Ebola survives and occurs in the following populations:
Answer
Humans and bats.
Humans and camels.
Humans and monkeys.
Only humans.
Question 2
Question
Microbes can be used in the formation of helpful drugs despite their harmful effects.
Answer
True
False
Question 3
Question
This disease ravaged the world in 1918-1919, killing approximately 50 million people in that one year.
Answer
Small pox.
Zika virus.
SARS.
The Spanish flu.
Question 4
Question
Which of the following were a part of the causes for initial life expectancy raises? (check all that apply)
Answer
Increases in sanitation due to complications in child birth.
Diseases becoming more recessive as humans have evolved.
Increase in vaccinations starting in the 1800s.
Close-quarter living conditions.
The emergence of antibiotics in the 1960s.
Question 5
Question
This fund donated 100 million dollars to disease treatment, heavily aiding in disease eradication in foreign countries.
Answer
Bill Gates Foundation.
Stephen Harper's Assistance.
The International Disease Eradication Society (IDES).
the British Embassy.
Question 6
Question
With the current progress we've made, we are well on the way to curing infectious diseases entirely.
Answer
True
False
Question 7
Question
Tuberculosis and Ebola are examples of two diseases with very different ways of spreading. The key differences between these are:
Answer
Tuberculosis is chronic - less hostile, with a slower onset period, whereas Ebola is acute - extremely lethal, with a rapid onset period.
Tuberculosis is chronic - extremely lethal, with a rapid onset period, whereas Ebola is acute - less hostile, with a slower onset period.
Ebola is chronic - less hostile, with a slower onset period, whereas Tuberculosis is acute - extremely lethal, with a rapid onset period.
Ebola is chronic - extremely lethal, with a rapid onset period, whereas Tuberculosis is acute - less hostile, with a slower onset period.
Question 8
Question
In the 1900s, life expectancy in the USA was:
Answer
Below 50.
50-60.
Exactly 62 years.
60-70.
Question 9
Question
The following act as wildlife origins/reservoirs of certain diseases:
AIDS: [blank_start]Chimpanzees.[blank_end]
SARS: [blank_start]Bats, palm civet.[blank_end]
West Nile Virus: [blank_start]Wild birds.[blank_end]
Influenza: [blank_start]Wild aquatic birds.[blank_end]
Monkeypox: [blank_start]Wild rodents in Africa.[blank_end]