Online / Physical Event

12th Edition of International Conference on

Infectious Diseases

Theme: Developing novel technologies & treatment to cure Infectious Diseases

Event Date & Time

Event Location

Rome, Italy

Brochure Program Abstract Registration ReaderBase Awards

20 Years Of Excellence in Scientific Events

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Performers / Professionals From Around The Globe

Conference Speaker

Sheyda Shikhaliyeva

Republican Anti-Plague Station
Azerbaijan

Conference Speaker

Hassan Rezanezhad

Jahrom University
Iran

Conference Speaker

Thomas Licker

International Infection Control Technologies
USA

Conference Speaker

Leena Bhattacharya Mithal

Northwestern University
USA

Conference Speaker

Sion Jo

Chonbuk National University Hospital
South Korea

Conference Speaker

Adriana Macedo

Federal University of Sao Paulo
Brazil

Conference Speaker

Paul J Caesar

University Medical Center Groningen
Netherlands

Conference Speaker

Stef Stienstra

Royal Dutch Navy
Netherlands

Conference Speaker

Catherine Mullie

University of Lille
France

Conference Speaker

Anna Jinxia Zhang

University of Hong Kong
Hong Kong

Conference Speaker

Ines Garcia-Garcia

University of Puerto Rico
USA

Conference Speaker

Hasan Mujtaba

Xian Jiaotong University
China

Tracks & Key Topics

Infectious Diseases 2019

About Conference

EuroSciCon  Conferences invites all the participants from all over the world to attend “12th Edition of International Conference on Infectious Diseases” during April 22-23, 2019 in Rome, Italy which includes prompt keynote presentations, special sessions, workshops, symposiums, oral talks, poster presentations and exhibitions.

lnfectious Diseases  square measure disorders caused by organisms like microorganism, viruses, fungi or parasites. Infectious diseases is also of, food borne, vector borne, air borne in  Related as  further more  in plants and animals. Infectious diseases essentially emphasize on the pathological process of the microorganism and their therapeutic measures, synthesize of branches of particularly clinical and diagnostic biology that deals with the cure hindrance of the Infectious diseases It represents associate degree progressively necessary  for human morbidity and mortality  reason throughout the globe. The Immunizing agent development may be nice importance’s in terms of world heal.

Target audience:

  • Directors, Board Members, Presidents, Vice Presidents, Deans and Head of the Departments
  • Infectious Diseases Researchers, Scientists, Faculties, Students
  • Infectious Diseases Associations and Societies
  • Medical Colleges
  • Pharmaceutical Companies and Industries
  • Medical Devices Manufacturing Companies
  • Drug Manufacturing Companies and Industries
  • Business Entrepreneurs and Industrialists
  • Training Institutes

Why to attend?

Members from round the world centered on learning regarding infectious diseases and its advances in therapeutic and diagnostic market, this can be your best chance to achieve the biggest gathering of participants from the Infectious diseases community This direct conference conduct displays, distributes information, conducts conferences with current and potential scientists, build an article with new drug developments, and receive name recognition at this 2 days event. World well known speakers, the foremost recent therapeutic and diagnostic techniques, developments, and also the Novel technologies and therapeutic measures for infectious diseases  resistance and management are hallmarks of this conference

 

 

Sessions/Tracks

Track 1: Infectious Diseases

Infectious Diseases are mainly caused by micro-organisms  like bacteria, viruses, fungi or parasites. some of these organisms  cause diseases. Than any other cause infectious diseases kill more people throughout the world. These infections are mainly caused by germs .we can get infected by touching, eating, drinking or breathing something. Germs can also spread through animal and insect bites, sexual contact. Some of the diseases like measles and chickenpox can also be prevented by vaccines. Hand washing is also a used to prevent infectious diseases.

 

Track 2: Veterinary Infectious Diseases

These sciences are used to control human health through monitoring and control of zoonotic disease, infectious disease transmitted from non-human animals to humans, food safety, and indirectly through human applications from basic medical research food supply is through livestock health monitoring and treatment,and mental health by keeping pet’s healthy and long living.Veterinary scientists often collaborate with Epidemiologists.

