Epidemiology Catch all
Epidemiologic Model
Transmission
Causation and Prevention
Rates + a study
100

As in malaria, viral encephalitis, and Lyme disease, an anthropod (e.g., mosquito, flea, tick, lice) conveys the infection agent. 

What is vector-borne transmission?

100

The organism having the exposure and then the disease.

What is the host?

100

The manner in which the disease moves to a new host.

What is the mode of transmission?

100

If primary prevention is used during prepathogenesis or incubation stage, then this level of prevention is used when the host begins to react to the agent or in the pathogenesis stage.

What is secondary prevention

100

Total deaths of infants in given year in population/ Total # of live births in same year in population

What is infant death rate

200

This occurs when a pathogen such as cholera or shigellosis is carried in drinking water, swimming pools, streams, or lakes used for swimming

What is vehicle-borne transmission?

200

Any substance that can cause death, disease, or biological malfunction in a living organism

What is the agent?

200

This involves contact between a person with the disease and another person.

What is direct transmission?

200

This level of prevention may include rehabilitation or palliative care

What is tertiary prevention?

200

The cardiovascular prospective cohort study was launched in 1948 in Framingham, Massachusetts and spanned 30 years with >5,000 participants, identifying much of what we know today about the effects of diet, exercise, and common medications such as asprin on heart disease.

What is the Framingham Heart Study? 

300

Who, what, where, when, person, place, and time.

What are questions answered by epidemiological studies?

300

According to the epidemiology model, this is needed for disease to happen?

What is the interaction of the agent, host, and environment

300

Touching, skin to skin contact, and sexual intercourse.

What are types of direct transmission?

300

Reasonable evidence there is a connection between an agent and disease.

What is association?

300

Number of new cases of a disease in population in given time vs. prevalence, which is the number of people in the population with the disease at one point in time

What is incidence

400

Surveillance, screening, outbreak investigation, assessment of causation

What are 4 core public health processes used in epidemiology?

400

This can move between an agent and host, causing spread of the disease.

What is a vector? ie a tick or mosquito

400

Using 1853 death rates across districts in London, John Snow created comparison tables on mortality by source of water by subdistricts showing that deaths rates in areas below the sewage inlets were very high.

What is showing that Cholera was a waterborne disease that traveled in both surface and groundwater supplies?

400

Interpretation is critical and is based on strength of association, consistency, temporality, biological plausibility, and concentration gradient

What is causation?

400

Total deaths from a specific cause in a year in a population subgroup/ Average total population subgroup for the same year

What is specific mortality rates?

500

These epidemics arise from infections transmitted from one infected person to another vs. common-source epidemics arise from a specific source

What are propagated epidemics?

500

Breaking at least one of the sides of the triangle--disrupting the connection between the environment, the host, and the agent, and stopping the continuation of disease

What is the goal of an epidemiologist?

500

The unknown transmission mode of HIV in the 1980s led to this positive commonly used medical precaution.

What are universal precautions?

500

A mother's exposure to rubella virus (Rubivirus) is necessary for rubella to occur, but exposure to rubella virus alone is not the only cause

What is necessary cause?

500

Total deaths from any cause in a given year in a population/ Average total population for the same year

What is crude mortality rate?

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