Infectious Disease Flashcards
Modes Of transmission
- Any mechanism by which a disease agent is spread to the host
- Agent to host
- Via direct contact, indirect inanimate vehicle, indirect animate vector, fomite
- Fomite: almost anything an infected individual (or reservoir) can touch, upon which can be left a residue of contagious pathogen
Reservoirs
The normal habitat in which the agent lives, multiplies, and grows.
1.Human reservoirs
•Symptomatic
•Carriers- asymptomatic, no sign of symptoms
•Incubating cases
2.Animal/Insect reservoirs
3.Environmental reservoirs
•Inanimate objects: water, food, soil, air, fomites
Patterns of disease
1.Sporadic - single case or cluster of cases: Infrequent disease occurrence AND Irregular and unpredictable
2.Endemic - disease occurs at expected frequency
3.Epidemic - disease occurs at greater than expected frequency
Point epidemic: Single common exposure; Does not spread; ex. Foodborne disease outbreaks
4.Pandemic – international/global epidemic
Immunity and Susceptibility
- immune: had the disease previously or because they have been immunized
- susceptible: not at risk
Herd Immunity
subgroup of population/community that are immune (naturally) and/or immune (vaccination)
• Susceptibles protected by immunity of others!
Incubation periods
- interval from receipt of infection to the time of onset of clinical illness.
- Basis of quarantine periods to prevent spread of disease
Critical variables to investigate an outbreak
- (1) When did the exposure take place?
- (2) When did the disease begin?
- (3) What was the incubation period for the disease?
Cross-Tabulation
• Method used in which many etiologic factors are suspected, be able to see which factor(s) have higher association with outcome
What makes infectious disease epidemiology ‘special?
- A case may also be a risk factor
* People may be immune
* A case may be a case without being recognized as a case
* There is sometimes a need for urgency
* Preventive measures (usually) have a good scientific basis
The infectious disease process
1.Agents – microbe causing the illness
2.Reservoirs - where the agents live
3.Portals of entry and exit
•Transmission – how agents get in and out
4.Host immunity - factors that affect disease severity and progression
Why are Outbreak Investigations Conducted?
- Identify the cause of illness or other health problem
- Characterize the extent of the problem and the affected population
- Limit the scope and severity of a threat to public health
- Identify the source of infection and mode(s) of transmission
- Obtain information that can be used to prevent future outbreaks
- Monitor success of disease control interventions
- Identify new pathogens and obtain new information about known pathogens
Steps of an Outbreak Investigation
- Prepare for field work
- Establish the existence of an outbreak
- Verify the diagnosis
- Define and identify cases
a. establish a case definition
b. identify and count cases - Perform descriptive epidemiology
- Develop hypotheses
- Evaluate hypotheses
- As necessary, reconsider/refine hypotheses and execute additional studies
a. additional epidemiologic studies
b. other types of studies – laboratory, environmental - Implement control and prevention measures
- Communicate findings
Case Definition
Simple, objective and standard criteria using clinical and/or laboratory findings
- Specifies person, place and time
- Does NOT include the risk factor (i.e. exposure) under study
- Broad vs. narrow definition…
- Possible, probable, confirmed