For nearly one hundred years, bringing a pet into Britain involved a six month period in quarantine. |
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The English are very strict on their anti-rabies regulations and sometimes keep animals in quarantine for six months. |
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The petrol-driven Hollands were initially consigned to Fareham Creek along with powder vessels, quarantine hulks and other undesirables. |
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The tiger was in quarantine while surgeons undertook emergency surgery on its owner. |
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When the birds finally arrive in England, they will spend 28 days in quarantine, before moving to a large pen with soft sides. |
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As the period for keeping them in quarantine was over, they were shifted to the exhibit area. |
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Like their hosts, the plant pathogens are also of foreign origin and are thus kept in quarantine. |
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Hospitals and doctors have been placed on alert to be prepared to quarantine patients suspected of suffering from the early stages of the virus. |
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She even toyed with the notion of racing dogs in Ireland but gave it up as a bad job when she was forced to quarantine two dogs. |
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In 1957 swarms of the Africanized honeybee escaped the quarantine and began to establish colonies. |
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Before he was taken to the quarantine center, he was hospitalized twice in Jakarta. |
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In this directory we will make five subdirectories named incoming, outgoing, etc, bin and quarantine. |
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The horse enters quarantine in Ireland on August 27 and arrives in Australia on September 19 accompanied by his longtime strapper. |
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A number of school pupils and restaurant staff are being put in quarantine as the north west battles to stop the Sars virus wreaking havoc. |
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But chief health officer Chris Adriaansen says states want trees in the quarantine area at Emerald individually inspected for canker. |
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The survey was also very useful for targeting international yacht and domestic vessels to monitor quarantine compliance. |
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City officials granted the unnamed Bush daughter privileged status, carting her out of the danger zone, despite the quarantine in effect. |
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Fifty-three performers are now on the industry's self-imposed quarantine list, barred from performing in any skin flicks until further notice. |
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After this fourth sequel, the series went into quarantine for three years, as if in reaction to the public mood of despair and anxiety. |
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The containment facility is the largest research facility where we can work with whole plants in a microbial quarantine greenhouse. |
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As a virulent strain of the measles spreads among the students, the town doctor puts Plumfield under quarantine. |
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Modern psychoanalytic practice goes to great lengths to quarantine the psychoanalytic conversation from the real world. |
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Where the risk is assessed as not high, quarantine restriction will apply for 21 days with regular veterinary visits undertaken. |
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Inside the towns, quarantine went into effect, with the sick isolated in prisonlike infirmaries called lazarettos. |
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These parasitic echo relays turn the autodestruct function of the original quarantine module into something almost completely different. |
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Control measures undertaken include quarantine and disinfection of infected premises. |
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Every day the quarantine officials find a grab bag of seeds, plants and fungi. |
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The chicks will arrive on Salisbury Plain on June 23 and spend a month in quarantine before moving to a large enclosure. |
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Hundreds of immigrants, mostly English and some Irish, died on the island while in quarantine. |
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The successful containment of the SARS outbreak was therefore due to both the efficiency of quarantine and the nature of the virus itself. |
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All laws of quarantine have their origin and basis in the concept of disease transmission by contagion. |
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The five who are expected to go home to Hong Kong will be placed in quarantine for 10 days on their return. |
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Under the new rules, only designated plants are allowed to process poultry, which cannot be sold without a quarantine certificate. |
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Isabel and the two older boys also succumbed to diphtheria and were in quarantine for a month. |
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The first beavers could arrive in Britain by autumn and would be released after six months in quarantine. |
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Patients are considered contagious and should remain in quarantine until all scabs separate. |
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Some 4,000 cattle in two herds remain in quarantine because of the concerns about mad cow disease. |
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Varietal screening done in quarantine by reveals that virtually all the existing commercially grown soybean cultivars are susceptible. |
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Was she in quarantine to protect most of her immediate family from the disease that was about to end her life? |
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Adding an extra three weeks of quarantine on to every trip makes it hard to fit this coverage into our lives. |
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But the secrecy and fear surrounding the once-successful quarantine has now put the region in even greater danger. |
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Inside the quarantine zone, even more specific procedures were outlined to keep those within the bounds of it safe. |
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They'll study them in quarantine to determine their efficacy and safety. |
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After the transplant she had to spend six months in quarantine to avoid catching an infection while her immune system recovered, but now she is fit and well. |
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Paul is due to return to his family in Preston later this week but Elliot will remain in quarantine for six months before he is allowed to come home. |
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The whole family was put in quarantine for a month but soon after she had recovered from one disease Julia was struck down with another, namely rheumatic fever. |
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Buster had to spend six months in quarantine on his return from Iraq. |
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The puppy was flown to Austria and then transported to Holland where another breeder was employed to care for him for six months, while he was in quarantine. |
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There is at least one nurse under quarantine in Germany who treated the deceased doctor there. |
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I am scared that, like me, they will arrive and see a frenzy of disorganization, fear and, most frightening, quarantine. |
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Placards or yellow flags traditionally marked places under quarantine. |
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Yellow fever, also known as yellow jack for the quarantine flag flown by ships at sea, became one of the most feared diseases throughout urban America. |
