true identity of the disease. UCL researchers are examining similar burial grounds to prove that another 'English' pestilence -- 'marsh fever' -- was actually malaria, now one of the great scourges of the developing world.
(Visit: http://www.uctv.tv/) For many years, neglected tropical diseases have been just that: neglected. However a wave of new funding combined with novel tools are generating significant progress against conditions that afflict the most vulnerable populations. Learn about major breakthroughs on the horizon for these tragic diseases. Speakers include Mary Wilson, Visiting Professor, UCSF; Eva Harris, Professor and Director, Center for Global Public Health, UC Berkeley; Peter Hotez, Founding Dean, National School of Tropical Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine; Mark Rosenberg, President and CEO, The Task Force for Global Health and Roberto Tapia Conyer, Director General, Carlos Slim Foundation. Recorded on 10/02/2014. Series: "The Science of Global Health: What’s Next" [1/2015] [Health an...