An internist, often known as an internal medicine doctor, is a doctor who specialises in internal medicine. Internal medicine focuses on injury and disease prevention, diagnosis, and treatment. Internal medicine specialists are educated to diagnose and treat common diseases, acute and chronic illnesses, and difficult diagnostic issues. Internal medicine doctors concentrate in the treatment of adults within general medicine, while they may have additional training in subspecialties such as infectious illnesses. Infectious disease medicine is an internal medicine discipline that focuses on the diagnosis and treatment of infections. Although general internists and other specialty physicians treat the majority of infections, infectious disease internists are regularly called upon to help diagnose unknown illnesses and manage difficult, uncommon, or severe infections. Infectious disease medicine necessitates a thorough grasp of how bacterial, viral, fungal, and parasite illnesses manifest clinically in humans, as well as knowledge of antimicrobial medicines, antibiotic resistance, vaccines, and other immunobiological agents.
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