Track 3: Pediatric Infectious Diseases

 Pediatric infectious diseases are mainly infected in children; specialists are devoted for diagnosis and treatment of children who suffer from infectious diseases. These diseases are mainly caused by bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites and treat mild to most severe conditions. A wide range of   and immunologic diseases caused by bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites. Pediatric specialist may also understand the unique signs, symptoms, treatments, and outcomes associated with infectious diseases in children.

Track 4: Respiratory and pulmonary Infectious Diseases

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and asthma are cause of respiratory symptoms. These affects the organs and tissues that make gas exchange possible in higher organisms, and includes conditions of the upper respiratory tract, trachea, bronchi, bronchioles, alveoli, and the nerves and muscles of breathing.

Track 5: Infection and immune system

Infection occupy organism's in body tissues by diseases causing agents, their reaction of host tissues to these organisms and  toxins  they produce   must be  sufficient  number and virulence to destroy normal tissue, illness  resulting from an infection. Infectious disease was also known as transmissible diseases or communicable disease, the immune system is a host defense system comprising many biological structures and processes within an organism that protects against diseases. An immune system identifies a variety of agents, like pathogens, from viruses to parasitic worms  and  distinguishes them from organism’s own healthy tissue.

Track 6: Zika /Ebola viruses

These virus spread   was by Aedas mosquito. these viruses cause birth defects in babies by infected pregnant women, symptoms are mild fever, skin rash, conjunctivitis, muscle and joint pain, malaise or headache. These last for 2-7 days this infection was confirmed by laboratory tests on blood or other body fluids, such as urine, saliva or semen. Ebola virus disease (EVD), is commonly called as Ebola hemorrhagic fever (EHF) or Ebola, signs and symptoms typically start between two days and three weeks after contracting the virus with a fever, sore throat, muscular pain and headache then, vomiting, diarrhea and rash usually follow, along with decreased function of the liver and kidneys.

Track 7 : Infectious Diseases Epidemiology

Epidemiology  suggests that examine the causes, pattern, and effects of health and diseases conditions in population. Characteristic the danger factors for being quality and targets for preventive care. The medical specialty  infectious diseases are HIV/AIDS, malaria, infectious disease, pneumococcus drug-resistant infections.

Track 8: Diseases of reproductive organs and sexually transmitted diseases

A microorganism is rarely alone and once an outsized range of microorganism have gathered to create communities, supposed biofilms. They attach themselves to surfaces, they trigger severe, chronic inflammation, against that each the system and antibiotics area unit impotent. Bacterial pathogens, vibrio cholera are the molecular approaches.

Track 9 : Infectious/ Plant Disease  Modelling

Plant pathology is that the study of diseases in plants caused by pathogens and environmental conditions. Organisms that cause infectious diseases embody fungi, oomycetes, bacteria, viruses, viroids, virus like organisms, phyto plasma, protozoa, nematodes and parasitic plants.  Infectious disease of plant disease include, modeling of infectious diseases in plants. Medicine Dynamics of disease, epidemics, plant pathology.

Track 10: Immunology of Resistances

Immune system is a network of cells and chemicals. The cells  within the system have the flexibility to acknowledge one thing as either self or extending the body system that protects the body from foreign substances, cells, and tissues by manufacturing the immunologic response which includes particularly the thymus, spleen, humor nodes, special deposits of animal tissue and lymphocytes together with the B cells and T cells.

Track 11: Vaccine and Vaccination

Vaccine produces immunity from disease and injected through Needle injections, through by mouth or aerosols. Vaccination is an injection of killed organism that produces immunity against that organism in body.

Track 12: Problems in Infectious Disease Practice

Infection Control in a health care facility is the prevention of the spread of microorganisms from one individual to another individual to prevent these infectious diseases problems frequent hand washing, infection out breaks, water and food in hospital must be maintained.

