We must be very careful to get not only clean milk but milk from healthy cows milked by persons who have no typhoid fever, scarlet fever, or diphtheria in their homes.
If you are sick with diphtheria, scarlet fever, or sore throat, the germs of the disease are likely to remain in your mouth two or three months.
Vomiting may be the first sign of many acute illnesses such as scarlet fever, measles, pneumonia, whooping cough, etc.
Scarlet fever is taken from the little flakes that peel off when the skin begins to dry up.
Doctor, you don't think--are there any more cases of scarlet fever?
And I laughed over your little scare of scarlet fever.
In the arteries of children who have died of measles, scarlet fever, diphtheria, cerebrospinal meningitis, etc.
In his youth there was a history of a mild attack of scarlet fever.
It does not come within our design to indicate the treatment, which appears to be the same as that pursued in scarlet fever.
Of all common diseases, scarlet feverappears to be the one most requiring fumigation.
This group has been still further extended by the addition of the lymphomata occurring in typhoid fever, scarlet fever, and diphtheria.
Milk may become contaminated in a variety of ways, and be a source of distributing the bacteria which produce typhoid fever, tuberculosis, diphtheria, scarlet fever, and a few other less common diseases.
On uncovering a scarlet fever patient, a cloud of fine dust is seen to rise from the body--contagious dust, that for days will retain its poisonous properties.
Measles, scarlet fever, and diphtheria find among such a congenial soil, and run riot among the elements of the body held together by so frail a thread.
Great pains, therefore, should be taken to exclude pupils attacked by or recovering from diphtheria, scarlet fever, whooping cough, etc.
A decoction of our plant has proved useful in prurigo (itching), and as a gargle for the sore throat of scarlet fever.
Hahnemann taught that, acting on the law of similars, Belladonna given in very small doses of its tincture will protect from the infection of scarlet fever.
It may not be flattering to our national vanity to look upon Englishmen as the product of the selection of the micro-organisms of measles, scarlet fever, small-pox, etc.
The germ cells in almost every case get off scot-free, and there is nothing in the organisation of a child to indicate whether or not his father or mother suffered from measles, or scarlet fever.
Scarlatina (Italian scarlattina, Low Latin febris scarlatina), or Scarlet Fever, is very rare in pregnancy.
Popularly, scarlatina is used for a light form of scarlet fever, as varioloid is used for a light attack of smallpox; but physicians do not make this distinction between scarlatina and scarlet fever: they use the terms synonymously.
Those who report large numbers of scarlet fever cases in pregnancy err in diagnosis.
This is just the way that measles, scarlet fever, chicken pox, whooping cough, and diphtheria begin.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "scarlet fever" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.