Chapter 14 (for final)

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72 Terms

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Epidemiology

The field of medicine that studies disease or adverse occurrences experienced by populations.

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What are the five W’s epidemiologists characterize their work

  • Who

  • What

  • Where

  • When

  • Why

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What is the idea of public health?

Practices and activities designed to prevent diseases or other negative outcomes in a community, a country, or in the world.

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Within the U.S. Public Health Services, what center is charged with protecting the public health?

Disease control and prevention (CDC)

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Who was the first to collect and use health, disease, and death statistics to improve health?

Florence Nightingale

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What did Florence Nightingale do during the Crimean War?

Used her ability to identify patterns and statistics to implement a change in practices.

  • Thirty-two out of every 100 soldiers would die, but Florence changed this to 2 out of every 100 died with her institute.

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Who is John Snow?

A doctor during London’s Soho neighborhood cholera epidemic (1854) made a map indicating cholera cases in the area to represent his hypothesis for the spread of the disease.

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What did John Snow hypothesize?

That water coming from a specific pump harbored the cholera bacterium

  • His map showed that cases clustered around a single pump, which was removed, and the epidemic stopped.

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When was CDC established and what was its goal?

  • 1946

  • To slow down the spread of malaria

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What is the Epidemic Intelligence Service (EIS)

  • Established 1950s

  • Scientists that can be quickly activated and sent anywhere in the world to respond to outbreaks

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Prevalence of disease

Total number of existing cases with respect to the entire population

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Incidence of disease

  • Measures the number of new cases over a certain time period

  • Also known as case or morbidity rate

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Mortalilty rate

Measures the numher of deaths in a population due to a certain disease

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Point-source epidemic curve pattern

Infectious agents came from a single source, and all victims were exposed at the same time

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Common-source epidemic curve pattern

Exposure to a single source of infection that can occur over a period of time

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Propagated epidemic curve pattern

Results from an infectious agent that is communicable from person to person and is propagated over time in a population

  • Influencza is a classic example

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Index case

The first patient found in an epidemiological investigation

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Endemic

An infectious disease that exhibits a relatively steady frequency over a long time period in a particular geographic locale

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Sporadic disease

Occasional cases are reported at irregular intervals in random locales

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Epidemic

Statistics indicate that the prevalence of endemic or sporadic disease is increasing beyond what is expected for that population

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Pandemic

Spread of an epidemic across continents

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Four different stages epidemiologists think of when it comes to disease

  • Susceptible host

  • Subclinical disease

  • Stage of clinical disease

  • Recovery, disability, or death

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Susceptible host

A person who has not yet encountered the agent or the circumstances that will result in an altercation in health

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Subclincial disease

Period of time after the exposure occurs where damage is not apparent to the host or health care provider

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Clinical disease

Most obvious effects of the disease are visible as signs and symptoms

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Three main ways signs and symptoms can play out in clinical disease stage

  • Complete recovery

  • Remaining symptoms that we refer to as disability

  • Death

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Screening Test are

  • Noninasive

  • Cheap

  • Easy to perform to detect diseases before symptoms occur

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Diagnostic tests are

  • More invasive

  • More hazardous

  • Less patient acceptance

  • Have lower accuracy

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A positive screening test is usally followed by a more accurate…

Diagnostic-style test

  • Example: Pap smears are screening tests for cancer, but a biopsy would be a diagnostic test

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Specificity

Determined by how many people it calls positive who are actually negative (false positives)

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Sensitivity

Determined by how many people who were positive were incorrectly found negative (false negative)

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Causative agents of a partifucal disease is often determined by:

  • Using Koch’s postulates

  • Molecular techniques (for example PCR)

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How is correlation observed

When one of the studied variables changes in the same direction as the other variable, but without more information, an observed correlation does not indicate causation

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Randomized control trials (RCTs)

Test exposures that might have positive effects, as opposed to ones that are potentially detrimental

  • Giving someone an experimental drug and seeing if they get better

  • Good for experimenatal groups

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Cross-sectional studies

The two factors (exposure and disease) are collected at a single point in time, with no refrence to which might have occured first

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Case-control

A group of people is categorized based on whether they have the condition (outcome) or not. Then both groups are asked about a certain exposure they have had to determine if one exposure stands out in the group with the condition.

