Classic Theory
History
Definitions
Transmission
Misc.
100

What is the epidemiology triad?

It includes the agent, host, and environment. 

100

What is humors?

Include blood, phlegm, yellow bile and black bile.

100

What is Epidemiology?

The Study of the distribution and determinates of health related states in specific population, and the application of this study to control health problems.

100

What is the chain of infection?

It is made up of links in sequential order, which include: Agent, resevoir, mode of transmission, portal of entry and host.

100

What is a carrier?

An infected person who shows no evidence of clinical disease but can still infect others.

200

What is a host?

A person or animal that provides a suitable place for an infectious agent to grow and multiply.

200

What is miasmas?

vapours rising from rotting refuse or stagnant water.

200

What is Substantive Epidemiology

The body of accumulated knowledge arising from years of Descriptive Epidemiology.

200

What is direct transmission?

Person to person transmission.

200

What are levels of prevention?

Primary, Secondary, tertiary are all examples.

300

What is an agent?

An organism, substance or force whose presence or absence is necessary for a disease process to occur.

300

Who is Hippocrates?

The first father of epidemiology.

300

What is incubation period?

The interval from infection to the time of onset of clinical illness or when symptoms appear

300

What is indirect transmission?

It includes both vehicle and vector-borne contact.

300

What are the classifications of disease severity?

Includes inapparent disease, clinical disease, severe outcome/fatal illness.


400

What is a non-infectious disease?

The greatest proportion of mortality in "developed countries"

400

Who is Galen?

Added two new elements to Hippocrates humors, was the roman emperor's personal physician.

400

What is the natural history of disease?

The processes of normally leading to disease occurrence, before any intervention, and to the the course and outcome of the disease process.

400

Whats is a mechanical vector?

It is the transfer of infectious agent from a vector's body to the host.

400

What is secondary prevention strategy?

Breast self exam


500

What is Iceburg metaphor?

Includes both the apparent clinical disease and the inapparent subclincial disease.


500

Who is Fracastorius?

First to claim that disease was transfered from one person to another who then develops the disease, called contagion.

500

What is immunogenicity?

The ability of an agent to produce systemic or local immunologic reactions in the host.

500

What is indirect transmission?

It is the spread of airborne droplets over large distances is an example.

500

What is primary prevention strategies?

Pasturization of milk