Describing Health and Disease Flashcards

1
Q

What are the positives of active surveillance?

A

delivers a quantified estimate of disease frequency
delivers representative data
Structured surveys usually undertaken by the government

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2
Q

What are the negatives of passive/ scanning surveilance?

A

Relies on goodwill and submission of evidence by others
Subjective and prone to bias
Does not provide a reliable estimate of prevalence

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3
Q

What are the positives of passive surveillance?

A

Engages a broad range of stakeholders
Most are effective for uncommon and new/emerging diseases
Relatively inexpensive

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4
Q

What are the negatives of active surveillance?

A

Expensive
Inefficent for uncommon diseases
Ineffective for ‘unknown’ diseases

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5
Q

What are the purposes of surveillance?

name at least 3

A
  • Detection of new conditions/hazards
  • Demonstrate freedom from disease
  • Describe the level and distribution of specified diseases
  • Detect threats to human health
  • Detect cases to facilitate control
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6
Q

What are the levels of surveillance in farmed livestock?

A
  • Stockperson observation
  • Herd/Flock production data
  • Veterinary practice records
  • Laboratory data
  • Abbatoir data
  • Fallen stock data
  • Movement records
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7
Q

What are some examples of factors that affect disease reporting

A

Farm factors, Relationships, Vet factors, Economics and logistics, Disease factors

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8
Q

What is a sporadic event?

A

Unpredictable, haphazard occurrence of disease that cannot be linked to other incidents. Sporadic cases may represent a large proportion of all detections

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9
Q

What is an endemic?

A

the constant presence and/or usual prevalence of a disease or infectious agent in a population within a geographic area

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10
Q

What is an epidemic?

A

An increase, often sudden, in the number of cases of a disease above that which is normally expected in a defined population and area
It need not affect many individuals nor be widespread

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11
Q

What is an outbreak?

A

The occurrence of cases of disease in excess of what would normally be expected in a defined community, geographical area or season. An outbreak may occur in a restricted geographical area, or may extend over several countries. It may last for a few days or weeks, or for several years. An outbreak may be considered as a “special case” of an epidemic, in which there is a single source and negligible secondary transmission

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12
Q

What is a pandemic?

A

an epidemic occurring worldwide, or over a very wide area, crossing international boundaries and usually affecting a large number of individuals or holdings

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13
Q

What is the definition of a veterinary surveillance system?

A

comprises a set of surveillance components that together provide evidence concerning animal health

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14
Q

What are some qualities of Host adapted serovars in salmonella

A

Clinical/subclinical infection
Long term carriers
High morbidity in adults & calves
Economic losses
Compromises animal welfare

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15
Q

What are some risk factors of salmonella host adapted serovars?

A

Contact (direct/indirect)
Animal trade
Herd size
Concurrent BVDV infection
Feeding strategies
Climate
Liver fluke infestation

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16
Q

What is the definition of surveillance of animal health?

A

The systematic, continuous or repeated, measurement, collection, collation, analysis, interpretation and timely dissemination of animal health and welfare related data from defined populations. These data are then used to describe health hazard occurrence and to contribute to the planning, implementation, and evaluation of risk mitigation actions

17
Q

What may a new or re-emerging threat include?

A
  • notifiable disease
  • New diseases, pathogens, or starins of microorganism
  • Novel resistance to veterinary medicine,
  • diseases or infections in animals that may effect human health
18
Q

What is the definition of an NRT?

A

an unusual event in the population

19
Q

When should you aim to detect an NRT?

A

You should aim to detect it early, so when the prevalence is low

20
Q

Why is an NRT not amenable to structured surveys?

A
  • NRT’s are likely to be localised at first
  • You have to sample a lot of individuals just to find one case
  • There is no justification for a survey
21
Q

What type of surveillance is highly effective in an NRT?

A

Passive surveillance- provided…
* NRT has a clinical impact in livestock
* veterinary advice is sought
* NRT is distinct to endemic conditions
* evidence is effectively collated and communicated

22
Q

What can we use to be more certain that there is freedom from a disease?

A

Consider the sensitivity of the surveillance system
* Probability of detection
* Test sensitivity
* Coverage
* Representativeness

23
Q

Who is allowed to say that a population is free of disease?

A

Authority of DEFRA

24
Q

What is salmonella dublin a host adapted serovar for?

A

Cattle

25
Q

When does salmonella dublin peak?

A

It peaks around autumn/ winter

26
Q

When has salmonella dublin been a serovar since?

A

It has been a serovar since 1999

27
Q

Where was african swine fever reported in 2023?

A

Wild boar in sweden