Basics of Epidemiology
Disease Patterns and Outbreaks
Transmission of Disease
Types of Cases and Carriers
Prevention and control
100

The study of how diseases affect the health and illness of populations, and how to control or prevent health problems. 

What is Epidemiology 

100

An increase in the number of disease cases above what is normally expected in a specific area.

What is an Epidemic

100

Disease transmission via contaminated objects like food, water, or utensils.

What is a Vehicle-Borne Transmission

100

A person identified as having a particular disease or health condition.

What is a Case

100

Preventing the onset of disease before it occurs (e.g., vaccination, healthy lifestyle).

What is Primary Prevention

200

A branch of epidemiology that investigates the causes and associations of diseases by studying how exposure relates to outcome.

What is Analytic Epidemiology

200

An epidemic that has spread over multiple countries or continents, usually affecting many people.

What is a Pandemic

200

Transmission of disease through vectors such as mosquitoes, ticks, or fleas.

What is a Vector-Borne Transmission

200

The first documented case of a disease in a population or outbreak.

What is an Index Case

200

Detecting disease early and taking action to halt or slow its progress (e.g., screenings).

What is Secondary Prevention

300

Describes the patterns of disease occurrence in terms of person, place, and time.

What is Descriptive Epidemiology

300

The constant presence or usual prevalence of a disease in a population or region.

What is an Endemic

300

Immediate transfer of infectious agents through physical contact between an infected person and a susceptible person.

What is Direct Transmission

300

The first person to bring the disease into a population.

What is a Primary Case

300

Reducing the impact of an ongoing illness or injury that has lasting effects (e.g., rehabilitation programs).

What is Tertiary Prevention

400

A model that explains disease occurrence through interaction between agent (pathogen), host, and environment.


What is Epidemiology Triangle

400

An outbreak that results from a group of people being exposed to a common infectious agent or toxin.

What is a Common-Source Epidemic

400

Transmission through an intermediary object or person, rather than direct contact.

What is Indirect Transmission

400

A person who becomes infected from exposure to the primary case.

What is a Secondary Case

400

Requires individuals to take action to prevent disease (e.g., exercise, immunization).

What is Active Primary Prevention

500

A microorganism (like bacteria, virus, or parasite) that can cause disease.

What is Pathogen

500

An outbreak that spreads from person to person over time.

What is a Propagated Epidemic

500

Spread of infectious agents via droplet nuclei that remain suspended in the air.

What is Airborne Transmission

500

An individual who harbors the infectious agent without showing symptoms and can transmit the disease to others.

What is a Carrier

500

Protection offered without active involvement from individuals (e.g., fluoridation of water).

What is Passive Primary Prevention