Control of communicable diseases

Descrição

Public health FlashCards sobre Control of communicable diseases, criado por Ashutosh Kumar em 27-03-2017.
Ashutosh Kumar
FlashCards por Ashutosh Kumar, atualizado more than 1 year ago
Ashutosh Kumar
Criado por Ashutosh Kumar quase 8 anos atrás
11
1

Resumo de Recurso

Questão Responda
Definition of a communicable disease: Definition: An illness caused by a specific agent, or its toxic product that results from transmission of that agent, or its products from an infected source to a susceptible host.
Degrees of disease control and examples: Degrees of disease control: Eradication: Smallpox. Elimination: Polio. Control: Diphtheria and mumps.
Epidemiological triangle: Apices: Linkages: Epidemiological triangle: Apices: Host (descriptive epidemiology) Environment (environmental investigation) Agent (laboratory investigation) Linkages: Immunity: host and environment. Transmission: host and agent. Survival: environment and agent. All link via disease.
Epidemiological concepts: Incubation period: Generation time (serial interval): Epidemic curve: Epidemiological concepts: Incubation period: Period in which host is infected before symptomatic/clinical disease. During this period there is a latent time and infectious period. Generation time (serial interval): Average number of days taken by an ill person to transmit the infection to another person. Epidemic curve: Illustrates the number of new cases per generation.
Terms: Reproduction number (R): Basic reproduction number (Ro): Terms: Reproduction number (R): Measures the potential for an infection to spread in a community. Basic reproduction number (Ro): The average number of persons directly infected by an infected person during the entire infectious period, when they enter a totally susceptible population.
What determines (Ro): What determines (Ro)= (Pi)x(K)x(D): The risk of transmission per contact (Pi). Number of contacts (K). Duration of infectious period (D).
Spread of infection likelihood based on (Ro): Spread of infection likelihood based on (Ro): <1: Disease will not spread. =1: Disease will become endemic. >1: Disease will cause an epidemic.
Effect of immunization: Effect of immunization: If proportion P have been immunized, P x Ro will escape infection. To prevent an epidemic: P>1-1/Ro
Herd immunity: Herd immunity: The protection given when a large proportion of the population are protected against the spread of a disease. Can be calculated from Ro. H=(1-1/Ro)x100
Why be concerned: Why be concerned: Dynamic interaction between populations; dependency (source of new cases) Important health effects (mortality/DALYS and morbidity Understanding of an organism (immunity and novel organisms) Urgency for public health action (potential for control or elimination)

Semelhante

Immune system(II)
Clare Yu
General epi flashes
Sno
VET EPI EXAM GENERAL
Sno
Public Health 1800-1914
zaza-zoo
Epidemiology Review
Ashutosh Kumar
Epidemiology Test 1- 5th Year PMU
Med Student
Epidemiology
Danielle Richardson
Public Health
Niamh MacElvogue
OCR GCSE History-Paper Two: The State of Public Health in the First Half of the 19th Century NEW FOR 2015!!!
I Turner
History Public Health Dates
The amazing Oli ©
'The Romans' withdrawal from Britain was a turning point in the development of medicine and public health.' How far do you agree with this statement? (16 marks)
Bethany Barrett