Communicable diseases: Flashcards
infectious disease:
A microorganism that has the potential to cause Illness on a wide scale due to its propensity for transmissibility, which is an inherent part of its reproductive cycle
communicable disease:
A microorganism that has the potential to cause Illness, and which is transmittable to other host organisms (people in this case)
Endemic:
– An incidence of disease that has a reasonably high yet approximately constant infection rate within a particular
population (e.g. annual cold/flu)
Epidemic:
– An endemic that for opportunistic reasons (weather, flood, starvation, war, pestilence), exceeds the normal number of
infections in a population (e.g. ebola in Africa, 2013-14
Pandemic:
– A global or intercontinental incidence of
disease (e.g. Spanish Flu in 1918-1
Bubonic Plague:
The extent of later outbreaks of Bubonic Plague were such that in Naples (1656) an enormous city of 500,000 saw approx. 300,000 deaths. There were not enough inhabitants to actually bury the dead • 60,000 bodies were burned • 100,000 were simply dumped into the sea • Stench of decomposition in the city • Dogs, vultures and rodents • Law-and-order and social chaos
catalyst for Change
• How did our approach change to diseases and viruses • Austin Bradford Hill –English Epidemiologist (1950’s) • Linked ‘smoking to lung disease’ • Casual Association
bradford Hill criteria for causality:
Strength: The greater the association the greater the strength. ? Small
association
Consistency: consistent findings in different persons, places and times
increases the likelihood of association
Specific :The more specific an illness to a specific population, the greater the
probability of causality
Temporal: temporal sequence – the outcome of interest has to occur after the
exposure
Biological gradient :Greater the exposure, the greater the effect
Plausibility: the association has to make biological sense consistent with current knowledge
Coherence: Coherence between field experimentation and laboratory findings
Experiment :Occasionally it is possible to appeal to experimental evidence
Changes in Medical Thinking:
Development of Public health strategies:
• Quarantine
• Sanitation
• Urban clean ups
• Magic bullets – quinine, penicillin, antibiotics
• Concealment: China and SARS – Naples and cholera
Ethical issues of human experimentation
important People in the history of
Communicable Diseases:
Edward Jenner
• The ‘Jennerian approach to vaccination’
• The father of immunology.
John Snow (no, the other one)
• Hypothesis that disease (cholera) was being transmitted by water and not poisonous vapour
•The father of epidemiology
Louis Pasteur
• Famous for ‘pasteurization’
portal of exit:
How pathogenic agent leaves infected host to invade another. This is agent dependent:
- Genitourinary Tract/Reproductive Systems
- Gastrointestinal tract
- Respiratory Tract
- Skin – Via open wound/lacerations or through
bites
Modes of Transmission:
Direct Contact
– touching an infected person including sexual contact
Indirect Contact
– touching contaminated surfaces
Food or Waterborne
- ingestion of food or water contaminated
with pathogenic agent. Often these infections are also spread by the faecal-oral route.
Airborne
– droplets from speech, coughing, sneezing or those
susceptibility to Communicable
Diseases:
Is influence by your immune response but also impacted on by: - Age - General Health Status - Immune Status - Cultural Behaviours - Sexual Behaviours - Environmental and Geographical conditions
Nosocomial infections:
Nosocomial infections (healthcare associated infections)
Consider:
• Why people get such infections
• Why traditional infection control is failing
The nature of nosocomial infection is such that 5-7% of admissions to a
teaching hospital acquire an infection that they did not have prior to admission
• Predominant infections:
• Catheter associated urinary tract infections
• Surgical wound infections
• Pneumonia
Nosocomial infections:
The incidence of nosocomial infections are such that trauma victims who actually
arrive at hospital alive have a significantly high relative risk of hospital acquired
infection
• Ventilation associated pneumonia
• Urosepsis – urinary catheter
• Bacteremia – central line
• Surgical MRSA