Introduction to Veterinary Epidemiology

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BVSc Animal Management 2 (Epidemiology & Statistics) Flashcards on Introduction to Veterinary Epidemiology, created by Florence Edwards on 29/09/2016.
Florence Edwards
Flashcards by Florence Edwards, updated more than 1 year ago
Florence Edwards
Created by Florence Edwards about 8 years ago
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Resource summary

Question Answer
Give 5 advantages of epidemiology compared to study of disease in the individual Allocation of resources Economic impact of disease (cost benefit analysis) Behaviour of disease in a population Discovering the cause of disease Prevention of disease
How is disease defined in clinical medicine? A departure from normal in an individual which can be recognised by our senses (e.g. foot rot can be detected by sight and smell)
Why is sub-clinical disease important? Sub-clinical infection may represent a higher proportion of animals than those with overt clinical signs
Give an example of the importance of sub-clinical disease Pregnancy toxaemia in sheep - overt clinical signs occur in some animals but many more in the flock may have raised beta hydroxybutyrate
Give 2 reasons why sub-clinical disease can be problematic Important source of economic loss e.g. sub-clinical mastitis in dairy cows Animals with sub-clinical disease are a reservoir of infection for the population e.g. enzootic abortion in sheep
What is the only way to recognise sub-clinical disease? Diagnostic tests such as the California Milk Test
Define epidemiology The study of disease in populations and of factors that determine its occurrence (note that in veterinary medicine productivity is also important).
Define epizootiology The study of disease in animal populations
Define endemic A disease is endemic if it is always present in the population (e.g. FIV in cats)
Define epidemic A sharp increase in the incidence and prevalence of a disease above normal levels Note that this is not necessarily related to the number affected but a deviation from the normal
Give an example of a long-term epidemic BSE
Give an example of a short-term epidemic E.Coli
Define outbreak A sudden epidemic of short duration
Define pandemic An epidemic occurring over a wide geographical area
Give 2 examples of diseases that often occur as pandemics Rinderpest in cattle Human influenza
Why do a number of influenza pandemics originate in South East Asia? Closer proximity between people and animals, so cycling of the virus leads to antigenic shift
Give 5 practical uses of epidemiology Finding the cause of a disease Establishing the origin or source of a disease Detecting the occurrence of disease Measuring the importance of a disease Acquisition of information on the ecology and natural history of a disease
Why is epidemiology useful in establishing the cause of a disease? Populations can often identify control mechanisms without a full understanding of the disease
Give an example of where acquisition of information about the ecology of a disease is useful? Liver fluke in sheep has snails as the intermediate host This allows for environmental conditions to be taken into account and produce 'fluke forecasts'
Define cause An environmental or individual characteristic which affects the incidence of disease
When is a factor determined to be causal? If its removal reduces the incidence of disease
What is the term for the factors that cause a disease when they are combined? Sufficient or component causes
Give an example of a multifactorial disease Foot rot Infectious agent but also environmental causes such as weather conditions, soil type and age of animal
Define association The degree of dependence between 2 variables 2 variables are associated if there is a statistically significant link between them
Give the classifications of associations Associations can be independent or statistically associated Statistical associations can be causal or non-causal Causal statistical associations can be both direct and indirect
Define risk factor Any variable of which the presence or absence influences the incidence of disease (increases or decreases)
What is a necessary cause? A factor which must be present for a disease to manifest itself (usually infectious agents) but may not be sufficient to cause disease without the presence of other contributing factors
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