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Animal Health
Health Management and more General Principles of Disease
27
Agriculture
Undergraduate 3
10/21/2014

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Cards

Term
What are the three approaches to disease management?
Definition
Eradication, Prevention/Exclusion, Control
Term
What is the purpose of disease eradication?
Definition
The extinction of a species of infectious agent from a population
Term
What are the methods of disease eradication?
Definition
- Selective Removal/Slaughter
- Depopulation (if inadequate screening test available)
- Mass Immunization
Term
What are the methods of disease prevention?
Definition
- Excluding disease from a geographic area (i.e. at border crossing)
- Protect a given population within a geographic area
Term
What are the methods of disease control?
Definition
- Quarantine (separating sick animals)
- Prophylactic Treatment
- Mass Immunization
- Environmental Control e.g. ventilation, cleanliness
Term
What is the purpose of disease control?
Definition
To decrease the frequency of a disease that is already present in a population
- done by decreasing the causes of the disease to a level of little or no consequence
Term
What is the purpose of disease prevention?
Definition
To exclude disease from an unaffected population of animals
Term
What is health management?
Definition
Promoting health and preventing disease, within the economic framework of the owner, while considering:
- animal welfare
- human safety
- environmental impact
Term
Why is Health management referred to as a dynamic process?
Definition
Because it is a constant, on-going process
Term
What is the Health Management cycle?
Definition
- Decisions are made
- Plans are developed/implemented
- Outcomes are measured/evaluated
Term
What are the major principles of health management?
Definition
- Promoting optimal health
- Accommodating Economic realities
- Promoting Animal welfare
- Promoting human and food safety
- Considering environmental impact
Term
What are the five criteria to setting a SMART goal?
Definition
Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Results oriented, Time framed
Term
What is the sensitivity of a test?
Definition
The proportion of truly diseased individuals that actually tested positive.
Term
What is the specificity of a test?
Definition
The proportion of truly disease-free individuals that test negative
Term
If the sensitivity of a test is high, there will be fewer false ______.
Definition
False negatives
Term
If the specificity of a test is high, there will be fewer false _______.
Definition
False positives
Term
What will happen if the sensitivity of a test is poor?
Definition
The test will miss finding diseased animals
Term
What will happen if the specificity of a test is low?
Definition
The test will call healthy animals diseased
Term
What is the positive predictive value of a test?
Definition
The proportion of individuals that tested positive, that actually have the disease
Term
What is the negative predictive value of a test?
Definition
The proportion of individuals that tested negative, that are truly disease-free
Term
Is it better to have a good specificity and bad sensitivity? Or vice-versa?
Definition
it's better to have a good sensitivity, and a poor specificity, b/c if too many individuals are said to be D+, it is something that we can deal with later

- better to treat too many, than not enough
Term
What are the two types of tests?
Definition
Diagnostic (applied to unhealthy animals to confirm/classify disease)

Screening (applied to healthy animals, usually before clinical disease evident)
Term
What factors affect the predictive value of a test?
Definition
test sensitivity
test specificity
prevalence of the disease in the population
Term
Which is better to have, good specificity but bad sensitivity OR

good sensitivity and bad specificity
Definition
good sensitivity and bad specificity
Term
What is a screening test? Which should be optimized, sensitivity or specificity?
Definition
a test applied to healthy animals, usually before clinical signs are displayed

sensitivity should be optimized
Term
What is a diagnostic test? Which should be optimized, sensitivity or specificity?
Definition
a test applied to abnormal or unhealthy animals to confirm or classify a disease

specificity should be optimized
Term
What are the requirements for mass immunization to be an effective method of disease eradication?
Definition
-vaccine must be 100% effective in preventing infection
-vaccinated animals must not be able to be come carriers
-must be able to distinguish vaccinated animals from carriers
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