Track 13: Communicable/Non-Communicable diseases

Communicable diseases  are spread from person to person or through animals .these can be spread through air and transfer from blood or other body fluids like malaria, HIV/AIDS. non communicable diseases are chronic diseases like heart diseases, cancer and diabetes.

Track 14 : Prevention of Methicillin-resistant S aureus (MRSA)

Methicillin-resistant S aureus(MRSA) is resistant to many antibiotics. Can also cause a variety of problems ranging from  skin infections and sepsis to pneumonia to bloodstream infections. Skin infections and severe infections are mainly caused. Wearing  gloves,  hospitalization trends  can mainly use  for prevention of MRSA.

Track 15 : Diagnosis, Management and Treatment  of  Infectious diseases

Diagnosis for infectious diseases is laboratory tests, imaging scans, biopsies, and antibiotics, antifungals are given for treatment of infectious diseases.

Track 16: Vaccines/Preventive Vaccine  for Infectious Diseases

Some common and preventable diseases diphtheria, Haemophilus influenza serotype infection, hepatitis B,  measles, meningitis, mumps, pertussis, poliomyelitis, rubella, tetanus, tuberculosis, and yellow fever. Some of the vaccines for preventive infectious diseases are, Animal vaccines, cancer vaccines, influenza vaccines, etc.

Track 17: Preventing and Controlling Viral Hepatitis

 To prevent and control viral hepatitis need to raise awareness of all types of viral hepatitis infections. Vaccines are also used to prevent and infectious precautions in health care and community settings, safer sex and hand washing, safe food and water provide protection against viral hepatitis.

Track 18: Infection   Prevention  and Control  Guidelines

Patients are cared for in an environment that is safe and clean. . Every interaction in general practice should include a risk assessment of the potential for infection transmission. Hand hygiene, infectious prevention education and training, safe injection practices.

Track 19: Global Eradication of diseases 

Eradication is that the reduction of infectious disease's prevalence within the international host population to zero. Smallpox and rinderpest are the diseases eradicated. Choice of infectious diseases for wipe-out depend on rigorous criteria.

Track 20 : Neurological Infectious Disease

The most challenging neurological disorders are viral and immune mediated disorders  of the nervous system. The most common neuroimmune disorder is multiple sclerosis, and  Meningitis  is the most common viral infection of the nervous system, Nonepidemic viral infections constitute the majority of infections affecting the nervous system today. Chronic neurologic disease as a sequel to infection is a relatively new and developing area of both pediatric and adult neurology research. Chief among these disorders is the role of postinfectious brain inflammation in epileptogenesis

Track 21: Blood Infectious Diseases

Germs can cause infection in human blood and diseases are known  as  blood borne pathogens. The most common and dangerous germs spread through blood within the hospital are viral hepatitis B and hepatitis c virus. These viruses cause infections and liver injury. This virus cause AIDS. Organisms such as bacteria, viruses, prions, and parasites will be transmitted through blood transfusions.

 

Track 22: Acute Rheumatic Fever/Rheumatic Heart Disease

Acute rheumatic fever is an autoimmune inflammatory develops as a sequel of streptococcal infection .Acute rheumatic fever  is the result of an autoimmune response to pharyngitis caused by infection with group A Streptococcus. The long term damage to cardiac valves caused by ARF, which can result from a single severe episode or from multiple recurrent episodes of the illness, is known as rheumatic heart disease.

Track 23: Infectious Diseases Pathology

The pathogenesis of bacterial infection includes initiation of the infectious process and the mechanisms that lead to the development of signs and symptoms of disease. Bacterial infections can involve different compartments of the CNS, leading to different clinical and pathologic manifestations

 

Market Analysis

Importance and scope:

