Epidemiology
Principles
Carriers
Transmission
Prevention
100

uses observational studies of the distribution of disease in terms of person, place, and time.

Descriptive epidemiology

100

a measure of how well an intervention, such as a vaccine or medical device, performs in real-world clinical settings.

Effectiveness 

100

an infected individual who can transmit the disease to others.

Active carrier

100

physical contact between the source or reservoir and a susceptible host. 

Direct transmission

100

Aims to prevent disease or injury before it ever occurs

Primary prevention

200

the ability to produce a desired or intended result.

Efficacy
200

habitat in which agent normally lives

Reservoir

200

those who can transmit the agent during the incubation period before clinical illness begins.

Incubatory carrier

200

bacteria or viruses that are commonly transmitted through small respiratory droplets. 

Airborne transmission
200

strategies that do not require action by an individual for protection to occur.

Passive primary prevention

300

Measures the association between a particular exposure and a disease, using information collected from individuals. 

Analytic Epidemiology

300

a person who gets the disease from an exposure and is the first case in the population.

Primary Case

300

is a person or animal that is infected with a pathogen but does not show any symptoms of the disease.

Healthy or passive carrier

300

Disease that is transmitted to humans and other animals by blood- feeding anthropods. 

Vector-borne transmission

300

emphasizes early disease detection

Secondary prevention

400

an epidemic that has characteristics of both common-source and propagated epidemics

Mixed epidemic

400

a case that is classified as suspected for reporting purposes

Suspect case

400

when an individual or, animal, has been exposed to and harbors a disease-causing organism and who can intermittently spread the disease at different places or intervals

Intermittent carrier

400

pathogens are transmitted from the blood of an infected host to another host during interrupted feeding of the insects

Mechanical transmission

400

focuses on people who are already affected by a disease.

GOAL: improve quality of life!

Tertiary prevention

500

cuts across international boundaries, as opposed to regional epidemics

Pandemic

500

 is a model that scientists use to understand the factors that contribute to the spread of disease.- it has three vertices 

Epidemiology triangle

500

that who have recovered from their illness but remain capable of transmitting to others.

Convalescent Carriers 

500

occurs when a substance carries an infectious agent to a new host

Vehicle Transmission

500

A set of interventions designed to reduce disability in individuals 

Rehabilitation