Infectious Epi

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incidence formula

# of new cases in pop./# of people in pop.

recall

______________ is influenced by: -How recent the activity took place -The impact, importance, or the uniqueness of the activity -The consistency of an event -If there was media coverage

general cohort

________________ cohort: -Benefit: Enhanced generalizability. -Limitation: Cannot analyze rare exposures

special cohort

________________ cohort: -Benefit: allows examination of rare exposures -Limitation: limited generalizability.

retrospective cohorts

benefit of _____________ cohort: are less expensive than prospective designs and generate results more rapidly.

prospective cohorts

benefit of _______________ cohort: allows for the quality control of exposure and outcome measurements and protects against temporal ambiguity.

ecologic studies

benefit of ________________________: Population data is typically publically available on a variety of governmental websites. Studies can be conducted inexpensively and easily because data collection is not required by the researchers.

Cross-Sectional Studies

benefit of ________________________: These studies are inexpensive and easier to conduct compared to the other analytic study designs.

case reports

benefit of ________________________: useful for the description of rare diseases or new treatments.

case reports

limitation of ______________________: The description of a single individual prohibits epidemiological inference

Cross-Sectional Studies

limitation of ________________________: Impossible to demonstrate a temporal association and, thus, impossible to prove causality.

case series

limitation of _________________________: A weak study design that does not allow for comparison between diseased and non-diseased individuals

ecologic study

limitation of _________________________: Cannot make individual level inferences based on population level data (ecologic fallacy). Cannot determine if those who are truly exposed have higher occurrence of disease.

case series

Data from a series of cases, with no control or comparison group is captured.

exposures

In cohort studies, _________________ measured at baseline can be followed up to look for an occurrence of disease.

Hill's Causal Criteria

Includes: Strength Consistency Plausibility Biologic Temporality Coherence Specificity Analogy Experiment

Agent Host Environment

List parts of the epidemiological triad

prevalence

Measures the proportion of the population who has the disease at a given time (point prevalence) or during an interval of time (period prevalence).

incidence

The number or rate of new cases of a particular condition during a specific time.

relative risk formula

[a/(a+b)]/[c/(c+d)]

case series

benefit of _______________________: Occasionally, there will be situations where there are no non-ill individuals or a very small number of cases. In these situations a _____________________ can provide person, place, and time associations.

Double blinded trial

both investigators and patients are blinded to the exposure group.

prevalence formula

# of people w/ disease/# of people in population or (a+c)/(a+b+c+d)

Intention to Treat Analysis (ITT)

All individuals who are randomly assigned to a treatment are analyzed, regardless of whether they complete or receive treatment

Intention to Treat Analysis (ITT)

Benefits of __________: -Benefits of randomization are preserved -Maintains statistical power of the original study -Good and poor compliance differs by important prognostic factors, ________ helps ensure the study results remain unbiased -Provides information on the effectiveness of a treatment under everyday conditions

determinants

By understanding _____________________ and their interrelationship, we can identify and implement interventions for disease prevention, treatment, and control.

Validity

Cannot be assessed statistically. Instead, an epidemiologist must rely on clinical and biologic characteristics, external literature, and judgment to assess it.

recall bias

Case-control studies are particularly susceptible to _______________, where the recall of the controls may be less accurate than the recall in the cases

ecologic studies

Correlational studies that are population-based rather than individual-based

Hill's Causal Criteria

Criteria for causality differ philosophically and practically. Epidemiologists typically use what?

target and source

Establishing the _____________ and _____________ population for a case control study is an important aspect of the study design

Source

Ex: Immunization rates in Sierra Leon post Ebola Crisis _________________ population: Major City Hospitals (type of population?)

Study

Ex: Immunization rates in Sierra Leon post Ebola Crisis _________________ population: People we can reach for survey in hospitals during the study time frame. (type of population?)

Target

Ex: Immunization rates in Sierra Leon post Ebola Crisis _________________ population: Sierra Leonean population (type of population?)

case-control studies

Goal of these studies: To compare the exposure characteristics of cases with a representative sample of the target population within which the cases occurred.

information bias

In case-control studies, exposure is assessed retrospectively, leading to the increased risk of ____________________

Case-Crossover Studies

In this design, cases serve as their own controls. The design evaluates exposure during a period of time before disease onset (control period). Example: use of disinfectant in hospital wards to prevent healthcare associated infections

Nested Case-Control Studies

Limitations of these studies: It is necessary to select different controls for each outcome of interest.

Case-Cohort Studies

Limitations of these studies: Potential increase in information bias because exposure information may have been collected at different times and the sub cohort may have been established after baseline.

Case-Crossover Studies

Limitations of these studies: Study assumes that no temporal trends exist. If such trends do exists, the design must be extended (case-time-control design).