Infectious diseases are worldwide leading explanation for death; a number of the communicable disease was in high causes of death in globally in most up-to-date survey by World health organization. Infectious diseases have cause damage to humans throughout history. Infectious diseases are especially listed by infectious diseases specialist .infectious diseases that replicate a worldwide or produce aerosols generated to be decreased. Healthcare personnel read on burden and diseases. Health care personnel may get to take extra infection management steps taken to stop these infectious diseases in patients. Health care personnel will be exposed to ebola virus by touching a patient’s body fluids, contaminated medical supply and equipment’s, or contaminated environmental surfaces. Splashes to unprotected mucous membranes (for example, the eyes, nose, or mouth) are risk. Procedures that may increase environmental contamination with infectious material or produce aerosols generated or decreased. healthcare personnel unpaid, operating in  aid  settings  World Health Organization have the potential for exposure to patients and infectious diseases, together with body substances, contaminated medical supplies  and  equipments, contaminated environmental surfaces, or aerosols generated throughout  medical procedures. Health care personnel’s include, however aren’t restricted to, physicians, nurses, pharmacists laboratory personnel, students and trainees.

Why Rome?

One of the dream destinations in Europe (even in the World) is Rome. Rome was the largest city in the Mediterranean, with a population of approximately one million. Its metropolitan center was filled with awe-inspiring buildings, which proclaimed the power and glory of the Empire: her Coliseum, the Roman Forum, public bathes, and the monumental markets built by the emperor Trajan.

Rome had wealthiest residents lived in richly appointed homes located in the finest neighborhoods and commanding impressive views of the Tiber located in the finest neighborhoods an commanding impressive views of the Timber River. What we tend not to consider is the fact that this privileged life-style was enjoyed by only about 5% of robe’s population, with the remaining 95% living at or below the poverty level.

Universities related to Infectious Diseases:

  • University of Cambridge
  • Kings College of London
  • London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
  • Imperial College London
  • UCL Institute of Epidemiology and Health care
  • University of Sheffield
  • Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society
  • Columbia University
  • University of Maryland
  • Swedish Institute for Infectious Disease Control
  • Uppsala University
  • University of Gothenburg
  • University of Otego
  • Oslo University
  • University of Pittsburgh
  • Emory Health Sciences
  • Queensland University of Technology
  • University of Liverpool
  • University of Colorado Denver
  • Infectious Diseases Society of America
  • Medical College of Georgia at Georgia Regents University

Market analysis for infectious diseases:

Infectious diseases are the second leading cause of death worldwide, according to current estimates of the World Health Organization (WHO), the leading killers of children under five years of age. In spite of tremendous progress made in the Different Countries during the 20th century in reducing infectious disease deaths. when aggregated, such deaths rank third behind cardiovascular disease and cancer in this country. With more than 1 billion humans crossing international borders in 2013. This market is expected to increase at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 8.8% to reach $138 billion in 2014. The largest market share belongs to antibiotic treatments for bacterial and fungal diseases at 53% of the total infectious disease treatment market. In 2015, 6.5 million individuals were infected with Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) and 28% of the HIV infected people were accessing antiretroviral therapy. Moreover, increasing availability of counterfeit drugs is expected to pose significant threat to the market during the forecast period. The global infectious disease therapeutics market size was valued at $ 46.88 billion in 2016 and is projected to grow at a CAGR of 6.6% during the forecast period. The Infectious disease diagnostic (IDD) market is estimated to grow at a CAGR of 7.9% to reach $18,156.2 million by 2019.

We live on a crowded and interconnected planet, with a projected global human population of at least 9 billion by 2050. The urbanization of the human population is impacting the risk of transmission of many infectious agents. Currently, more than 80 % of humans live in developing countries, Rising prevalence of infectious ailments, increasing expenditure to boost the penetration rate of treatments of these diseases, rising initiatives for creating awareness about treatments & diagnosis of these conditions, and increasing clinical trial studies for development of new drugs are likely to be the factors responsible for growth of this market. However, lack of awareness about treatments for these disorders and low adoption of treatments are factors expected to restraint the growth in the coming years.

