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Volume 10, Number 2, February 2004

SARS Surveillance during Emergency Public Health Response, United States, March–July 2003

Stephanie J. Schrag,* John T. Brooks,* Chris Van Beneden,* Umesh D. Parashar,* Patricia M. Griffin,* Larry J. Anderson,* William J. Bellini,* Robert F. Benson,* Dean D. Erdman,* Alexander Klimov,* Thomas G. Ksiazek,* Teresa C.T. Peret,* Deborah F. Talkington,* W. Lanier Thacker,* Maria L. Tondella,* Jacquelyn S. Sampson,* Allen W. Hightower,* Dale F. Nordenberg,* Brian D. Plikaytis,* Ali S. Khan,* Nancy E. Rosenstein,* Tracee A. Treadwell,* Cynthia G. Whitney,* Anthony E. Fiore,* Tonji M. Durant,* Joseph F. Perz,* Annemarie Wasley,* Daniel Feikin,* Joy L. Herndon,* William A. Bower,* Barbara W. Kilbourn,* Deborah A. Levy,* Victor G. Coronado,* Joanna Buffington,* Clare A. Dykewicz,* Rima F. Khabbaz,* and Mary E. Chamberland*
*Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA

 
 
Figure 1.
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Figure 1. A) Number of U.S. severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) cases reported to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) by week of illness onset (N = 398a) and B) number of unexplained respiratory illness reports received by CDC by week of illness report (N = 1,460), January–July 2003. (SARS-CoV, severe acute respiratory syndrome–associated coronavirus).

 

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This page last reviewed January 16, 2004

Emerging Infectious Diseases Journal
National Center for Infectious Diseases
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention