Clinical Case Studies and Reports are devoted to a study of an individual or a group of related disorders, as well as their critical research. It might be a long study, therefore different stages and changes can be detailed and documented. The proper documentation of these Clinical Case Studies and Reports would allow researchers, clinicians, and students to examine such fascinating situations and judge how the therapy was carried out theoretically.
A case report is a complete account of a patient's symptoms, signs, diagnosis, treatment, and follow-up in medicine. A patient's demographic profile may be included in case reports, although they usually discuss an unusual or novel incident. A literature evaluation of previous recorded cases is included in some case reports. Case reports are professional narratives that provide feedback on clinical practise guidelines and serve as a foundation for detecting early signs of efficacy, adverse events, and cost. They can be used in medical, scientific, or educational research.
Title : Extensively drug-resistant bacterial infections: Confronting a global crisis with urgent solutions in prevention, surveillance, and treatment
Yazdan Mirzanejad, University of British Columbia, Canada
Title : Pathogen-derived noncanonical epitopes: Are they valuable targets for novel vaccinations and shall we be concerned about autoimmune responses?
Michele Mishto, Francis Crick Institute, United Kingdom
Title : Bioterrorism through the ages: Historical perspective, emerging threats, and medical countermeasures
Claudia Ferreira, Sorbonne University, France
Title : Measles vaccination coverage indicators in 2023 and advance towards measles elimination and eradication by 2030
Pedro Plans Rubio, College of Physicians of Barcelona, Spain
Title : Gendered socioeconomic impacts of emerging infectious diseases: Insights from a mixed-methods study in Guinea
Stephanie Maltais, University of Montreal, Canada
Title : The role of social sciences in operationalizing the One Health approach: A case study of the DOPERAUS project in Guinea and the Democratic Republic of Congo
Stephanie Maltais, University of Montreal, Canada