 

Association Related to Infectious Diseases

  • International Society for Neglected Tropical Diseases
  • Italian Society for Infectious and Tropical Diseases
  • Infectious Diseases Society of America
  • British Infection Association
  • European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases
  • European Society for Pediatric Infectious Diseases
  • Bart’s and The London Societies
  • International Society for Infectious Diseases
  • Australasian Society for Infectious Diseases
  • Clinical Infectious Disease Society
  • Hong Kong Society for Infectious Diseases
  • Texas Infectious Disease Society
  • Connecticut Infectious Disease Society
  • Armed Forces Infectious Diseases Society
  • Vanderbilt Infectious Diseases Society
  • Swiss Society for Infectious Diseases
  • ID Society of St. Louis
  • Infectious Diseases Society of Ireland
  • World Health Organization
  • Society for Infectious Diseases Pharmacists
  • International Society for Infectious Diseases
  • World Health Organization
  • Worldwide societies for infectious diseases
  • National Infection Institute

Learn More

Global Top Infectious Diseases Universities

USA  Infectious Diseases Universities

Augusta University |Wayne State University|Penn University|University of Maryland | Drexel University | EurosciconConferences University Of Miami | University of Georgia | Harvard University|WashingtonUniversity|  University of Illinois|University of Minnesota | University of Charleston | West Virginia University|University of Wisconsin | University of Wisconsin | University of Washington | EuroSciCon | University of Appalachia | Duke University | University of California | University of Melbourne | University of Toronto | EuroSciCon | University of Pennsylvania | Cornell University | Yale University | University of Michiga | Washington University in St Louis | McGill University | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill | Boston University | McMaster University | EurosciconConferences | University of California | Northwestern University | University of British Columbia | University of Pittsburgh | New York University | Emory University | Vanderbilt University | Case Western Reserve University | University of Southern California | EurosciconConferences Tufts University | Dartmouth College | University of California, Davis | University of Wisconsin-Madison | Ohio State University | University of Virginia | University of Florida

European Infectious Diseases Universities

University of Oxford | University of Cambridge  | University of Copenhagen | University College London | Imperial College London | Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich | University of Zurich | Karolinska Institute | University of Munich | University of Edinburgh | Pierre and Marie Curie University | Heidelberg University | University of Manchester Catholic University of Leuven | University of Helsinki | Freie Universität BerlinUtrecht University | Uppsala University Wageningen University and Research Center EuroSciCon 
 Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin | University of Groningen | University of Barcelona Technical University of Munich | Leiden University | University of Basel | University of Strasbourg | Ghent University | King's College London | University of Geneva | EurosciconConferences | University of Dundee | Lund University University of Göttingen | University of Freiburg | Stockholm University | University of Gothenburg | University of Sheffield | Eberhard Karls University, Tübingen | University of Padua | University of Würzburg | Université Paris-Sud  | EuroSciCon |  University of Vienna | University of Bristol | Free University of Brussels | University of Milan | University of Amsterdam | University of Nottingham | University of Hamburg | University of Oslo | University of Leeds | University of Birmingham University of Southampton | University of Bern | University of Cologne | Medical University of Vienna | University of Münster | University of Lisbon University College Dublin | University of Aberdeen | University of Liverpool | Euroscicon Conferences | Trinity College Dublin | Delft University of Technology | Bielefeld University University of Leipzig Cardiff University | University of York |  University of Regensburg | University of Warsaw 