Nested Case-Control Studies Case-Cohort Studies Case-Crossover Studies

List 3 other ways to choose controls

cohort studies

Non-diseased, at-risk individuals are enrolled into a study and followed up for a period of time. Exposures measured at baseline can be followed up to look for an occurrence of disease.

incidence

Refers to the number of new cases that develop among susceptible individuals. Incidence can be expressed as a proportion of at-risk individual who develop disease by a certain time (cumulative incidence) or as a function of follow-up time contributed (incidence rate)

Case-Cohort Studies

Select controls from a random subset of the entire cohort at baseline and use this group as a control for each of the case groups. If a new type of outcome needs to be studied, only cases need to be tested.

selection bias

Selection of study participants in a way that favors a certain outcome

True

T/F: Avoid matching on many variables. Unless the variable is a strong confounder, it makes little difference. We usually use 1:1 or 2:1 matching. Increasing beyond 4:1 matching shows little to no benefit in terms of power.

True

T/F: DO NOT match on a variable you are interested in analyzing as an exposure. Matching removes the differences between groups by a certain variable. In this case, you measure of association will be 1 and show no difference in exposure.

epidemiological triad

The _____________________________ provides a framework for emphasizing the relationship between three components: the host, the agent, and the environment

external validity

The ability to apply inferences about the particular target population to other target populations.

Person

The attributes of the ________________ include individual level characteristics believed to influence disease

intervention

The exposure of interest (or ___________________) is randomized and administered to patients based on a strict study protocol.

Randomized Clinical Trial (RCT)

The investigator assigns participants to receive a treatment (experimental group) and others to receive another treatment, often a placebo or the current gold standard of care (control group).

population-based

The most basic "_________________________" study pulls controls from the same population as cases (i.e. geographically or from the same hospital).

prevalence

The number or proportion of cases of a particular disease or condition present in a population at a given time.

information bias

The relationship between the exposure and the outcome is distorted because of how data are measured.

human hosts

These differ in susceptibility to infections due to genetic, environmental, behavioral, and other factors

RCTs

These studies are initiated to make inferences about a specific target population. To do so they use eligibility criteria.

Cross-Sectional Studies

These studies capture information regarding an exposure and an outcome simultaneously, usually through a survey instrument; they may also collect retrospective data.

case reports

These studies evaluate a single case of disease. It may evaluate transmission, natural history, and/or a new/novel treatment.

Randomized Clinical Trial (RCT)

These studies evaluate the effect of planned interventions in an experimental manner

ecologic studies

These studies look at how levels of exposure correspond to levels of disease within a population

Epidemiologists

They investigate associations between exposure and outcomes. The ultimate goal is to prove a causal association.

case-control studies

This allows the _____________________ study to overcome some of the limitations of cohort studies: -It is possible to study rare diseases because resources can be used more efficiently -More than one exposure can be assessed at a time because the study population was not restricted based on exposure -More resources can be expended per person because a large sample size in not required

prospective cohorts

This cohort is one in which a cohort is assembled in the present time and followed up into the future.

retrospective cohorts

This cohort takes advantage of records and specimens collected in the past and assesses outcome that have occurred before the present time. Often times, databases or medical records are used for this design.

place

This describes the geographical characteristics of our population, whether this be a county, a state, a school, or a place of work.

epidemiology

This is a population science and we take a multifaceted approach to describe the populations we study

Source population

This is a subset of the target population that can be enumerated and further studied

time

This is the essential third parameter of our population that provides us with more specificity in our measurements.

the agent

This is the infecting pathogen. They have characteristics influencing infectivity, including evolution of resistance to antibiotics and antivirals.

Study population

This population is comprised of those individuals in the source population contributing information to the epidemiological investigation

cohort study

This study is best suited for diseases with high incidence among the exposed and high prevalence of exposure in the population. If disease is rare, an unrealistically large one would be required

the environment

This t is the setting in which transmission occurs. It is important to recognize that certain ones influence the agent's survival and infectivity

prevalence

Typical measurement of a survey or cross-sectional study.

accuracy formula

(TP + TN)/(TP + TN+ FP + FN)

accuracy formula

(a+d)/(a+b+c+d)

general cohort

(type of cohort) Used to analyze common exposures. Participants pulled from general population.

special cohort

(type of cohort) Used when exposures under study are rare. Study populations can be drawn from groups sharing similar characteristics such as hospitals or occupational groups (i.e. factories, oil rig workers, so on).

probable

*If sample is sufficiently large ________________ cases can be excluded from analysis to maximize accuracy of results.

secondary

*When later conducting analysis it is important to eliminate _________________ cases for risk factor analysis, especially when the goal is to identify source of the outbreak

gown

- STANDARD PRECAUTION To protect from splashes /sprays of large quantities of BBF/S E - CONTACT PRECAUTION To protect contamination of personnel clothing

Non-differential misclassification

A bias that occurs when the misclassification of the disease is the same for all categories of the exposure or the misclassification of the exposure is the same for all categories of the disease.

infectious disease

A disease that is caused by a pathogen and that can be spread from one individual to another.

