Food and Waterborne Diseases
Vaccine Preventable Diseases
Zoonotic and Vector-borne Diseases
Pandemics, Epidemics and Other Notifiable Diseases
History of Epidemiology and Disease Surveillance
100

According to Philip Tierno, a microbiologist of the New York University School of Medicine, this room in common houses is the dirtiest, harboring many food-borne pathogens.

Kitchen

100

The most recent Philippines Measles outbreak occured in this year

2019

100

The first dengue vaccine, the infamous Dengvaxia® (CYD-TDV), was developed by this company

Sanofi Pasteur

100

A trade deal with China unleashed one of the deadliest of the great pandemics. Italy was hit especially hard.

Bubonic plague

100

This theory, hypothesized by Doctor Girolamo Fracastoro, states that "it is actually small, living particles that cause disease"

Germ Theory

200

World Hepatitis Day falls on this date

July 28

200

He developed the first polio vaccine

Jonas Salk

200

World Rabies Day falls on this date

September 28

200

This pandemic occured during the first world war. Fun Fact, the disease killed more people than the actual war!

The Spanish Flu

200

Sickness was once thought to have been caused by an imbalance of this collective term for: blood, yellow bile, black bile, and phlegm.

Humors

300

Doctors called her the most dangerous woman in America. An immigrant who had worked as a cook, she was New York’s patient zero, passing the fever to 51 people. By year’s end, 20,000 had died.

Mary "Typhoid Mary" Mallon

300

Aside from anti-toxoids and immunoglobulins, it is the drug of choice to treat (not cure) a patient with Tetanus.

Metronidazole

300

The name of this disease is derived from the Italian words for "bad air"

Malaria

300

This sacred text instructed in its guide to pandemics. “If you hear of a plague in a land, do not enter it; and if it breaks out in the land where you stay, do not leave.”

Holy Quran

300

In the early 20th century, this branch of science was introduced into epidemiology thereby adding statistical support to the field

Mathematics

400

As of 1961, there have been this number of Cholera Pandemics

Seven (7)

400

Charles IV of Spain launched history’s first global immunization campaign. The pathogens of this disease were extracted from a diseased cow, then passed arm-to-arm in a human chain from the Canary Islands to the Americas and then on to the Philippines.

Smallpox

400

The written history of leptospirosis was initiated by this Professor of Medicine at Heidelburg University.

Adolf Weil

400

The first case of Ebola was documented in this West African Country

Guinea

400

He is Dubbed as the Father of Field Epidemiology.

John Snow

500

The first documented case of Cholera in the Philippines happened on this year

1858

500

In 1613, Spain experienced an epidemic of this disease. The year is known as El Año de los Garrotillos (The Year of Strangulations) in the history of Spain.

Diphtheria

500

The name of this disease is derived from a word in the Kimakonde language, meaning “to become contorted”

Chikungunya

500

In February 1692, in the Massachusetts village of Salem, eight young women were accused by their neighbors of witchcraft. However, some historians blame the hysteria on a viral fever spread by insects and birds.

Encephalitis

500

he is the first person known to have examined the relationships between the occurrence of disease and environmental influences.

Hippocrates

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