Types of Prevention
Modes of Transmission
Chain of Infection
Historical Epidemics
Terms to Know
100

Behavioral change on the part of the individual to prevent disease before it happens

What is active primary prevention?

100

The transfer of bacteria or viruses that cause disease on dust particles or small respiratory droplets

What is airborne transmission?

100

The method why which a disease moves from host to host

What is mode of transmission?

100

A serious bacterial infection caused by germs in soil that primarily infected animals in the 1870s

What is anthrax?

100

Something capable of producing an effect; the cause of disease

What is an agent?

200

Any attempt to restore a useful, productive, and satisfying lifestyle to an individual with disease

What is rehabilitation?

200

The transfer of bacteria or viruses from a host and/or reservoir to someone susceptible

What is direct transmission?

200

Someone who is vulnerable to infection by an infectious agent

What is a susceptible host?

200

A highly infectious disease caused by a virus that causes high fever and pimple eruptions

What is smallpox?

200

Objects such as clothing, towels, and utensils that can be a reservoir for disease

What is a fomite?

300

Health screening and detection actions that serve to identify disease before it can develop

What is secondary prevention?

300

The transfer of infectious agents through an intermediate item, organism, means, or process to a susceptible host.

What is indirect transmission?

300

The habitat in which an infectious agent lives

What is a reservoir?

300

An intestinal infection caused by bacteria that releases a toxin to the intestines, increasing water release, epidemic in the 1850s

What is cholera?

300

The study of disease that arises from many factors

What is multifactorial etiology?

400

The limiting of disability by providing rehabilitation when a disease has already occurred and caused damage

What is tertiary prevention?

400

The transfer of infectious agents that cause disease through an object, such as through water or needle use.

What is vehicle-borne transmission?

400

The method by which an infectious agent enters and exits a reservoir and/or host

What is the portal of exit/entry?

400

An infectious disease that causes fever and hemorrhaging of the bowels in the early 1900s

What is typhoid fever?

400

Inoculation with a weak strain of a disease as a method to induce immunity against more virulent strains of the disease

What is variolation?

500

Prevention of disease without behavioral change on part of the individual

What is passive primary prevention?

500

The transfer of infectious agents through an arthropod acting as a transmitter.

What is vector-borne transmission?

500

The system used to describe how an infectious agent moves from a reservoir to a host

What is the chain of infection?

500

A uterine infection of the placental site secondary to childbirth, epidemic in the 1840s

What is childbed fever?

500

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

What is zoonosis?