30%

About _______% of infected people are asymptomatic for norovirus

96%

About _______% of non-bacterial outbreaks are probably Norovirus-related

Review; case; food; clinical

Actions to Confirm the Diagnosis: - ________________ preliminary information - Get ___________ history - Collect ______________ specimens (in the case of a foodborne outbreak) - Obtain _________________ specimens - Send clinical/food specimens to CDC reference laboratories, when warranted

Enteropathogenic E.coli (EPEC)

Acute and chronic endemic and epidemic diarrhea in infants

Case-Cohort Studies

Advantages of these studies: -Efficient way to analyze relationship of exposure and outcome. -Allows flexibility to test hypotheses not thought of at beginning of cohort -Reduces selection bias by drawing cases and controls from the same population

Case-Crossover Studies

Advantages of these studies: All personal-level factors are similar and cannot confound the analysis

Nested Case-Control Studies

Advantages of these studies: Offer potential for integrating technology and research questions that increase the value of conducting lengthy cohort studies. With repeated testing, can determine if an exposure occurred before disease onset (temporality).

intermediate

Areas with ________________________ levels of infection of HAV: • Developing countries, countries with transitional economies, and regions where sanitation conditions are variable • Children escape infection in childhood and reach adulthood with no immunity • Higher number of susceptibles makes outbreak and epidemics more likely

low

Areas with low levels of infection of HAV: • Developed countries with good sanitary and hygienic conditions • Infection rates are low • Disease may occur in adolescents and adults in high risk groups (IV drug users, MSM, travelers to endemic areas, isolated populations) • When virus is introduced into communities, generally stopped early with good hygiene practices

entire population

As epidemiologists, the interventions that we purpose deal with _____________________________ and include the majority of public health measures, policies, and guidance affecting the population.

-Person, place, and time of the outbreak -Suspected etiologic agent -Mode of transmission

As soon as preliminary data offer information about the scope and magnitude of an outbreak a hypotheses is formed to describe what?

direct transmission

Can happen through: -Sexual (via mucous-membranes; ex: Syphilis, HIV, Gonorrhea) -Contact (skin to skin; ex: Herpes Simplex; Perinatal (transplacental or vertical ex: Rubella, HIV, Hepatitis B, Syphilis) -Parenteral (needle stick) ex: HIV, Hepatitis B & C

Nested Case-Control Studies

Cases and controls pulled from an existing cohort or clinical trial.

Rapid diagnostic test Traditional Lab testing

Cholera is diagnosed through what methods?

slaughter; slaughter; contaminated ingredients

Food contamination that leads to enteric bacterial diseases occur due to bacteremia prior to _____________________, contamination of meat by fecal material after ___________________, use of _____________________________ during food processing. cross contamination in the food processing plant, and cross contamination in the kitchen during food prep

recall bias

Food histories are not 100% accurate; they are subject to what?

Oocysts

For Cryptosporidium, _________________ appear in the stool at the onset of symptoms and are immediately infectious; Excretion of them occurs for several weeks after symptoms resolve and a large # of them are shed in human and animal stool

Antibiotics

For Salmonella, after enterocolitis, fecal excretion persist for several days or weeks; ___________________ do not decrease the duration of excretion

1:1

For ___:___ matched pair analysis, the odds ratio formula is f/g and the test for statistical significance is the McNemar chi-squared test

conditional logistic regression

For matched pair analysis with 2, 3, or 4 controls per case, we must perform __________________________ or a similar method

1 − 1/R0

For simple models and a 100%-effective vaccine, the proportion of the population that needs to be vaccinated to prevent sustained spread of the infection is given by what equation?

epidemiologically linked

For some diseases a person is considered a confirmed case if they have clinically compatible symptoms and are "_______________________ ________________" to a confirmed case.

HANDWASHING

For the prevention of food borne outbreaks, enforce ______________________ of food handlers and educate them

SARS-COV2

For this disease, certain activities like singing, speaking loudly or playing a musical instrument, such as the saxophone, these droplets can be aerosolized (become smaller) and therefore can stay longer in the air (see choir outbreak)

spores

For transmission of intestinal botulism in infants and adults, it occurs after ingestion of botulism ____________ rather than by ingestion of a preformed toxin

Rn = R0 x s s= proportion of susceptible persons in the populations

Formula for Rn = of actual number of transmissions (number of susceptible persons are decreasin

SARS-COV2

Furthermore, the virus can be transmitted via fomite transmission. ___________________ can survive in the environment depending on the surface so persons can become infected when touching high contact surfaces such as door knobs, elevator buttons and toilet handles and then touching their faces..

