Epidemiology Catch all
Epidemiology Model
Spread of Disease
Causation and Prevention
Health Measures
100

The study of the distribution and determinants of health-related states in specified populations, and the application of this study to control of health problems.

What is epidemiology?

100

A human who can get the disease.

What is the host?

100

The habitat in which the agent normally lives, grows, and multiplies (includes humans, animals, and the environment).

What is the reservoir [of an infectious agent]?

100

Mammograms and blood pressure screenings for early detection and diagnosis before the onset of symptoms are examples of this.

What are types of secondary prevention?

100

The number of cases divided by the size of the population per unit of time.

What is a rate?

200

This model contains the elements of host, agent, and environment.

What is the epidemiologic triangle?

200

An infectious microorganism or pathogen: a virus, bacterium, parasite, or other microbe.

What is the agent?

200

This involves contact between a person with the disease and another person, or droplet spread.

What is direct transmission?

200

This goal of this level of prevention is rehabilitation or treatment to reduce complications and disabilities.

What is tertiary prevention?

200

The frequency and pattern of health events in a population.

What is distribution?

300

This is another term for illness, or illness rate.

What is morbidity?

300

Extrinsic factors that affect the agent and the opportunity for exposure.

What is environment?

300

An epidemic that has spread over several countries or continents, usually affecting a large number of people.

What is a pandemic?

300

Health promotion and specific protection strategies such as seatbelts or immunizations are two examples of this.

What is primary prevention?

300

The number of existing cases (old and new) of a disease/condition in population over a specified time period.

What is a prevalence rate?

400

Any factor, whether event, characteristic, or other definable entity, that brings about a change in a health condition or other defined characteristic. 

What are determinants?

400

According to the epidemiologic triangle, this is needed for disease to happen.

What is the interaction of the agent, host, and environment?

400

Transfer from a reservoir to a host by suspended air particles, inanimate objects (vehicles such as food), or animate intermediaries (vectors such as mosquitoes).

What is indirect transmission?

400

Primary prevention occurs during this period of the natural history of human disease.

What is the Prepathogenesis period?

400

(# of deaths in first 12 months x 1,000) divided by (# of live births for the same year)

What is an infant mortality rate?

500

The constant presence and/or usual prevalence of a disease or infectious agent in a population within a geographic area.

What is an endemic (i.e., baseline level of disease)?

500

The progression of a disease process in an individual over time, in the absence of treatment. (i.e., from susceptibility through exposure, subclinical disease [pathologic changes occur], onset of symptoms, usual diagnosis, clinical disease, and ending with the recovery, disability or death.)

What is the natural history of disease?

500

When the agent leaves its reservoir or host through a portal of exit, is conveyed by some mode of transmission, and enters through an appropriate portal of entry to infect a susceptible host.

What is the chain of infection?

500

This model of causes of disease includes the following categories of factors: Biological and behavioral; Environmental; Immunological; Nutritional; Genetic; and Services, social, and spiritual.

What is the BEINGS model/acronym?

500

A rate is converted to this to permit comparisons between different population groups (with a common denominator - usually 1,000 or 10,000 or 100,000).

What is a standard base rate (SBR)?