Case Concepts
Preventions
Disease Transmission Concepts
Methods of Disease Transmission
Epidemiology
100
any virus, bacteria, fungus, or parasite that can cause disease.

What is a pathogen?

100

Preventing a disease or disorder before it happens.

What is primary prevention?

100

An infected person or animal that contains, spreads, or harbors an infectious organism. 

What is a carrier?

100

It's the uninterrupted and immediate transfer of an infectious agent from one person to another which requires physical contact.

What is direct transmission?

100

It's a epidemic that affects or attacks the population of an extensive region, country, or continent.

What is a pandemic?

200

the first disease case in the population in an epidemic.

What is a primary case?

200

Screening to identify diseases before symptoms are shown

What is secondary prevention?

200

It's a nonliving object like a door handle or a utensil that can harbor an infectious agent and and is capable of being a means of transmission.

What is a formite?
200

when an agent is transferred or carried by some intermediate item, organism, means, or process to a host, resulting in disease. (dust particles, food, water)

What is indirect transmission?

200

It's the occurrence of cases of an illness that is in excess of normal expectancy in a community or region. 

What is an epidemic?
300

A person in a population who has been identified as having a particular disease, disorder, injury, or condition. 

What is a case?

300

It's the efforts to limit disability by providing rehabilitation where disease, injury, or a disorder has already occurred and caused damaged.

What is tertiary prevention?

300

It's a invertebrate animal like ticks and mosquitos that transmits infection by conveying the infectious agent from one host to another.

What is a vector?

300

It's when droplets or dust particles carry the pathogen to the host and cause infection (pneumonia, rubella, respiratory viruses).

What is airborne transmission?

300

Is an ongoing, usual, or constant presence of a disease in a community or among a group of people.

What is an endemic?

400

an individual or group of individuals who has all the signs and symptoms of a disease but has not been diagnosed as having the disease

What is a suspect case?

400

Is a behavior change on the part of the individual that prevents a disease or disorder before it happens like exercising and not smoking.

What is active primary prevention?

400

Is the habitat (living or nonliving) in or on which an infectious agent lives, grows, and multiplies, and on which it depends for its survival in nature.

What is a reservoir?

400

It's when an arthropod like mosquito and ticks conveys the infectious agent.

What is vector-borne transmission?

400

Is a type of infectious-disease that arises from a specific source.

What is a common-source epidemic? 

500

the first disease case brought to the attention of the epidemiologist.

What is an index case?

500
It does not require behavior change on the part of the individual like eating vitamins-enriched food or drinking fluoridated water. 

What is passive primary prevention?

500

It's an infectious organism in vertebrate animals like the rabies virus and Ebola virus that can be transmitted to humans through direct contact, a fomite, or a vector.

What is zoonosis?

500

It's the transfer of a pathogen to a susceptible host by a vector, with the pathogen undergoing reproduction, development changes, or both while in the vector.

What is biological transmission?

500

A type of infectious-disease that arises from infections transmitted from one infected person to another.

What is a propagated epidemic?