12-60hrs

Gastroenteritis typically develops how long after being infected with the norovirus?

gram negative

General shift towards ____________________ flora in hospitals

External validity

Generalizability

airborne

Give the mode of transmission for the following disease: measles

sexual contact

Give the mode of transmission for the following disease: HIV/AIDS

airborne droplet

Give the mode of transmission for the following disease: SARS

saliva

Give the mode of transmission for the following disease: diptheria

bodily fluids

Give the mode of transmission for the following disease: ebola

airborne droplet

Give the mode of transmission for the following disease: influenza

airborne droplet

Give the mode of transmission for the following disease: mumps

airborne droplet

Give the mode of transmission for the following disease: pertussis

fecal-oral route

Give the mode of transmission for the following disease: polio

airborne droplet

Give the mode of transmission for the following disease: rubella

airborne droplet

Give the mode of transmission for the following disease: smallpox

case reports

How are Potential Outbreaks Identified? An individual, physician, lab technician, or infection control nurse, notice a higher than expected number of cases of disease and report the cluster to the health department. These are known as what?

Person Place Time

How do epidemiologists describe populations?

RT-PCR IgM and IgG antibodies

How do you diagnose Ebola?

B/c it is a lipid enveloped RNA virus

How does Ebola virus survive in the environment?

Blood and Body Fluids (BBF)

How is Ebola transmitted?

24-60hrs

How long do norovirus symptoms typically last?

3-8 days

How long does the Influenza virus disease last?

Laboratory testing

However, if a case definition is sufficiently specific, it may not be necessary to test all specimens for confirmation. _______________________ is expensive and time consuming; it is often not the best expenditure of resources

Animal reservoirs

Humans are also susceptible to diseases that have human ________________ reservoirs. These disease are transmitted from animal to animal with humans as incidental hosts.

300 million cells

Humans shed about how many skin cells (squames) per day?

◦ Means of transmission ◦ Reservoir of the organism

ID epidemiologists typically classify disease by two important epidemiological characteristics; what are they?

IRR formula

IRe/IRue

Norovirus

Is highly contagious and spread: • Person-to-person spread • Environment or fomite contamination • Aerosolization of vomitus • Fecal-oral route i.e. consumption of fecally contaminated food or water

Randomized Clinical Trial (RCT) Cohort Studies Case-Control Studies Cross-Sectional Studies

List the types of analytic study designs

Case reports Case series Ecologic study

List the types of descriptive study designs

Food contamination Milk Food Handlers (rare carriers) Water Contact with Infected Animals

List the types of foodborne transmission that may lead to enteric bacterial diseases

N95 Mask PAPR Powered Air Purifying Respirators

List the types of personal respirators for airborne precautions

Target Source Study

List the types of populations

Human Animal (zoonoses) Soil Water

List the types of reservoirs

- Typical signs and symptoms - Modes of transmission - Foods in past outbreaks

List what you should know about the causative agent

high

The following are people who are at __________ risk for Ebola: -Handling bush meat (wild animals hunted for food) -Contact with infected bats (CARRIERS) -Removal and burial of human remains (funeral rituals), postmortem examinations -Healthcare providers, family and friends who get exposed to blood or body fluids of sick patients. -Waste management: Clothes, bedding, needles, syringes/sharps or medical equipment contaminated with the virus -Diagnostic laboratory activities (see Marburg virus)

Botulism

The following are reservoirs for ____________________: -Spore forming clostridium bacteria -Spores -Toxin

Botulism

The following are risk groups for ____________________: -Foodborne: Individuals who can or preserve foods in the home -Intestinal: Infants younger than 6 months & Infants younger than 1 yr. who are fed honey -Wound: Injection drug users

Ebola

The following are signs & symptoms of ______________: -Fever (greater than 38.6°C or 101.5°F) -Macular Rash Severe headache -Muscle pain -Weakness -Diarrhea, might be bloody later in the disease process -Vomiting -Abdominal (stomach) pain -Unexplained hemorrhage (bleeding or bruising) but never in the first days of illness

Norovirus

The following are signs and symptoms for what virus? - Acute onset of watery nonbloody diarrhea - Vomiting (esp. in children) - Abdominal cramps - Nausea - Low grade fever

control measures

The following are some examples of what? -Recalling or destroying remaining contaminated food products -Restricting infected workers from high-risk occupations -Correcting procedural practices identified as inadequate or improper

control measures

The following are some examples of what? -Recommending a prophylactic therapeutic agent and/or vaccine -Enforcing hand washing -Educating the public regarding risk and prevention

