Division of Bacterial Diseases (DBD)
Our Mission
The mission of the Division of Bacterial Diseases (DBD) is to prevent and control illness and death from vaccine-preventable and other respiratory bacterial diseases, in the U.S. and worldwide, through excellence in epidemiologic and laboratory science. This newly developed office within the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases plays a critical role in outbreak response, diagnostic epidemiology, vaccine development, and control of respiratory and vaccine-preventable disease nationally and globally.
Our Priorities
- Improve detection, prevention, and control of respiratory and related invasive bacterial pathogens
- Accelerate development, introduction, and monitoring of bacterial vaccines domestically
- Accelerate development, introduction, and monitoring of bacterial vaccines globally
What We Do
The Division of Bacterial Diseases serves as the primary contact regarding bacterial respiratory and vaccine-preventable diseases. In addition to serving as experts in the area of bacterial respiratory and vaccine-preventable disease issues, we also:
- Assure the overall quality of the science relating to bacterial respiratory and vaccine-preventable disease
- Review, prepare, and coordinate congressional testimony and briefing documents related to these diseases, and analyze programmatic and policy implications of legislative proposals
- Advise CDC, CCID, and NCIRD on policy matters concerning DBD programs and activities
- Provide statistical methodology and participate in outbreak investigations and disease reporting systems for ongoing surveillance
- Develop new methods or adapt existing methods for statistical applications in epidemiologic or laboratory research studies
- Provide statistical consultation for epidemiologic and laboratory research studies
DBD Organization Chart
- Organization Chart (93 KB - 1 page); (text-only) Updated - Oct. 21, 2008
Division Contact Information
Programs
- Pneumococcal Vaccine
- Adolescent Vaccines
- Get Smart: Know When Antibiotics Work
- Active Bacterial Core surveillance (ABCs)
- Vaccine Safety Analytic Unit (VAU)
- Vaccine Development (Anthrax & Immunology)
- PneumoADIP
- The Hib Initiative
Recent Outbreak Response
- Pertussis in St. Croix
- Pertussis Outbreak Guidelines
- Group A strep in NM
- Cipro-resistant meningococcus in MN & SD
- Respiratory outbreak working group
Respiratory Diseases
- Chlamydia pneumoniae
- Group A streptococcal disease (necrotizing fasciitis, impetigo, scarlet fever, strep throat, strep toxic shock)
- Group B streptococcal disease
- Haemophilus influenzae
- Legionellosis (Legionnaires' Disease and Pontiac Fever)
- Mycoplasma pneumoniae
- Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine
- Pneumococcal disease
- Pneumococcal meningitis
- Pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine
- Pneumonia
- Psittacosis
- Streptococcus pneumoniae
- Trachoma
Meningitis and Vaccine Preventable Diseases
- Anthrax vaccine & safety
- Bacterial meningitis
- Diphtheria (Corynebacterium diphtheriae Infection)
- DTaP, DT, TD vaccines
- Haemophilus influenzae serotype b
- Meningococcal meningitis
- Meningococcal conjugate vaccine
- Meningococcal polysaccharide vaccine
- Neisseria meningitidis
- Pertussis (whooping cough)
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- Page last reviewed: May 16, 2008
- Page last updated: August 5, 2008
- Content source: National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases
Contact Us:
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
1600 Clifton Rd
Atlanta, GA 30333 - 800-CDC-INFO
(800-232-4636)
TTY: (888) 232-6348
24 Hours/Every Day - cdcinfo@cdc.gov