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Cohort study

People without the condition in question are enrolled in the study and followed over time, monitored both for the appearance of a disease and for several exposure factors that are suspected of leading to that disease.

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Main crietria to declare exposure as causative

  • Strength of association:

  • Consistency of association

  • Specificity of association

  • Temporality of association

  • Biologic Plausibility

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Strenght of association

Dependent on statistical analysis and asks how strongly the exposure and the outcome are sometimes associated

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Consistency of association

When multiple studies of the same and different designs provide the same result, then we can call the findings

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Specificity of association

Refers ot the extent that only one exposure is associated with a disease, or exposure only results in a single disease.

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Temporalilty of association

The cause you are investigating can be shown to have occured before the outcome

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Biologic plausibility

Traces a biological line between the exposure and the outcome as reinforcing evidence

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Check for understanding: The number of new cases of disease over a certain time period is the____

Incidence

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Check for understanding:The____rate is the number of persons afficted with infectious disease.

Morbidity rate

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Check for understanding: An ____ disease is seen at a steady frequency over a long period of time in a particular location.

Endemic

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Check for understanding: An ___ is an epidemic occuring over multiple continents

Pandemic

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Check for understanding: Name three study designs that help contribute to understanding causation

  • Cohort study

  • Case-control study

  • Randomized controlled trial (RCT)

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Surveillance refers to

Collecting, analyzing, and reporting of data on the rates of occurrence, mortality, morbidity, and transmission of infections

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Physicians and hospitals report all________

Notifiable disease that are brought to their attention

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Government agency responsible for keeping track of infectious disease is the ____

CDC

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What reports does the CDC publish weekly of diseases

Morbidity and Mortality reports

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The CDC estimates that every day, 1 in 31 hospital patients and 1 in 43 nursing home residents have an…

HAI ( Healthcare-associated infections)

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Top four HAI’s

  • Catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTI)

  • Central line-assocaited bloodstream infections )CLABSI)

  • Surgical site infections (SSI)

  • Ventilator-associated events (VA)

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Medicare and Medicaid programs stopped reimbursements to hospitals for ______, _______, and ______ aquired during hospital care

  • CAUTI’s

  • CLABSI’s

  • SSIs

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Adoption of universal precautions:

  • Medical asepsis

  • Surgical asepsis

  • Infection-control officer

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R0 (R-sub-zero or R-naught)

Term to give the basic reproduction rate

  • Describes how many susceptible people (on average) that one infected person will spread the infection to

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Case fatality rate (CFR)

The number of people who die of the disease divided by the number of people infected

  • Based on people who receive no treatment

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R-sub-zero and CFR can vary based on

  • Geographic location

  • Circumstances of an outbreak

  • Variant of the microbe

  • Vaccinations are most needed for high R-sub-zero disease

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What plays a critical role in controlling infectious disease

Vaccines

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Herd immunity

When a significant portion of a population becomes immune to an infectious disease, it limits further disease spread

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Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting System (VAERS)

Centralized system for reporting and advertising events happening after a vaccination

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Who can make a report whether the adverse effect is related to the vaccine or not?

  • Patients

  • Parents

  • Healthcare providers

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Emerging disease

Caused by newly identified microbes

  • Examples: SARS and novel strains of influenza

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Reemerging disease

Those that have affected the human population in the past but are now becoming more prevalent due to travel, habitat invasion, or the development of drug resistance.

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Global Disease Detection (GDD) service

Collaboration between the CDC, the WHO, and the local governments all around the world to monitor disease emergence and to spot and limit epidemics

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CDC also

  • Monitors developing situations in health and disease

  • Creates strategies to decrease excess morbitidty and mortality

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What disease is caused by Trypanosoma Cruzi

Chagas disease

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What disease is caused by the tapeworm Taenia solium

Neurocysticercosis

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What is caused by worms that travel through tissues and can cause blindness

Toxocariasis

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What infected 60 milllion people in the United States

Toxoplasmosis

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What is a protozal infection of the genital tract that leaves those infected more vulnerable to other sexually transmitted infections and leads to premature births in infected mothers?

Trichomoniasis