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Morbidity rate is an important parameter used by epidemiologists to measure disease. If there are 10 new cases of measles per 10,000 individuals in a population in a two-month period, the morbidity rate is _______________.
0.1%
The first epidemiologist was ___________.
John Snow
Control measures should be directed toward the part of the infectious disease cycle that is _________.
most susceptible to control
Brian lives in a town where 98% of the population is immunized against measles. Brian is unlikely to get measles, despite the fact that he has never been immunized. This situation demonstrates the concept of
herd immunity
The vaccine used to prevent measles consists of live measles viruses. This type of vaccine is most likely
an attenuated vaccine
A subunit vaccine is composed of
purified parts of a microorganism
T/F. Vaccines made from attenuated microorganisms are better at boosting the immune response than vaccines made from inactivated microorganisms.
True
T/F. Vaccines present antibodies from a pathogen to stimulate immunity.
False
The U.S. government has invested national effort into creating a biological weapons defense. The initiatives include:
(check all that apply)
- development of improved detection and diagnostic systems
- preparation of clinical microbiologists and their laboratories as first-responder teams
- a stockpile of specialized vaccines and medicines for civilian protection
The total number of individuals infected in a population at any one time is referred to as
prevalence rate
Epidemiology
The study of the origin, cause, distribution, and spread of disease
What were John Snow's studies?
Studied series of Cholera outbreaks; discovered the disease came from infected drinking water
T/F. Control measures for microorganisms should be directed toward the part of the disease cycle that is most susceptible to control.
True
What governmental agency focuses on national and environmental health, as well as designs a set of health education activities to improve general health of the population?
Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
What is the supranational agency involved in tracking and controlling the spread of disease worldwide?
World Health Organizations (WHO)
What is the U.S. Biological Weapons Defense Initiative?
Based on developing, producing, and stockpiling specific antibody reagents hat can be used to protect the population against biological warfare threats
Sporadic disease
Occurs occasionally, at irregular intervals
Endemic disease
Occurs regularly at a low level of frequency and at moderately regular intervals
Hyperendemic disease
Increases gradually above the level of an endemic disease, but not enough to qualify as an epidemic
Outbreak
An abrupt, unexpected occurrence of a disease, usually in a limited segment of the population
Epidemic
An abrupt increase in the frequency of the disease above the expected number
Index case
First case in an epidemic
Pandemic
An increase in the occurrence of disease within a large population
What does public health surveillance involve?
The proactive evaluation of emerging infectious agents, human behaviors, lifestyle choices, and genetic backgrounds
T/F. Epidemiologists frequently draw on knowledge from the field of statistics.
True
What are the three numerical measures of disease frequency?
1. Morbidity Rate
2. Prevalence Rate
3. Mortality Rate
Morbidity rate
the number of new cases of a disease during a particular period, as a fraction of the population size
Prevalence rate
measures the total number of infected individuals in the population at any given time, as a share of the total population size
Mortality rate
the number of deaths from a given disease, as a fraction of overall cases of that disease
Infectious disease
One that results from an infection by microbial agents
When does an infectious disease become communicable?
when it can be transmitted from person to person
Common-source epidemics
one that is caused by a single, common contaminated source.
What are common-source epidemics characterized by?
a significant, immediate increase in the number of infected individuals, and a similarly significant decrease in the number of infected individuals.
Propagated epidemics
caused by the introduction of an infected individual into a susceptible population, where the disease can be propagated to others.
What are propagated epidemics characterized by?
a gradual increase in the number of infected individuals, followed by a gradual decline in the number of infected individuals over time
Herd immunity
Explains the resistance of a population to infection and to the spread of an infectious organism due to high level of immunity of a large percentage of the population.
Why does an unvaccinated individual not get infected when those around them are vaccinated?
Herd immunity
T/F. Immunization of a population has no effect on herd immunity.
False; increased the level of herd immunity
Antigenic drift
results in minor changes to virus
Antigenic shift
More drastic changes that result in completely different strains
What do antigenic drifts occur from?
Natural mutations
What do antigenic shifts occur from?
A combination of strains
What are some of the reasons for the emergence of new diseases in recent decades?
Ecological distribution, increased drug use, sexual promiscuity, and an increase in the mobility of the population
Systematic epidemiology
The study of the ecological and social factors that influence the development of emerging ad reemerging infectious disease.
What are three strategies that epidemiologists use to contain or eradicate disease?
1. Reduce or eliminate the source
2. Break the connection between the source and susceptible individuals
3. Reduce the number of susceptible individuals
T/F. Vaccines stimulate immunity by presenting the body with novel antigens, which causes the body to develop antibodies to fight the antigens.
True
Whole-cell vaccine
Consist of whole microorganisms
Subunit vaccine
Consist of purified parts of the microorganism
Attenuated vaccines
Contains strains of live microorganisms that have undergone the process of attenuation, which makes them less virulent
Inactivated vaccines
Contains dead microbes or their fragments that can neither replicate nor mutate to a more virulent form
Toxoid vaccines
Contain chemically or thermally modified toxins
Which type of vaccine is better at boosting the immune response?
Attenuated Vaccines
Fermentation
involves the growth of microbes in large volumes for the production of industrially important products
Starter culture
the preparation of living microorganisms that are deliberately used to assist the beginning of fermentation
What are the major types of fermentation in food biology?
- Lactic
- Propionic
- Alcoholic fermenations
What are the four microbial genera used in production of fermented dairy products?
1) Lactobacillus
2) Lactococcus
3) Leuconostoc
4) Streptococcus
What is an example of mesophilic fermentation?
buttermilk, sour cream
What is an example of thermophilic fermentation?
yogurt
What is an example of yeast-lactic fermentation?
Kefir
What is an example of mold-lactic fermentation?
Viili
What is the most common starter culture for cheese production?
Lactobacillus species
T/F. Pasteurization is used to kill pathogens and retard spoilage.
True
Enology
Wine production
Beer fermentation: Must
the liquid that is formed from crushing of grapes
Beer fermentation: Malt
the malt after being mixed with water in order to hydrolyze starch to usable carbohydrates
Beer fermentation: Mash
the malt after being mixed with water in order to hydrolyze starch to usable carbohydrates
Beer fermenation: Wort
Liquid portion of mixture
What is sour mash inoculated from?
Homolactic bacterium
What is fermented in bread making?
Saccharomyces cerevisiae (baker's yeast)
Probiotics
A live microorganisms, which when administered in adequate amounts, confer a health benefit to the host
What is an example of probiotics?
Lactobacilli and Bifidobacteria are in yogurt
Industrial microbiology
Branch of applied microbiology in which microorganisms are used in industrial processes such as the production of drugs, chemicals, and fuels
What is an example of industrial microbiology?
Magnetosomes
Environmental microbiology
Study of the cumulative impact of microbial processes occurring in the environment, both in specific biomes and on global scale
What is an example of environmental microbiology?
Waste-water treatment
Biodegradation
Involves the use of microbes to break organic matter into simpler compounds
Bioremediation
Involves the use of microbes to "remedy" environmental problems, such as converting toxic materials to non-toxic materials