Field
Terms
Going on a Trip
Global Style
What is It?
100

A field of science that studies health problems within populations

What is Epidemiology?

100

Ability of a program to

produce a desired effect among those who

participate in the program compared with

those who do not

What is Efficacy?

100

Transfer of a disease via a particular vehicle- for example, needle use

What is Vehicle-borne Transmission?

100

An epidemic that arises from a specific

source.

What is a Common Source Epidemic?

100

A person in a population who has been

identified as having a particular disease,

disorder, injury, or condition.

What is a Case?

200

Finding and quantifying associations, testing

hypotheses, and identifying causes of

health-related states or events

What is Analytic Epidemiology?

200

Ability of a program to

produce benefits among those who are

offered the program

What is Effectiveness?
200

A nonliving

intermediary such as a clothing, food, or

water that conveys the infectious agent

from its reservoir to a susceptible host

What is a Vehicle?

200

Epidemic that affects or

attacks the population of an extensive

region, country, or continent

What is a Pandemic?

200

A standard set

of criteria ensures that

cases are consistently diagnosed, regardless

of where or when they were identified and

who diagnosed the case

What is Case Definition?

300

Characterization of

the distribution of health-related states or

events.

What is Descriptive Epidemiology?

300

Arises from infections transmitted from one infected person to another

What is Propagated?

300

Different ways in which disease is

transferred

What is Modes of Transmission?

300

Ongoing, usual, or constant

presence of a disease in a community or

among a group of people; a disease is said

to be endemic when it continually prevails in

a region

What is an Endemic?

300

The first disease case brought to the

attention of the epidemiologist.

What is an Index Case?

400

This triangle is based

on the infectious disease model and is

useful in showing the interaction and

interdependence of the agent, host, environment, and time

What is an Epidemiology Triangle?

400

An infectious organism in

vertebrate animals (e.g., rabies virus,

Bacillus anthracis, Ebola virus, influenza

virus) that can be transmitted to humans

through direct contact, a fomite, or a vector

What is a Zoonosis?

400

Transfer of a disease to a human by a vector.

What is a Vector-borne Transmission?

400

Occurs when

victims of a common-source epidemic have

person-to-person contact with others and

spread the disease, resulting in a

propagated outbreak

What is a Mixed-Epidemic?

400

Person who becomes infected and ill after a disease and ill after a disease has been introduced into a population and who is infected as a result of contact with the primary case

What is a Secondary Case?

500

Any attempt to restore an afflicted person to

a useful, productive, and satisfying lifestyle

and to provide the highest quality of life possible, given the extent of the disease

and disability; a component of tertiary

prevention.

What is Rehabilitation?

500

An inanimate (nonliving) object

such as a piece of clothing, a door handle,

or a utensil that can harbor an infectious

agent and is capable of being a means of

transmission

What is a Fomite?

500

Transmission from an individual to its

offspring through sperm, placenta, milk, or

vaginal fluids

What is Vertical Transmission?

500

Occurrence of cases of

an illness, specific health-related behavior,

or other health-related events clearly in

excess of normal expectancy in a

community or region

What is an Epidemic?

500

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 has the cause of the

symptoms connected to a suspected

pathogen

What is a Suspect Case?
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