BASICS OF PUBLIC HEALTH
DISEASE TRANSMISSION CONCEPTS
LEVELS OF PREVENTION
EPIDEMICS, ENDEMICS, PANDEMICS WOW
CASE CONCEPTS
100

One of the main sciences of Public Health that studies health-related determinates of the human population.

What is epidemiology?

100

An object or material that can carry infections and a capable means of transmission.

What is a fomite?

100

The first step in the levels of prevention. In this phase, you are preventing disease before it happens. 

What is primary prevention?

100

The spread of a disease or illness in a community or region.

What is an epidemic?

100

A person in a population that has been identified as having a disease, disorder, injury, or condition.

What is a case?

200

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

What is descriptive epidemiology? 

200

An invertebrate animal that transmits an infection from one host to another. Also an object with magnitude and a direction (in math).

What is a vector?

200

Changed behavior on behalf of the individual to prevent a disease or disorder.

What is active primary prevention?

200

The spread of a disease or illness, attacking a population across an extensive region, country, or continent. 

What is a pandemic?

200

In cases of an epidemic, this is the first disease case in a population.

What is a primary case?

300

The quantifying factors and causes of health-related states/events.

What is analytic epidemiology?

300

An infectious organism in vertebrate animals that can be transmitted to humans.

What is Zoonosis?

300

No required behavior change to prevent a disease or disorder. Examples can be taking vitamins or drinking fluoridated water

What is passive primary prevention?

300

A constant presence of a disease or illness in a community. Continuous prevalence. 

What is an endemic?

300

The first disease case brought to epidemiologists' attention.

What is an index case?

400

The ability of a program to create the desired effect among participants in the program compared to those who do not.

What is efficacy?

400

A ___ contains, spreads, or harbors an infectious organism. 

What is a carrier?

400

Health screening and detection activities to identify a disease.

What is secondary prevention?

400

An infectious-disease epidemic that arises from a specific source.

What is a common-source epidemic?

400

Individuals who have been infected with a disease after it has been introduced to a population by primary cases.

What is a secondary case?

500

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

What is effectiveness?

500

The home of an infectious agent where it can grow, multiply and survive.

What is a reservoir?

500

The process of stopping the progression of a disease or disorder before it worsens. May require excessive care.

What is tertiary prevention?

500

An infectious-disease epidemic that arises from infections transmitted from person to person.

What is a propagated epidemic?

500

An individual (or group of individuals) who share symptoms of a disease/condition yet not has not been diagnosed.

What is a suspect case?