Levels of Preventions
History of Epidemiology
Modes of Disease Transmission
Transmission Concepts
Infection and Causation
100

prenatal care like vitamins, nutrition like eating vitamin rich foods are examples of

What is passive primary prevention

100

This individual attempted to explain disease occurrence from a rational viewpoint. He is also considered the first epidemiologist

Who is Hipocrates

100

the immediate transfer of an infectious agent from one individual to another

What is direct transmission

100

an object that can hold an infectious agent and is possible for being a means of transmission

What is a fomite.

100

This describes the cycle of infectious agent, reservoir, portal of exit, mode of transmission, portal of entry, and susceptible host  

What is the chain of infection.

200
This level of prevention is focused on identifying the presence of the disease through screening and detection methods.

What is secondary prevention

200

This is the belief that everything is made of tiny particles

What is the atomic theory

200
small particles, like dust or droplets, cause infection by carrying the host.
What is airborne transmission
200

The habitat where an infectious agent lives, grows, and depends on for survival.

What is a reservoir.

200
Group/population, environment, and causative factors describe this.

What is the epidemiology triangle.

300

self management strategies, rehabilitation services, psychosocial strategies, and medical and surgical treatments are examples of

What is tertiary prevention

300

This term describes a method of immunizing patients against smallpox by introducing a weak strain in order to create immunity against more virulent strains

What is variolation

300

this is where the infection agent is carried by an arthropod

What is vector-borne transmission

300

This carries the infectious agent from home host to another. Examples include mite, mosquite, or tick.

What is a vector.

300

The pathogen enters through this in order to infect the host.

What is a portal of entry

400

Quitting smoking is an example of this type of prevention

What is active primary prevention.

400

This medical author once worked on classifying London fevers in the 1660s and 1670s.

Who is Thomas Sydenham

400

this can be a specific type of vector-borne disease transmission where a host is used as a ride to spread the disease. Hosts include rats or fleas.

What is mechanism transmission

400

A nonliving intermediary that transmits the infectious agent from a reservoir to a susceptible host.

What is a vehicle.

400

This is a site that the pathogen departs from, such as nose, mouth, or body fluids, in order to spread

What is a portal of exit.

500

Due to this type of prevention, noninfectious diseases are the main cause of death in the United States

What is primary prevention

500

This physical and anesthesiologist studied cholera and his work is considered one of the most important contributions to epidemiology. He is also worked for Queen Victoria of England.

John Snow

500

This type of transmission is where the pathogen changes during its life cycle in order to allow transmission. This is seen in malaria.

What is biological transmission

500

This individual can harbor the infectious organism but not display any symptoms or signs of the disease. This can relate to the COVID-19 patients who are symptomatic. 

What is a carrier.

500

This occurs from antibodies entering the body thorough the placenta or injections.

What is passive immunity.