Only around 100 cases of brucellosis are reported annually in the U.S., even fewer of which involve feral pigs.
A joint WHO/UNICEF report this week shows that measles has made a dramatic comeback across Europe and Central Asia.
124 cases and 18 hospitalizations from measles have been reported in Texas and New Mexico, though the true tally is likely higher.
WHO officials have identified two outbreaks of a mystery illness in the area that has sickened hundreds and killed over 50 people to date.
Scientists in China have found a new coronavirus in bats that could possibly infect humans, but the risk remains low for now.
Health officials in Wisconsin and Minnesota have documented a rare case of donor-derived ehrlichiosis.
The highly contagious virus has infected dozens of people so far, if not more, leaving at least 13 hospitalized.
The latest human case of H5N1 is the first in the state of Nevada.
Flu activity is high to very high in 43 states as of early February.
It's the first time that highly pathogenic avian influenza H5N9 has been found in U.S. poultry.
Dozens of active and latent TB cases have been linked to the outbreak dating back to last year, local health officials say.
Federal inspectors uncovered numerous food safety issues at Taylor Farms' Colorado facility, including equipment found with "large amounts of food debris."
The horrific Guinea worm once infected millions of people a year. Thanks to Jimmy Carter and others, the leg-infesting parasite is now on the brink of eradication.
There have been over 32,000 cases of whooping cough this year, CDC data shows—the highest count seen in a decade.
The cat death appears to be the first case of H5N1 in the U.S. traced to raw pet food.
New research is the latest to show that raw milk can be a viable transmission route for bird flu.
While the exact fate of the misplaced samples is still unknown, they likely pose no danger to the public, government officials have said.
A new CDC report details how splash pads have caused dozens of waterborne outbreaks and plenty of gastrointestinal illness since they became popular in the 1990s.
A potential outbreak of a flu-like illness has killed nearly 150 people in the region, mostly children over 15.
60-year-old Fresno resident Leah Seneng was reportedly killed by a rabies infection that she likely caught from a bat that had wandered into her classroom.
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