Emerging Infectious Disease - Questions Flashcards

1
Q

What are the two basic categories of emerging infectious disease?

A

Newly emerging diseases and re-emerging diseases.

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2
Q

What kind of organism dominates the pathogens that have been identified since 1980?

A

Viruses

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3
Q

How do new diseases or versions of diseases develop?

A

There has to be some genetic change.

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4
Q

What is a major source of human disease?

A

Nonhuman animals.

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5
Q

How does literal introduction occur (after a zoonotic jump)?

A

Aerosol, a bite, eating contaminated food, blood feeders.

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6
Q

What barrier could prevent introduction?

A

Insufficient habitat overlap.

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7
Q

Approximately what percentage of the population would die if another pandemic “great flu” evolved?

A

3 to 6%. Probably about 1 million people would die in the US alone.

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8
Q

What have been some significant changes in human populations since the 1800s?

A

Massive increase in numbers, huge movements of populations, easier movement, rural regions to urban centers, slums, stress put on a variety of services, stress on infrastructure, infrastructure breaking down.

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9
Q

What are some of the major criticisms of the demographic transition model?

A

Assumes populations are uniform, and is based on European history model.

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10
Q

Is it easy for new diseases to become established?

A

No

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11
Q

What would be the main barrier to infection?

A

Species incompatibility

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12
Q

What are the main species with which we share pathogens?

A

Birds and mammals

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13
Q

What is the main factor that increases likelihood of infectious potential?

A

Variability the creates uniqueness. Natural variability in the human population.

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14
Q

Which factors of emerging diseases particularly enhance the second stage of infection/establishment?

A

Breakdown of public health measures and poverty and social inequality.

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15
Q

A variety of factors are contributing to increased susceptibility to disease in some groups. What might this be?

A

Chronic disease, ageing population, HIV, obesity, antibiotic resistance, anti-VAX groups, poor nutrition.

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16
Q

What barrier might prevent transmission?

A

If the pathogen is unable to pass itself from host to host.

17
Q

What are the main routes out of the body for a pathogen?

A

Respiratory tract, digestive tract, urogenital tract

18
Q

What are other modes of transmission?

A

Bodily fluids, consumption of meat, injections, blood transfusions, vectorborne.

19
Q

How does a disease moved academic status?

A

Each individual person infected is able to transfer disease to more than one person.

20
Q

What are the barriers between infection/establishment and epidemic spread?

A

Biological barriers and epidemiological barriers.

21
Q

What tools can we use to reduce the risk of emerging infectious disease?

A

Effective global surveillance, better diagnostics, political will to respond, research to help understand the ecology and pathogenesis of new disease, research to help develop effective preventative or therapeutic measures.