Shared Flashcard Set

Details

Infectious Disease Epidemiology
Lecture 37 (Thurs 09/17/09)
19
Medical
Professional
09/19/2009

Additional Medical Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
what is the epidemiological triad?
Definition
  • host
  • infectious agent
  • environment that promotes exposure of human host to the agent & determines whether an outbreak will occur
Term
what is infectious disease epidemiology?
Definition

the study of the distribution (who, where, when) and determinants (risk factors) of infectious disease in populations

 

Term
what are the determinants of disease outbreaks?
Definition
  • host: age, sex, race, customs, occupation, genetic profile, immune status, nutritional status
  • agent:bacteria, virus, fungi, parasites
  • environment: temp, humidity, crowding, water treatment, milk pasteurization, food handling
Term

what are examples of the various modes of transmission?

Definition
  • direct
    • person to person (resp droplets-flu, contact-scabies)
  • indirect
    • common vehicle (air-Tb, water-cryptosportidiosis, food-E.coli)
    • vector (insects-malaria/W Nile, animals-bats/rabies)
Term
what is herd immunity?
Definition

resistance of a group to an attack by a disease to which a large proportion of the members of the group are immune; once a certain percent of the population is immune, the likelihood is smaller that an infectious person will contact a non-immune person (dimished probability of exposure)

 

requires:

  • single host species
  • direct transmission
  • full immunity
Term
what is definition of an outbreak?
Definition

increase in the incidence of an event over the expected rates, or baseline rate that is usually found in that population (endemic)

Term

what are some examples of rare infectious diseases, one case of which would be sufficient of an investigation to stop an outbreak?

Definition
  • anthrax
  • pneumonic plague
  • rabies (human)
  • smallpox
  • ebola
Term
why is outbreak investigation crucial?
Definition
  • prevent further cases
  • discover and describe "new" diseases (emerging pathogens)
  • learn new mechanisms of transmission for "old" diseases
  • evaluate existing prevention strategies
  • address public concern about the outbreak
Term
the case definition needs to specify the clinical syndrome of interest with restrictions on...
Definition
  • time
  • place
  • person
Term

whats the difference between a probable and a confirmed case?

Definition

probable case: no lab criteria available

 

confirmed case: clinical plus lab criteria met

Term
what is sensitivity and how is it calculated?
Definition

the ability of a case definition to accurately identify those who have the new infection

 

(a)/ (a+c) x 100

 

a=true positives

c=false negatives (but actually positive)

Term
what is specificity and how is it calculated?
Definition

the ability of the case definition to correctly identify those who do not have the new infection

 

d/(b+d) x 100

 

minimizing false positives (b) will lead to more accuracy in determining the cause of the outbreak

Term
how is cumulative incidence of disease calculated?
Definition

new cases

-----------------

population @ risk

 

*during same time period as the cases

Term
who is defined as "at risk"?
Definition

individuals are at risk of disease if they:

  • do not have disease at start of f/u period
  • are capable of developing the disease
    • have organ of interest, ie
    • meet case definition and its restrictions on time, place, and person
Term

what is plotted on an epidemic curve and what information can be determined by the shape of the curve?

Definition
  • y axis: number of cases
  • x axis: time
    • time period over which rate is calculated
    • at which each case presents
  • shape of curve tells us:
    • common point source v. on going transmission
    • incubation period
Term

how do single vs. multiple exposures show up on the epidemic curve?

Definition

single exposure: one peak, no index case

 

multiple exposure: bimodal (2 peaks)

 

continuous: no apparent peaks...level...

Term
define the incubation period
Definition

interval from receipt or transmission of the infection to the onset of clinical illness

 

during the incubation period, the person does not have any symptoms or signs of illness

 

disease specific

Term
what should the hypothesis explain?
Definition
  • source of infection
  • mode of transmission

hypothesis developed with the help of:

  • epidemic curve (pattern, incubation period)
  • line listing (descriptive analyses of cases)
Term
how must hypothesis be tested?
Definition

in a comparative study with controls (people at risk but w/o disease)

Supporting users have an ad free experience!