Epidemiology
Epidemic, Pandemic, Etc.
Biology
Transmissions
Prevention
100

A field of science that studies health problems within populations.

What is epidemiology?

100

An epidemic affecting or attacking the population of an extensive region, country, or continent.

What is a pandemic?

100

Any virus, bacteria, fungus, or parasite.

What is a pathogen?

100

The direct and immediate transfer of an infectious agent from one person to another.

What is direct transmission?

100

Preventing a disease or disorder before it happens.

What is primary prevention?

200

The 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?

200
The ongoing, usual, or constant presence of a disease in a community or among a group of people.

What is an endemic?

200

An 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?

200

Occurs when an agent is transferred or carried by some intermediate item, organism, means, or process to a susceptible host.

What is indirect transmission?

200

Requires behavior change on the part of the individual.

What is active primary prevention?

300
The ability of a program to produce benefits among those who are offered the program.

What is effectiveness?

300

The occurrence of cases of an illness, specific health-related behavior, specific health-related behavior, or other health-related events in excess of normal expectancy.

What is an epidemic?

300

An infectious organism in vertebrate animals that can be transmitted to humans through direct contact, a fomite, or a vector.

What is zoonosis?

300

Occurs when droplets or dust particles carry the pathogen to the host and cause infection.

What is airborne transmission?

300

Doesn't require behavior change on the part of the individual. (e.g. drinking fluorinated water)

What is passive primary prevention?

400

The characterization of the distribution of health-related states or events.

What is descriptive epidemiology?

400

Arise from infections transmitted from one infected person to another. Transmission can occur through direct or indirect routes.

What is a propagated epidemic?

400
The habitat in or on which an infectious agent lives, grows, multiplies, and on which it depends for its survival in nature.

What is a reservoir?

400

When an arthropod conveys the infectious agent. It doesn't cause the disease, but it does transmit it.

What is vector-borne transmission?

400

Aimed at the health screening and detection activities used to identify disease.

What is secondary prevention?

500

Finding and quantifying associations, testing hypotheses, and identifying causes of health-related states or events.

What is analytic epidemiology?
500
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?

500

An individual who has been exposed to and harbors a pathogen but has not become ill or shown any of the symptoms of the disease.

What is a passive carrier?

500

When the pathogen undergoes changes as part of its life cycle while within the host/vector and before being transmitted to a new host.

What is biological transmission?

500

Aimed to slow or block the progression of a disability, condition, or disorder in order to keep it from advancing and requiring excessive care.

What is tertiary prevention?