Botulism

The following are symptoms in adults of __________________: • Early symptoms • Fatigue, weakness, and vertigo • Followed by: • Blurred vision, dry mouth, difficulty in speaking • Disease may progress to weakness in arms and neck, then respiratory muscles and muscles of the lower body are affected • Illness may lead to respiratory failure and death if ventilators are not provided (CFR: 5-10%)

Botulism

The following are symptoms in infants (< 1yr) of __________________: • Typically starts with constipation • May include: poor suck, altered cry, weakness, loss of head control • Ranges from mild illness and ranges to (descending) paralysis and respiratory failure • Mortality rare: 0.1%

Vibrio

The following are the 3 types of illness for ____________: - Gastrointestinal - Primary septicemia - Wound

Ebola

The following are the Epidemiologic risk factors for what disease? within the past 21 days before the onset of symptoms, such as contact with blood or other body fluids or human remains of a patient known to have or suspected to have EVD; residence in—or travel to—an area where EVD transmission is active (Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia); or direct handling of bats or non-human primates from disease-endemic areas.

HAV

The following are treatment recommendations for what? • Palliative only. Replenish fluids • Avoid prescription of unnecessary medications • Hospitalization unnecessary in absence of acute liver failure

Ebola

The following is the clinical criteria for what disease? which includes fever of greater than 38.6 degrees Celsius or 101.5 degrees Fahrenheit, and additional symptoms such as severe headache, muscle pain, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain, or unexplained hemorrhage

Crypto

The following risk groups are for ________________: -Children younger than 2 years of age -Animal handlers -International Travelers -MSM -Close personal contacts of infected individuals -10-20% of AIDS patient developed infection at some point during illness

Internal validity

The goal of obtaining inferences from a study population that are applicable to the target population.

reservoir

The habitat in which an infectious agent usually lives, grows, and multiplies. This habitat can include humans, animals, and the environment.

portal of exit

This is the path by which a pathogen leaves its host. This usually corresponds to the site where the pathogen is localized.

Target population

This is the population we will want to make inferences about or generalize to

Matching

This is the primary method of ensuring that cases and controls share similar characteristics.

Virulence

This is the severity of the disease after infection occurs and is measured as the proportion of clinical cases that develop severe disease or die (Case Fatality Rate).

Herd immunity

This is typically achieved through vaccination. The concept of it dictates that not all individuals have to be immune to a disease to halt epidemics, but a significant proportion of the population has to be protected against the disease. This number is known as the ____________________ threshold.

portal of entry

This is where the pathogen is able to enter into a susceptible host. These include ingestion, inhalation, and percutaneous entry

case definition

This lists the clinical criteria by which public health professionals determine whether a person's illness is to be included as a case in an outbreak investigation.

carrier

This may be an individual who is: - colonized - infected and asymptomatic - in incubation period before disease, pre-symptomatic - convalescent from acute disease This status may be short or lenghty

Clinical infection

This may result in signs and symptoms. Some of these may be less obvious or very minor. At the end of the spectrum is the individual with no signs, no symptoms who has a asymptomatic infection or subclinical infection

vehicle transmission

This occurs via an inanimate object, material, or substance that is contaminated with the infectious agent

Standard Precaution

This precaution applies to 1) blood; 2) all body fluids, secretions, and excretions, except sweat, regardless of whether or not they contain visible blood; 3) non-intact skin; and 4) mucous membranes.

Universal Precaution

This precaution says to treat all human blood and certain human body fluids as if they were known to be infectious for HIV, HBV and other blood-borne pathogens

Quarantine

This separates and restricts the movement of people who were exposed to a contagious disease to see if they become sick

Isolation

This separates sick people with a contagious disease from people who are not sick.

case definition

This should always contain information regarding person, place, time, and clinical features.

Indirect transmission

This transmission involves airborne and droplet

Normal flora

This type of Flora protects against infectious diseases originating at mucous membranes

Norovirus

This virus can survive high chlorine levels and is HIGHLY contagious

Norovirus (NOV)

This virus has a temperature tolerance from freezing to 60 C

SERIAL INTERVAL

Time of onset between primary and a secondary case

Frequency Tables

Use _______________________ to express: - # of individuals presenting with specific symptoms - # of individuals who ate a specific food or had a specific exposure - # of individuals who ate a particular meal, if multiple meals are suspected

low

Use of PCR tests with ________ specificity (FP high) can result in unnecessary investigation and treatment of persons with false-positive PCR test results and inappropriate chemoprophylaxis of their contacts

Cholera

Vibrio Cholerae is the scientific name of the bacteria that causes what known disease that affects the small intestine?

severity

Virulence is the _____________ of the disease after infection occurs and is measured as the proportion of clinical cases that develop severe disease or die (Case Fatality Rate).

