Epidemiology
Communicable Diseases
Non-communicable Diseases
Substance Use
Injury and Violence
100

Considered the founder of epidemiology

Who is John Snow

100

A concept used in public health to explain how conditions are caused by multiple interconnected factors rather than a single cause

What is Web of Causation Model?

100

This is the number one cause of death, per the CDC

What is Heart disease?

100

The leading cause of death and disability

What is smoking tobacco?

100

Two population that have a higher risk of fall

Who are Toddlers and elderly?

200

Describing disease patterns by THIS , THIS, and THIS is a fundamental step in investigating health events.

What is person, place, and time

200

The ability of a pathogen to cause disease in a host

What is pathogenicity?

200

Chronic diseases not passed from person to person

What are non-communicable diseases?

200

Adolescents/young adults are the highest users of  THIS, also known as ENDS

What are Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems?

200

A primary violence prevention strategy for nurses is THIS

What is education through preventions programs and workshops?

300

This epidemiological model is made up of Agent, Host, and environment

What is the Epidemiological triangle?

300

Mosquito is the primary vector for this Pathogen

What is West Nile virus?

300

Diabetes, Hypertension, and Obesity are examples of ________

What are NON communicable disease?

300

THIS is a condition in which a person's body becomes less responsive to a drug, alcohol, or other substance after repeated use. As tolerance develops, the person needs a larger amount of the substance to achieve the same effect that a smaller amount once produced.

What is substance tolerance?

300

_______is a pattern of behavior by a current or former intimate partner that causes physical, psychological, emotional, sexual, or economic harm

What is Intimate Partner Violence (IPV)?

400

A system where public health officials actively seek out cases by regularly contacting healthcare providers, hospitals, or labs.

What is Active Surveillance?

400

Spread of disease through inanimate objects

What is fomite transmission

400

A primary nursing intervention for non-communicable diseases

What is prevention?

400

Substance abuse prevention model that focuses on those identified as actively involved in substance abuse

What is Indicated prevention model?

400

Type of violence in which many people involved- Example: Protestors violence against police

What is collective violence?

500

Three disadvantages of Passive surveilance.

What are underreporting, delays in reporting, May be incomplete or less accurate?

500

This is a type of immunity that occurs when a person is given antibodies produced by another organism, rather than producing them on their own.

What is Artificial passive immunity?

500

Nurse prevention efforts for non-communicable diseases would be focused on THIS

What are modifiable risk factors?

500

Anxiety, sweating, and nausea are symptoms that occur with abrupt withdrawal from this substance

What is Alcohol Abuse?

500

Strong social support and reduces access to firearms are two protective factors against THIS. 

What is self-directed violence?