Looking for the best tax consultant in India? Look no further than Auriga Accounting! As a trusted name in the financial industry, Auriga Accounting stands out as the go-to destination for individuals and businesses seeking expert tax consultation services.
Our team of seasoned tax professionals is dedicated to helping you navigate the complex landscape of tax regulations in India. Whether you need assistance with income tax, GST, corporate tax, or any other taxation matters, Auriga Accounting is your reliable partner in achieving financial success.
Our commitment to excellence extends beyond mere tax compliance. We specialize in optimizing your tax strategies to maximize your savings and minimize liabilities, ensuring that you keep more of your hard-earned money.
At Auriga Accounting, we prioritize client satisfaction and tailor our services to your unique needs. Our SEO-friendly approach ensures that you can easily find us online, so when you need the best tax consultant in India, Auriga Accounting is just a click away.
Partner with us today and experience the difference that India's top tax consultant can make in your financial journey. Trust Auriga Accounting for unmatched expertise, personalized service, and a brighter financial future.
Displays news articles from the Wildlife Disease News Digest. The Map displays articles that have been posted within the last 45 days that have a geographical reference.
On December 1, 1981, the AIDS virus is officially recognized as a disease. Aids is a disease of the human immune system caused by infection with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).
The complete origin of HIV are not really known to researchers on this day. Clear is however, that the human immunodeficiency virus is very similar to the Simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV), a retrovirus that is able to infect over 40 species of African primates. It is assumed, that this virus exists for more than 32.000 years, which was measured at the African island Bioko and the African mainland....
On November 6, 1880, while working in the military hospital in Constantine, Algeria, French military surgeon Charles Louis Alphonse Laveran discovered that the cause of malaria is a parasite. For this work and later discoveries of protozoan diseases Laveran was awarded the 1907 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine
On November 3, 1906, German psychiatrist Alois Alzheimer presented for the first time the pathology and the clinical symptoms of presenile dementia together, later renamed in his honor as Alzheimer's disease.
Free or low-cost sources of unstructured information, such as Internet news and online discussion sites, provide detailed local and near real-time data on disease outbreaks, even in countries that lack traditional public health surveillance. To improve public health surveillance and, ultimately, interventions, we examined 3 primary systems that process event-based outbreak information: Global Public Health Intelligence Network, HealthMap, and EpiSPIDER. Despite similarities among them, these systems are highly complementary because they monitor different data types, rely on varying levels of automation and human analysis, and distribute distinct information. Future development should focus on linking these systems more closely to public health practitioners in the field and establishing collaborative networks for alert verification and dissemination. Such development would further establish event-based monitoring as an invaluable public health resource that provides critical context and an alternative to traditional indicator-based outbreak reporting.
India, Bangladesh, Vietnam and mainland China also experienced new outbreaks of H5 N1 influenza in December. During the same period, four new human cases - in Egypt, Cambodia and Indonesia - were reported to the World Health Organization. A 16-year-old girl in Egypt and a 2-year-old girl in Indonesia have died.
HMPV infection incidence ranged from 2.2% to 10.5% in outpatient cohorts. Infections were asymptomatic in at least 38.8% of each of these cases. Symptoms when apparent were typical of upper respiratory tract infection.
Health care workers in emergency departments are often carriers of the methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), potentially putting patients at risk.
The Ministry of Health of the Democratic Republic of Congo has declared an outbreak of Ebola haemorrhagic fever. As of 26 December, WHO is aware of 34 suspected cases including 9 deaths associated with the ongoing event.
In the UK 164 people have died of variant CJD, which originally came from cows infected with BSE, and all cases to date shared the same version of the prion gene (MM). A new case has a different varian tof the gene (MV). Estimates are that up to 350 people could be affected in this new wave.
Researchers have have discovered a distinctive chemical signature for placental and cerebral malaria which kill hundreds of thousands of young children a year, giving the option of earlier,or more intense treatment in those who need it.
Increased routine measles vaccine coverage implemented during 2000-2007 resulted in a 74% decrease in the estimated number of measles deaths globally. An estimated 197 000 deaths from measles occurred in 2007.
Anyone who has sex can catch a sexually transmitted infection. Find out how to avoid infection, get tested, get treated and how to protect your sexual health.
The causative agent of the disease which has resulted in the recent deaths of 3 people from Zambia and South Africa is a new virus from the Arenaviridae family.
Scientists have uncovered a chain reaction which could link Enterococcus faecalis bacteria living in our intestines to the development of colon cancer.
Currently there's no evidence to suggest that salads are a major source of food poisoning in the UK and very few incidents of contamination in pre-packed salads have been reported to the Food Standards Agency in the past three years.
Bacteria have tiny channels in their walls which operate like the valve on a pressure cooker - they open to release material when the pressure in a bacterial cell gets too great. If the channel didn't open to relieve pressure the bacteria would explode and die, so this is a target for drug development.
S. Cesur, and F. Cokça. Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology: The Official Journal of the Society of Hospital Epidemiologists of America, 25 (2):
169--171(February 2004)PMID: 14994946.
C. Peña, M. Dominguez, M. Pujol, R. Verdaguer, F. Gudiol, and J. Ariza. Clinical Microbiology and Infection: The Official Publication of the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, 9 (9):
938--43(September 2003)PMID: 14616682.
K. Workowski, and S. Berman. Clinical Infectious Diseases: An Official Publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America, (April 2007)PMID: 17342670.
R. Brooks, C. Woods, D. Benjamin, and N. Rosenstein. Clinical Infectious Diseases: An Official Publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America, 43 (1):
49--54(July 2006)PMID: 16758417.
F. Fusco, and V. Puro. Euro Surveillance: Bulletin Européen Sur Les Maladies Transmissibles = European Communicable Disease Bulletin, (March 2008)PMID: 18445438.
A. Sullivan, J. Wigginton, and D. Kirschner. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 98 (18):
10214--10219(August 2001)PMID: 11517319.