Hygiene & Sterility
Animal Health & Professionals
Disease & Pathogens
PPE & Protocols
Biosecurity & Preparedness
100

Define Hygiene

Practices that maintain cleanliness and health to prevent disease.

100

Define Animal Health

The overall well-being of animals, free from disease.

100

Define Disease

Disease – Abnormal condition harming body functions.

100

What does PPE stand for?

PPE – Personal Protective Equipment (gloves, masks, gowns, goggles).

100

Define biosecurity.

Biosecurity – Practices to prevent spread of disease between animals, humans, facilities.

200

How are aseptic and sterile different?

Aseptic = Free from pathogens; Sterile = Completely free of all microbes

200

Who are considered animal health professionals?

Animal health professionals – Vets, vet techs, animal scientists, public health officials.

200

What is a pathogen?

Pathogen – A microorganism that causes disease (bacteria, virus, fungus, parasite).

200

Define don and doff.

Don = Put on PPE; Doff = Remove PPE.

200

How do biosecurity measures help prevent disease transmission?

Biosecurity measures block disease transmission through barriers, cleaning, and isolation.

300

How does proper handwashing contribute to disease prevention?

Proper handwashing removes pathogens and reduces disease transmission.

300

Define veterinary and explain their role in biosecurity.

Veterinary – Medical professionals trained to diagnose/treat animal disease and protect biosecurity.

300

What are symptoms of infection?

Symptoms – Signs of illness (fever, coughing, lesions, abnormal behavior).

300

What is the importance of using PPE correctly in a veterinary setting?

Correct PPE use blocks pathogen exposure to both humans and animals.

300

How can biosecurity safeguard animal welfare?

Safeguards welfare by reducing illness, stress, and death in animals.

400

Why is surgical hygiene emphasized?

Surgical hygiene lowers risk of infection during medical procedures.

400

What is animal welfare and how is it connected to biosecurity?

Animal welfare – The humane treatment and well-being of animals; supported by biosecurity.

400

Define zoonotic disease and give one example.

Zoonotic disease – Disease that passes from animals to humans (e.g., rabies, salmonella).

400

What is a biohazard?

Biohazard – Material that poses a threat of infection (blood, feces, needles).

400

What is situational analysis and how does it help in biosecurity planning?

Situational analysis – Assessing risks and planning appropriate responses for disease prevention.

500

What is the significance of performing surgical gowning protocols properly?

Gowning properly ensures the sterile field is not contaminated.

500

What are the potential consequences of poor animal welfare practices?

Poor welfare → stress, illness, reduced productivity, disease spread.

500

How does biosecurity relate to public health in preventing zoonotic disease?

Biosecurity reduces spread of zoonoses, protecting humans and animals.

500

How does performing PPE protocols incorrectly put both humans and animals at risk?

Incorrect PPE use increases infection risk and disease spread.

500

What are the long-term impacts of failing to implement proper biosecurity measures?

Failing biosecurity → outbreaks, animal deaths, financial loss, public health risk.