Term
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Definition
Lifestyle factors: smoking, obesity, diet, exercise, drinking |
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Term
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Definition
The study of the distribution and determinants of health related states and events in populations, and the application of this study to control health problems |
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Term
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Definition
Gender, age, genetics, race |
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Term
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Definition
- No disease is present
- Action can be taken to prevent disease ocurrence
- eg immunizations, condoms, anti-smoking commericals
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Term
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Definition
Disease is present but early stages
treatments are more effect in early stages
e.g. early stage breast cancer |
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Term
Population-based Prevention |
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Definition
prevention measure is widely applied to the general population
e.g. water floridation |
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Term
Example of skin-skin
transmission?
Direct or indirect? |
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Definition
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Term
Example of food-borne
transmission?
Direct or indirect? |
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Definition
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Term
Example of mucous-mucous
transmission?
Direct or indirect? |
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Definition
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Term
Example of water-borne
transmission?
Direct or indirect? |
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Definition
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Term
Example of across placenta
transmission?
Direct or indirect? |
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Definition
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Term
Example of vector-borne
transmission?
Direct or indirect? |
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Definition
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Term
Example of through breast milk
transmission?
Direct or indirect? |
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Definition
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Term
Example of AIR-BORNE
transmission?
Direct or indirect? |
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Definition
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Term
Example of SNEEZE-COUGH
transmission?
Direct or indirect? |
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Definition
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Term
Example of TING-BORNE
transmission?
Direct or indirect? |
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Definition
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Term
2 MODES of Contact Transmission
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Definition
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Term
3 MODES of Vehicle Transmission |
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Definition
AIRBORNE
WATERBORNE
FOODBORNE |
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Term
2 Modes of Vector Transmission |
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Definition
Mechanical (on insect bodies)
Biological (lice, mites, mosquitos) |
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Term
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Definition
- A concept that helps explain that disease does not occur randomly. Rather, disease occurrence is the result of the interaction between characteristics of the agent, host and environment (and, in some cases, vector).
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Term
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Definition
A concept that helps explain that only a proportion of those persons who are exposed will become infected, and an even smaller proportion go on to develop symptoms and seek medical care. As a result, often the cases of disease we are able to count are only “the tip of the iceberg.” |
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Term
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Definition
Habitual presence of disease in a defined area. |
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Term
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Definition
An outbreak or any increase in disease that is above what is expected |
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Term
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Definition
- An epidemic that spans multiple countries.
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Term
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Definition
A concept that explains how a large group of people can be resistant to disease due to the fact that a high proportion of the population is immune (either due to vaccination or previous exposure). The few in the group who are not immune only have a small chance of coming into contact with someone that is infected and thus are protected by herd immunity |
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Term
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Definition
The period of time between exposure and the development of symptoms. For chronic diseases, this period is often very long and is sometimes referred to as the latent period |
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Term
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Definition
· A graph that plots the number of cases (y-axis) over time (x-axis). A true epidemic curve is drawn as a histogram, a special kind of bar chart in which there are no spaces between the vertical bars on the chart. This is a tool that may be used during an outbreak investigation to help determine when most people became ill. |
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Term
INDEX VS. PRIMARY CASE
(TRANSMISSION) |
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Definition
INDEX- 1ST CASE IDENTIFIED
PRIMARY- THE CASE THAT BRINGS THE INFECTION TO POPULATION
can be used interchangibly if unable to identify |
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Term
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Definition
diseases is a result of forces w/i dynamic system consisting of:
AGENT, HOST, ENVIRONMENT |
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Term
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Definition
A host that carries a pathogen w/o injury to itself and serves as a source of infection for other host organisms
(ASYMPTOMATIC INFECTIVE CARRIER) |
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Term
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Definition
a host that carries a pathogen w/o injury to itself and speads the pathogen to susceptible organisms
ASYMPTOMATIC CARRIERS OF PATHOGENS
EG. teste fly |
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Term
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Definition
occasional cases occurring at irregular intervals |
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Term
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Definition
persistently high level of occurrence |
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Term
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Definition
A routine on-going system that:
Documents to occurrence of a disease or health outcome.
Estimates magnitude
Documents distribution (person, place time)
Evaluates prevention strategies |
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Term
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Definition
Available data on reportable diseases or for which disease reporting is mandatory
- lacking quality-burden falls on busy health care provider
- inexpensive, easy to adopt
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Term
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Definition
Hired staff carry out surveillance
Used to identify new cases
- Reporting more accurate
- expensive, time consuming
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Term
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Definition
Intensive active surveillance of cases of disease in portion of pop.
- identifies trends
- may be hospital based
eg. surveillance systems: CDC reportable diseases
(i.e. AIDS, PERTUSSIS, SYPHILIS, MEASLES, E COLI) |
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Term
Epidemiologic Transition
As income/development increases: |
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Definition
- childhood survival improves
- fertility decreases
- greater proportion of the population ages
- causes of death shift from infectious diseases to chronic diseases
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Term
Limitations of Prevalence |
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Definition
- does not consider the duration of illness
- prevalence cannot be used to estimate risk
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