Ebola- lipid enveloped RNA virus

Virus shed in human body fluids or animal feces survives under dry conditions only hours to days in the environment but will survive for weeks if stayed hydrated (e.g. in blood samples) (clinical specimens)

• Humans are the only reservoir • Vaccination causes long term immunity • The disease is easily detectable in humans

WHAT MAKES A DISEASE A GOOD CANDIDATE FOR VACCINATION AND ERADICATION?

Hand Sanitizer

Washing hands with soap and water is the best way to reduce the number of germs on them. If soap and water are not available, use an alcohol-based _________________ _______________ that contains at least 60% alcohol

case control

When to use ____________________ studies: 1. When the exposure is unknown 2. When the outbreak is large 3. When the disease is uncommon 4. The exposed population cannot be enumerated

Household Exposed children and providers Exposed, unprotected healthcare workers (HCW)

What contacts of pertussis should receive prophylaxis?

Microscopy (Identification of oocysts) ELISA PCR

What diagnostic tools are used for Crypto?

Ebola

What disease is a viral hemorrhagic fever?

No positive test in an healthy person

What do you want from a confirmatory test?

find everyone with disease (no disease with negative test; no false negative)

What do you want from a screening test?

Cholera and other Vibrio Illness Surveillance System

What does COVIS stand for?

Hepatitis A Virus (HAV)

What does HAV stand for?

herd immunity threshold

What does HIT stand for?

Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome

What does SARS stand for?

Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers

What does VHF stand for?

RT-PCR

What is a good tool for diagnosis of norovirus in humans? (hint: it examines stools and emesis)

Measure of transmissibility

What is a secondary attack rate an example of?

Foodborne: • by ingestion of food • from contaminated animals • food products contaminated by infected animal or person

What is another form of transmission for enteric bacterial diseases not including person 2 person?

- Median illness duration of 12-60 hrs. - Incubation period of 24-48 hrs. - More than 50% of people vomiting. - No bacterial agent

What is the Kaplan criteria for diagnosis during outbreaks?

H7N9

What is the NEW strain of "bird flu" that affected Asia in 2013?

R0 Guinea: 1.7 (CI:1.44 to 2.01) R0 Liberia: 1.83 (CI: 1.72 to 1.94) and R0 Sierra Leone: 2.02 (1.79 to 2.26)

What is the R0 for Ebola in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone?

0, Bodily fluids, exposure to contaminated needles and other objects (assuming no control measures)

What is the R0 for Ebola in the US?

1-4, Sharing needles, sexual contact

What is the R0 for HIV?

12-18, Airborne

What is the R0 for Measles?

12-17, Droplets, Airborne

What is the R0 for Pertussis?

maximum in catarrhal stage

What is the communicability of pertussis?

Standard

What is the correct form of isolation that is needed (Standard, Contact, Droplet, Airborne)? Annette is admitted for a severe fever, hepatitis and renal failure. She just returned from trekking in the Brazilian Amazon. She is diagnosed with malaria and yellow fever

Standard Contact Droplet

What is the correct form of isolation that is needed (Standard, Contact, Droplet, Airborne)? Benjamin, 2 months old, has a severe cough. His physician suspects whooping cough or Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) bronchiolitis. He was admitted to a pediatric intensive care unit in a private room.

Standard Contact -Contact precaution if nasty boil is still seeping and not successfully drained yet

What is the correct form of isolation that is needed (Standard, Contact, Droplet, Airborne)? John had a nasty boil under his arm. He has some fever, chills, vomiting and diarrhea. He is so sick that he is admitted in a hospital. A blood culture shows that he has Staphylococcus aureus growing from a blood culture.

Standard Droplet Airborne

What is the correct form of isolation that is needed (Standard, Contact, Droplet, Airborne)? Peter went to see his physician for a chronic cough. He is sick enough to justify being admitted. He is going to be worked up in the next few days, meanwhile what is recommended?

Standard Contact

What is the correct form of isolation that is needed (Standard, Contact, Droplet, Airborne)? Typhoid Marie broke her leg. She is admitted to the broken foot ward of the hospital. Her stool is checked because of her past history of typhoid fever. Salmonella typhi is still present in her stool.

Serologic (IgM)

What is the diagnostic method for HAV?

1-2 weeks, range of a few days to 4 weeks

What is the duration of Crypto?

less than 2 months

What is the duration of HAV?

R0 - 1/R0

What is the equation for the herd immunity threshold?

