Measure of Epidemiology
Transmission
Carriers
Cases
Prevention
100

Diseases that affect a large number of people but are bound to a certain region or population. 

What is an epidemic?

100

When the transmission of disease occurs through contact or indigestion. 

What is vehicle-borne transmission?
100

Someone who harbors an infectious disease

What is a carrier? 

100
The person that is the first one to introduce a disease to population

What is a primary case?


100

Intervention that is applied before there is evidence of sickness or injury

What is primary prevention?

200

Diseases that affect a large number of people across regions and countries

What is a pandemic?

200

Diseases that transmit from person to person

What is propagated?

200

Someone who carries a disease for a significant time and is able to transmit it to others

What is an active carrier?

200

The person that was the first document instance of a disease

What is an index case?


200

Interventions that are applied after a disease begins but before symptoms are shown

What is secondary prevention?

300

Studies the "who, what, where, and when" of health problems. 

What is Descriptive Epidemiology? 

300

Diseases that spread through the exposure of a common element. 

What is common-source?

300

One who carries an infection from time to time but not continuously

What are intermittent carriers?

300

A person who gets exposed to a disease through another who is infected 

What is a secondary case?

300

Interventions that are applied after disease or an injury has been confirmed

What is tertiary prevention?

400

Performance of interventions in "Real World" scenarios

What is effectiveness?

400

A disease that can be transmitted to humans by animals. 

What is Zoonosis?

400

Carriers that transmit the disease before symptoms and illness begin

What are incubatory carriers?

400

Cases that are not confirmed and are awaiting test results for confirmations. This term is also used in large outbreaks as officials feel that it unnecessary to run a lab test on every patient. 

What is a suspect case? 

400

Interventions that require behavioral change such as wearing masks or general lifestyle changes

What is active primary prevention?

500

Studies the "how's and why's" of health problems. 

What is analytical epidemiology? 

500

Objects that are likely to carry diseases

What is a fomite?

500

People who have recovered from an illness but are still capable of transmitting it to others

What are convalescent carriers?

500

A set of standards that help determine whether a person has a disease, syndrome, or another health problem

What is a case definition?

500

Care that someone receives in order to heal damages brought by disease or injury

What is rehabilitation?