University of Tokyo | National University of Singapore Kyoto University | Peking University | Tsinghua University Weizmann Institute of Science | Osaka University | Seoul National University | Shanghai Jiao Tong University | Fudan University Zhejiang University EurosciconConferences Tel Aviv University | Hebrew University of Jerusalem | University of Hong Kong | Tohoku University | Nanyang Technological University | Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology | Hokkaido University | National Taiwan University | Keio University | Shandong University | Nagoya University | Sungkyunkwan University Yonsei University | Kyushu University Sun Yat-sen University | Huazhong University of Science and Technology | Wuhan University University of Science and Technology of China | EuroSciCon | Tokyo Institute of Technology Tokyo Institute of Technology | EurosciconConferences | King Abdulaziz University | National Cheng Kung University | Kobe University Korea University | Pohang University of Science and Technology | EuroSciCon Conferences | Indian Institute of Science | Nankai University | EuroSciCon | Tongji University | King Saud University | Nanjing University | Harbin Institute of Technology | University of Tsukuba | Kyung Hee University | Sichuan UniversityXiamen University | Chonnam National University  | Jilin University | Central South University | University of Tehran | Aligarh Muslim University | Chinese University Hong Kong | University of Delhi South China University of Technology | EuroSciCon | Waseda University Okayama University | Southeast University | Soochow University | Mahidol University | Hiroshima University | Tianjin Medical University | Kanazawa University | Tehran University of Medical Sciences | Kumamoto University | EurosciconConferences | Kyungpook National University | National Yang-Ming University | China Medical University

Related Conferences to Infectious Diseases

Infectious Diseases Conferences | Infection Meetings | Infectious Diseases Conferences 2018 | Euro Infectious diseases 2018

12th Edition of International Conference on   Infectious Diseases, Rome, Italy, April 22-23, 2018 | 6th International Congress on Infectious Diseases Feb 25-26, 2019 London, United Kingdom  | 10thEuro-Global Conference on Infectious Diseases ,September 27-29, 2018 Rome, Italy | 4th International Conference on Influenza and Zoonotic Diseases July 2-3, 2018 Vienna, Austria | 9th  Emerging Infectious Diseases Conferences, 31st August-1st September 2018 Zurich, Switzerland | Euroscicon Conferences  | 10th  Virology Conferences July 2-4, 2018 Vienna, Austria.  | Microbialphysiology Conferences July 16-18, 2018 London, UK | 7th Microbiology Research Conferences, August 13-14, 2018, Madrid, Spain |  EuroSciCon |  23rd Immunology and Evolution of Infectious Diseases , April 29-30, 2019, London, UK,  2ndInfectious diseases and STD-AIDS , April 15-16 2019 , Paris, France

 

Infectious Diseases Related Research Units

Infectious Diseases Clinical Research Unit (CRU) | Alfred Health| NYU-Emory Tuberculosis Research Unit | Infectious Diseases Research | Children's Hospital of PittsburghInfectious Diseases Research Unit - - Lund UniversityInfectious Diseases​​​ - Stellenbosch UniversityICDC Unit| NIH GuideHealth Environment & Infection Research Unit (HEIRU)Swiss TPH| Infectious Diseases Unit – California National Primate Research Center |Victorian Infectious Diseases Service (VIDS)| EuroSciCon | National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, NIHInfectious Diseases - oahpp.caWorld Health Organization| Infectious Disease Research Institute: IDRI| Euroscicon Conferences Infectious Diseases Research Ohio State Medical CenterInfectious disease urmcStanley Ho Centre for Emerging Infectious Diseases (CEID)Cochrane Infectious Diseases Group | LSTMQ research|Emerging Infectious Disease journal – CDC 

Infectious Diseases Job Opportunities

Infectious Research Scientist – Microbiology Dyson  | EuroSciCon | Research Microbiologist Lonza Euroscicon Conferences | Food Safety Microbiological Specialist Britvic Soft Drinks Ltd | Johnson & Johnson Family of Companies | Postdoctoral Research Associate in Infectious Diseases Fermentation  University of Reading , PhD Studentship: Antimicrobials & Antimicrobial Resistance University of Nottingham | Senior scientists, antibody discovery and protein engineering | Microbiologist - Environmental Monitoring | QC analyst – Microbiology  Liverpool, England | Equipment Management Associate - Harrogate, UK | Senior Biomedical Scientist (Microbiology) England | Microbiology Laboratory Technician South East | Technical Manger - Microbiology- Water Testing - SE London | [Microbiologist/Biochemist] Plate Coating Scientist (Microtiter) | Microbiologist - Environmental Monitoring | PhD / Senior Microbiologist for Science Solutions Recruitment Ltd | Microbiology Technical Specialist - Home Based  | Microbiology Lab Manager for Chain Biotech | Senior Microbiologist in Dun Laoghaire Infectious Diseases Manager Vivid Resourcing London | Microbiology - Associate Director Pharmaceutical Industry London Euroscicon Conferences |  Microbiology Technician for Clinical Professionals UK Plant Microbiologist Cork, Ireland | EuroSciCon |  Senior Microbiologist (Team Leader) ABERDEEN - United Kingdom  | QC Micro Analyst Scotland, UK | Research Scientist - Microbiologist Supervisor New Brunswick, NJ, USA |  Sr Microbiologist Danvers, MA United States | QC/QA Microbiologist  cheshire, Manchester, North West England |  Microbiologist Matchtech  East Riding of Yorkshire ,  England.