C

What is the following Human influenza type? • Mild Illness • No epidemics

B

What is the following Human influenza type? • No subtypes • Humans only • Epidemics Yearly

A

What is the following Human influenza type? • Subtypes based on surface protein • Humans and animals • Epidemics yearly • Ability to cause pandemics

Phase 2

What is the following WHO pandemic phase? an animal influenza virus circulating among domesticated or wild animals is known to have caused infection in humans, and is therefore considered a potential pandemic threat

Phase 3

What is the following WHO pandemic phase? an animal or human-animal influenza reassortant virus has caused sporadic cases or small clusters of disease in people, but has not resulted in human-to-human transmission sufficient to sustain community-level outbreaks

Phase 5

What is the following WHO pandemic phase? human-to-human spread of the virus into at least two countries in one WHO region

Phase 4

What is the following WHO pandemic phase? human-to-human transmission of an animal or human-animal influenza reassortant virus able to cause "community-level outbreaks

Phase 1

What is the following WHO pandemic phase? no viruses circulating among animals have been reported to cause infections in humans

Phase 6

What is the following WHO pandemic phase? the pandemic phase, is characterized by community level outbreaks in at least one other country in a different WHO region in addition to the criteria defined in Phase 5. Designation of this phase will indicate that a global pandemic is under way.

case definition

What is the following an example of? Situation: 25 children who attend Happy Times daycare have presented with rash and fever over the past two weeks. _______________________: A case will be defined as a child (person) attending Happy Times daycare (place) from X date to Y date (time) presenting with rash and fever (clinical features).

seasonal variation

What is the following an example of? For example, vector-transmitted diseases such as malaria, dengue or St. Louis encephalitis depend on mosquito vectors for transmission. Since mosquitos are only present during warm parts of the year, disease only occurs during warm parts of the year.

3-5 days

What is the incubation period for Campylobacter?

7 days (range 2-14 days)

What is the incubation period for Crypto?

1/2 day to 3 days

What is the incubation period for E. Coli?

8-10 days (range 2-21 days)

What is the incubation period for Ebola?

7-10 days (range: 2-25 days or longer)

What is the incubation period for Giardia?

28-30 days (range 15-50 days)

What is the incubation period for HAV?

6-48hrs

What is the incubation period for Salmonella?

1-3 days

What is the incubation period for Shigella?

12-48hrs, range 6hr-8 days

What is the incubation period for foodborne botulism?

3-30 days

What is the incubation period for infant botulism?

12-48hrs

What is the incubation period for norovirus?

1-5 days

What is the incubation period for the Influenza virus?

4-14 days

What is the incubation period for wound botulism?

2-3 days, range a few hours-5 days

What is the incubation period of Cholera?

12-72 hours

What is the incubation period of Vibrio Vulnificus?

6-21 days

What is the incubation period of pertussis?

5 virions

What is the infectious dose of Influenza?

poultry, unpasteurized milk

What is the leading Bacteriological Causes of the following Foodborne/Enteric Illness in USA: Campylobacter jejuni

eggs, poultry, beef, pork, produce

What is the leading Bacteriological Causes of the following Foodborne/Enteric Illness in USA: Salmonella sp.

cattle (handling) and beef, produce, water (recreational and drinking)

What is the leading Bacteriological Causes of the following Foodborne/Enteric Illness in USA: Shigatoxin E.coli (STEC)

salads, produce (food handler)

What is the leading Bacteriological Causes of the following Foodborne/Enteric Illness in USA: Shigella

Large droplets

What is the mode of transmission for pertussis?

Disease

What is the most appropriate classification for the following? (Contamination, Exposed, Colonization, Carrier, Asymptomatic Infection, Disease?) A week later Jane has a headache, mild fever, a light rash that lasted only a few days. The virus is no longer present in her blood but she has developed antibodies to the West Nile virus

Contamination -Should he be treated? NO

What is the most appropriate classification for the following? (Contamination, Exposed, Colonization, Carrier, Asymptomatic Infection, Disease?) Bob had diarrhea, dehydration and fever. He received some intravenous fluid and recovered rapidly. A blood culture showed the presence of Staphylococcus epidermidis, a common skin contaminant. A second culture taken within 20 minutes was negative

Asymptomatic Infection

What is the most appropriate classification for the following? (Contamination, Exposed, Colonization, Carrier, Asymptomatic Infection, Disease?) Jane went to give blood. Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) test performed as routine screening showed that she had West Nile virus present in her blood.

Disease

What is the most appropriate classification for the following? (Contamination, Exposed, Colonization, Carrier, Asymptomatic Infection, Disease?) John had a nasty boil under his arm. He has some fever, chills, vomiting and diarrhea. He is so sick that he is admitted in a hospital. A blood culture shows that he has Staphylococcus aureus growing from a blood culture.

