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  1. 6 juil. 2011 · In the third phase (~1885 to the present), scarlet fever began to manifest as a milder disease in developed countries, with fatalities becoming quite rare by the middle of the 20th century. In...

  2. 24 janv. 2023 · While epidemics of scarlet fever raged through Europe and North America through the 17th and 18th centuries, it was not until the 1920s that the significance of the patient’s sore throat would be fully realized.

  3. 12 août 2009 · Between approximately 1820 and 1880 there was a world pandemic of scarlet fever and several severe epidemics occurred in Europe and North America. It was also during this time that most physicians and those attending the sick were becoming well attuned to the diagnosis of scarlet fever, or scarlatina.

  4. 28 mars 2008 · Scarlet fever is an acute infectious disease, caused by certain types of group A hemolytic streptococci. The disease is characterized by sudden onset of soreness on swallowing, with fever and headache. A rash appears within 2 days of onset, and desquamation follows.

  5. 4 nov. 2020 · Scarlet fever was one of many early childhood communicable diseases, all of whose incidences were exacerbated by the overcrowded, insanitary, and unhygienic conditions of living faced by the expanding urban working classes in the rapidly growing towns and cities to which they increasingly migrated.

  6. 1 janv. 2004 · Epidemic diseases were better described during the 18th Century in colonial America compared with the earlier period, and there was clear recognition of the impact of smallpox, diphtheria,...

  7. 21 févr. 2020 · Creighton described a number of eighteenth-century epidemics of ‘sore-throat’ that included the typical symptoms of scarlet fever and some of its more unusual epidemiological characteristics, in particular pronounced autumnal peaks and greatest mortality at two to seven years of age.