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When four were injured and one killed, President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf officially lifted the quarantine. |
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Entire towns or neighborhoods could not be targeted for quarantine, hodge said. |
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During the French colonization, this was the quarantine zone for the port. |
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The two islands off Quebec were used to quarantine immigrants with many Irish emigrants, who failed to survive the transatlantic crossing, buried on these islands. |
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On the other hand, the Mosaic health laws stressed prevention more than treatment with their clean and unclean foods, emphasis on sanitation, and rules of quarantine. |
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The individuals quarantined may in each case be perfectly healthy, but the suspicion that they are harbouring disease provokes the application of quarantine procedures. |
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Done properly, quarantine could often halt further contagion. |
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This project aims to develop alternative lettuce-friendly postharvest quarantine treatments based on vacuum and controlled atmospheres to disinfest lettuce of insects. |
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In the past, vessels flew a yellow quarantine flag if any crew members or passengers were suffering from cholera. |
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The reason for this was the decision of Casimir the Great to quarantine the nation's borders. |
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It is, ironically, based on the well-established model of the USDA's own plant quarantine regulations for nonrecombinant organisms. |
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Shelley's body was washed ashore and later, in keeping with quarantine regulations, was cremated on the beach near Viareggio. |
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When they finally docked in Naples, the ship was held in quarantine for ten days due to a suspected outbreak of cholera in Britain. |
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Fisher obliged, but sent only yellow and black flags signifying plague and quarantine. |
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The dog, a combination of a pit bull and another breed, was placed in a 10-day quarantine. |
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The quarantine had either failed by then, or did shortly after. |
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Preemptive quarantine through contact-tracing effectively controls emerging infectious diseases. |
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Becoming an anchoress may have served as a way to quarantine her from the rest of the population. |
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The quarantine failure rate is then monitored through the collection of data on incubation periods throughout the outbreak. |
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There was no medical inspection employed, but the whole routine left to the officers of customs and quarantine. |
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But the quarantine, lifted just 10 days in, was a colossal failure. |
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What access to communications would they be given during quarantine? |
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One development as a result of the Black Death was the establishment of the idea of quarantine in Dubrovnik in 1377 after continuing outbreaks. |
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The steady approach of cholera in 1831 was the last occasion in England of a thoroughgoing resort to quarantine restrictions. |
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We evaluated the validity of the assay by analyzing bark beetles intercepted at quarantine stations. |
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Other diseases lent themselves to the practice of quarantine before and after the devastation of the plague. |
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Such agencies may perform various functions such as customs, immigration, security, quarantine, beside other functions. |
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Without the harbour, is a lazarette, where persons coming from infected places, are obliged to perform quarantine. |
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The moggie was given flea and worm treatment, a rabies vaccination and a microchip during her spell in quarantine. |
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His parents and other family members in the Njaluahun tribal chiefdom have been placed in quarantine, the ministry said. |
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The first immigrants to arrive at the new depot were aboard three ships that had just been released from quarantine. |
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Lifting this quarantine means that only distances between seedbeds are maintained to impede their contamination with other crops, but this does not call. |
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According to reports the quarantine officials in China destroyed almost two tonnes of almond cake with chocolate and butterscotch produced by a Swedish firm Almondy. |
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They closed down the jet bridge and put the aircraft into quarantine. |
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The emphasis of the surge will be on increased safe burials, ambulance dispatching and quarantine activities, as well as adding additional social mobilizers into communities. |
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Daily animal-care and support activities for quarantine rooms should be conducted after all necessary tasks in the nonquarantine rooms have been performed. |
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Control measures include quarantine and destruction of infected livestock, and export bans for meat and other animal products to countries not infected with the disease. |
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Australia has perhaps the world's strictest quarantine standards. |
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The Philadelphia Lazaretto was the first quarantine hospital in the United States, built in 1799, in Tinicum Township, Delaware County, Pennsylvania. |
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At the end of this quarantine period the head was transferred to a Royal Navy storeship, the Weymouth, which was also burdened with antiquities from Leptis Magna. |
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If one of the 44 subnets falls victim to a virus, the IT staff can quickly quarantine that area, keeping the rest of the campus free from infection. |
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After the departure of the Turks, an international control was exercised over the quarantine station, but it was in fact placed under British administration. |
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All livestock were culled and a quarantine erected over the area. |
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Later, isolation was prolonged to 40 days and was called quarantine. |
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Where the condition is serious, governments impose regulations on import and export, on the movement of stock, quarantine restrictions and the reporting of suspected cases. |
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In the 1730s, the city built a quarantine station on the Bedloe's Island. |
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In some cases in the 17th and 18th centuries, slaves were kept under quarantine due to fear of the plague threatening the life of the slave and payment of the ransom. |
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Quarantine law began in Colonial America in 1663, when in an attempt to curb an outbreak of smallpox, the city of New York established a quarantine. |
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The system provides an economical and environmentally friendly disinfestation treatment to satisfy the quarantine security requirements of international markets. |
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