Epidemiology terms
Forms of transmission
Forms of prevention
Chain of infection
Cases
100

What is Epidemiology?

A field of science that studies health problems within populations

100

What is Modes of Transmission?

different ways in which disease is transferred.

100

What is Primary prevention?

effort to prevent a disease or disorder before it happens.

100

What is a pathogen?

organisms or substances such as bacteria, viruses, fungi, mold, or parasites that are capable of producing disease.

100

What is a Case

a person who has been diagnosed with a

health-related state or event.

200

What is Descriptive Epidemiology?

is classification of the distribution of health-related states or events.

200

What is Direct transmission?

the direct and immediate transfer of an agent from a host/reservoir to a susceptible host.

200

What is Active primary prevention?

behavior change on the part of the individual that prevents a disease or disorder before it happens

200

What is a Reservoir?

the habitat (living or nonliving) in

or on which an infectious agent lives, grows, and multiplies and where it depends for its survival in nature.

200
What is a primary case

the first disease case in the population.

300

What is Analytic Epidemiology?

involves finding and quantifying study that involves answering the questions: Why and How. These questions are addressed using hypotheses about relationships and statistical tests for assessing the hypotheses. A comparison group is involved.

300

What is Airborne transmission?

transfer of bacteria or viruses on dust particles or on small respiratory droplets that may become aerosolized

300

What is Passive primary prevention?

does not require behavior change on the part of the individual in order to prevent a disease or disorder from occurring (e.g., eating vitamin-enriched foods,

300

What is Portal of exit?

disease transmission that occurs when the pathogen leaves the reservoir through a portal.

300

What is a Secondary Case

those persons who become

infected from contact with the primary case

after the disease has been introduced into the

population.

400

What is Effectiveness?

the ability of a program to pro-

duce benefits among those who are offered the

program.

400

What is Vector-borne transmission?

transfer of a disease to a human by a vector.

400

What is Secondary prevention?

activities aimed at health screening and early detection in order to improve the likelihood of cure and reduce the chance of disability or death.

400

What is Modes of transmission?

different ways in which disease is transferred.

400

What is a Index Case

the first disease case brought to the

attention of the epidemiologist.

500

What is Epidemiology triangle?

a model of disease causation that helps us understand the interrelated nature of factors that contribute to disease. The four factors involved in the original concept of the epidemiological triangle, developed for infectious diseases, are as follows: host, agent, environment, and time.

500

What is Mechanical transmission?

vector-borne disease transmission processes that occur when the pathogen, in order to spread, uses a host

500

What is Tertiary prevention?

efforts to limit disability by providing rehabilitation where disease, injury, or a disorder has already occurred and caused damage.

500

What is Portal of entry?

the entryway through which

the pathogen or disease-causing agent enters the

body.

500
What is a Suspect Case

an individual (or a group of individuals) who has all the signs and symptoms of a disease or condition but has not been diagnosed as having the disease, or had the cause of the symptoms connected to a suspected pathogen.

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