 

 

Past Conference Report

8th Edition of International Conference on Infectious Diseases was organized during June 07-08, 2019 at London, UK With the support and contribution of the Organizing Committee Members, we successfully hosted the event at the conference venue.

Firstly we must thank you for trusting us and participating at Infectious Diseases 2018, a global platform to discuss various important aspects of Infectious Diseases and Disorders

There are infinite reasons to extend our gratitude to you for making the Infectious Diseases 2018 outstanding conference. We couldn't have done it without your continuous support and believe towards our organization, which mutually made to achieve Infectious Diseases 2018 new height in the field of Infection and Disorders

The conference was marked by the attendance of young and brilliant researchers, business delegates and talented student communities representing more than 30 countries, who have driven this event into the path of success.  

The conference was organized around the theme “Global impact on Control, treatment and elimination of Infectious Diseases”. The event implanted a firm relation of upcoming strategies in the field of Infectious   with the scientific community. The conceptual and applicable knowledge shared, will also foster organizational collaborations to nurture scientific accelerations. Muhammad Farooq Umer, Xian Jiaotong University, China and Narendra Kumar Chopra, SEGi University, East Malaysia was the moderator of Infectious Diseases 2018. We are much thankful to Both  for his great support and help.

The conference proceedings were carried out through various Scientific-sessions and plenary lectures, of which the following Speakers were highlighted as Keynote speakers Stef Stienstra, Royal Dutch Navy, Netherlands; Catherine Mullié, CHU Amiens-Picardie, France; Anna Jinxia Zhang, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong;  Chao Zhang, Zhengzhou University, China; Guangyuan Zhou, Zhengzhou University, China; Muhammad Farooq Umer, Xian Jiaotong University, China; Narendra Kumar Chopra, SEGi University, East Malaysia; Yuefei Jin, Zhengzhou University, China, Hasan Mujtaba, Xi’an Jiaotong University, China; Catherine K Derow, Catherine Kari Derow Ltd, UK, The conference witnessed anamalgamation of peerless speakers, Keynote speakers, well-known researchers and delegates who enlightened the crowd with their enviable research knowledge and on various alluring topics related to the field of Infectious Diseases through their fabulous presentations at the podium ofInfectious Diseases 2018.

EuroSciCon Ltd offers its heartfelt appreciation to all the Organizing Committee Members, Chairs and Co-chairs, Speakers, Students, Media Partners and Editorial Board Members of Journal of Prevention and Infection Control, International Journal of Skin Diseases and Skin Care who supported the conference in every aspect for the awe-inspiring exhibition at the venue.

We are also obliged to various delegate experts, company representatives and other eminent personalities who supported the conference by facilitating active discussion forums. So as continuation of Infectious Diseases 2018,
We would like to heartily invite you to our upcoming 12th Edition of International Conference on Infectious Diseases scheduled April 22-23, 2019 Rome, Italy.
We look forward to seeing your benign presence with active contribution and support to make this event successful once more.

Get Infectious Diseases 2018 Conference Proceedings Click here

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A huge thanks to all our amazing partners. We couldn’t have a conference without you!

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Sponsors/Exhibitors

A huge thanks to all our amazing partners. We couldn’t have a conference without you!

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