Basic Definitions
Basic Definitions Part 2
Levels of Preventions
Disease Transmission
Historical Figures
100

The field of science that studies health problems within populations.

What is epidemiology?

100

Anything that contains, spreads, or harbors an infectious organism.

What is a carrier?

100

Preventing a disease before it happens.

What is primary prevention?

100

The transfer of an infectious agent from one person to another through physical contact.

What is a direct transmission?

100

Known as the Father of Epidemiology.

Who is John Snow?

200

An epidemic that affects a population of an extensive region.

What is a pandemic?

200

Within a community, cases of an illness becomes excessive of the normal expectency. 

What is an epidemic?

200

Identifying a disease in the first stage through health screening and detection activities. 

What is secondary prevention?

200

The transfer of an agent through a process, organism, or object like food.

What is indirect transmission?

200

Known as "Lady with the Lamp."

Who is Florence Nightingale?

300

The model shows the interaction between the agent, host, and environment.

What is the epidemiology triangle?

300

The habitat, living or nonliving, in which an infectious agent lives, grows, and multiplies.

What is reservior?

300

Providing rehabilitation before the disease worsens the individual.

What is tertiary prevention?

300

The transfer of disease from droplets or dust particles which is carrying the pathogen to the host.

What is an airborne transmission?

300

Invented a vaccination for smallpox.

Who is Edward Jenner?

400

Characterizing the outbreak of an infection, such as population that are affected and the region with high or low cases.

What is descriptive epidemiology?

400

Researching the causes and effects of an infection, such as testing a hypothesis.

What is analytic epidemiology?

400

An individual must change their behavior to prevent a disease.

What is active primary prevention?

400

An antropod, like a mosquito, being responsible for transmitting the pathogen to the host.

What is vector-borne transmission?

400

A cook who had been responsible for around 51 cases of typhoid fever.

Who is Mary Mallon?

500

An ongoing presence of an infection among a population.

What is an endemic?

500

The model shows the process of the transmission of disease which includes the following: infectious agent, reservior, portal of exit, mode of transmission, portal of entry, and susceptible host. 

What is the chain of infection?

500

Not needing to change one's behavior in order to prevent getting a disease.

What is passive primary prevention?

500

The transfer of disease from an inanimate object to the host, like swimming in a pool.

What is vehicle-borne transmission?

500

The first epidemiologist that introduced the terms of epidemic and endemic.

Who is Hippocrates?