Brote del virus Nipah de 1998-1999 en Malasia (Spanish Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Brote del virus Nipah de 1998-1999 en Malasia" in Spanish language version.

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cdc.gov

  • «Nipah Virus (NiV)». Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 20 de marzo de 2014. Consultado el 30 de agosto de 2019. 

doi.org

dx.doi.org

fao.org

mjpath.org.my

nih.gov

ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

npr.org

  • Doucleff, Michaeleen (25 de febrero de 2017). «A Taste For Pork Helped A Deadly Virus Jump To Humans». NPR. Consultado el 30 de agosto de 2019. «The disease was as deadly as Ebola, but instead of attacking blood vessels, it attacked the brain. Young men would be healthy one day, the next day their brains would swell up. They couldn't walk or talk. They'd become comatose and some of them became paralysed. Yet the Malaysian government told people not to worry, it said the disease was coming from mosquitoes and it had it under control because it was spraying for mosquitoes. Both C. T. Tan and Kaw Bing Chua thought the government was wrong and there was one big clue: No Muslims were getting sick, mosquitoes don't care which religion you practice so if the disease was coming from mosquitoes, you would have Muslims, Hindus and Christians getting sick. But only Chinese Malaysians were catching the disease — and even more specifically, only Chinese farmers raising pigs. As you know, Muslims don't handle pigs.» 

theborneopost.com

thestar.com.my

web.archive.org

who.int

who.int

  • «Nipah virus». World Health Organization. 30 de mayo de 2018. Consultado el 30 de agosto de 2019. 

searo.who.int

  • «Nipah Virus Infection». World Health Organization. Archivado desde el original el 30 de agosto de 2019. «The virus is named after the Malaysian village where it was first discovered. This virus along with Hendra virus comprises a new genus designated Henipavirus in the subfamily Paramyxovirinae.»