Disease outbreak Flashcards

1
Q

Define endemic

A
  • Constant presence of disease or infectious agent in a given geographical area, population or subgroup
  • The usual rate of disease
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2
Q

What is an outbreak?

A
  • Occurrence of new cases of disease clearly in excess of the baseline frequency for that population over a given period of time
  • Synonymous with epidemic (although generally considered to be a more localized epidemic)
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3
Q

Define epidemic?

A
  • Any disease occurring at a greater frequency in a defined comminity or institutional population over a given period of time
  • An excessive rate of disease
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4
Q

What is a pandemic?

A
  • A pandemic is an epidemic occurring over a wide area, crossing international boundaries and affecting a large number of people
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5
Q

What is an attack rate?

A
  • Measure of the number of persons affected by a disease outbreak among persons at risk
  • The total number of people who develop disease in population divided by the number in the population at risk
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6
Q

What is a secondary attack rate?

A
  • The probability that infection occurs among susceptible persons within a reasonable incubation period following a known contact with an infectious person or infectious source
  • This person must have been directly exposed to disease vs. primary where they just need to be in population at risk
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7
Q

Define virulence

A
  • The severity of disease produced by the organism in a given host
  • It is expressed as the number of cases of severe and fatal infection divided by the total number clinically infected
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8
Q

Define case-fatality, how is it calculated?

A
  • The PROPORTION of people contracting a disease who will die of that disease
  • DIFFERENT THAN MORTALITY RATE
    CF = #deaths / #diagnosed patients
  • Can be thought of as the ‘risk’ of death
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9
Q
  • What is the mortality rate?
A
  • AKA Crude death rate

- Estimation of the portion of the population that dies during a specific period from all causes of death

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10
Q

What is a point-source epidemic?

A
  • Exposure is brief and essentially simultaneous.
  • Cases rise to peak rapidly to peak and falls gradually
  • Most cases occur within one incubation period
  • Ex: Restaurant with contaminated food
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11
Q

What is an extended source epidemic?

A
  • Exposure period lasts for a period of days to weeks
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12
Q

What is a propagated epidemic?

A
  • An epidemic that begins with only a few exposed persons but is then maintained by person to person transmission
  • Ex: Influenza
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13
Q

How does Risk differ from case fatality?

A

Risk: new cases/persons at risk
- refers to initial development of condition

CF: #deaths / # of diagnosed patients
- refers to risk of death among those with condition

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