Exposed

What is the most appropriate classification for the following? (Contamination, Exposed, Colonization, Carrier, Asymptomatic Infection, Disease?) Michael was a drinking companion of Billy who was diagnosed with the infectious form of tuberculosis. They spent a lot of time together. They slept under the interstate or in empty containers.

Colonization -No treatment indicated, actually would do more harm than good

What is the most appropriate classification for the following? (Contamination, Exposed, Colonization, Carrier, Asymptomatic Infection, Disease?) Peter went to see his physician for a sore throat. She took a sample from his throat. Thinking it could be a viral pharyngitis and since Peter was not very sick, she did not prescribe antibiotics. Two days later the results of the culture came back showing the presence of Neisseria meningitis. Does he need treatment?

Carrier

What is the most appropriate classification for the following? (Contamination, Exposed, Colonization, Carrier, Asymptomatic Infection, Disease?) Typhoid Marie had typhoid fever. Later Salmonella typhi was isolated from her stools although she had recovered completely and was healthy.

Dehydration in children and elderly

What is the most common complication of norovirus?

waterborne

What is the most common mode of transmission for Cryptosporidium?

Campylobacter

What is the most frequent enteric bacterial diseases in the US?

the intestinal tract

What is the primary habitat for Salmonella?

Fruit bats

What is the reservoir for Ebola?

humans

What is the reservoir for HAV?

Humans only (adolescents and adults)

What is the reservoir for pertussis?

humans and various animals ◦ Infects over 45 invertebrate species, birds, fish, reptiles, and mammals

What is the reservoir of Crypto?

food/water; feces

What is the source and anatomical source of Crypto?

Pertussis

What is whooping cough or 100 day cough called?

surface water, water systems

What is/are the reservoir(s) for the following? Legionella

soils & animal gut -horses

What is/are the reservoir(s) for the following? Tetanus

rodents

What is/are the reservoir(s) for the following? plague

Animals but not humans

What is/are the source(s) of infection for the following? Hantavirus

Humans & other animals

What is/are the source(s) of infection for the following? Influenza, plague

Humans only

What is/are the source(s) of infection for the following? Mycobacterium tuberculosis, measles, chickenpox, smallpox, Shigella

Animals

What is/are the source(s) of infection for the following? Salmonella, Brucella

fecal-oral

What kind of person 2 person transmission happens in enteric bacterial diseases?

Avian (bird) flu

What type of flu is the following? • Influenza viruses that occur naturally among wild birds • Transmitted from birds to humans • No human immunity • No vaccine

Seasonal (common) flu

What type of flu is the following? • Transmitted person to person • Most people have some immunity • Vaccine available

Pandemic flu

What type of flu is the following? • Virulent human flu that causes a global outbreak • Spread easily from person to person • No human immunity

Nigeria Senegal DR Congo

What was the hot zone of Ebola?

2009

What year was the H1N1 (Influenza A) Swine Flu pandemic?

>

When R0 ____ (> or <) 1 the infection will be able to spread in a population

<

When R0 ____ (> or <) 1 the infection will die out in the long run.

Varies on a case by case basis, involving many considerations: -Severity of the illness -Vulnerability of exposed population -If the suspected exposure is ongoing -Cost of the intervention -Political Considerations

When do we enact extreme control measures?

results

When do you publish ___________________? 1. When the disease or exposure is rare or novel 2. If the disease or exposure has presented in atypically 3. If the means of control was novel or atypical

Review what you know about cases Identify most likely agents

When the Causative Agent is Unknown, what should you do?

unknown

When the Causative Agent is Unknown: Review what you know about cases -Symptoms, severity of disease -Events attended or anything unusual -Foods consumed and methods of food preparation Identify most likely agents 1. Apply knowledge of incubation period 2. Apply knowledge of food item consumed or other mode of transmission 3. Apply knowledge of clinical presentation

water (drinking water and recreational water)

While this parasite can be spread in several different ways, _________________ is the most common way to spread the parasite, Cryptosporidium

State; error; false

Why do we Confirm Diagnoses? -________________ labs may not have the proper expertise or equipment to diagnose rare or emerging diseases. -There is the potential for _____________ in specimen collection. -______________ conclusion may be drawn regarding a cluster of cases.

1. Reveal if control measures were successful or not. 2. The potential for the rise of secondary epidemics.

Why do we continue to monitor surveillance data?

-Can provide important and interesting information about the origins of the outbreak -Can confirm the existence of the suspected etiologic agent.

Why perform supplemental investigations?

B/c the guidelines for how to use the gear (PPE) were insufficient

Why were so many health care workers affected by Ebola?

Campylobacter jejuni

Wildlife reservoir of ________________________: • Wild birds, migratory birds — cranes, ducks, geese, and seagulls • Domestic bird species • Rodents • Insects on their exoskeleton

wash your hands

You do this activity: - Beginning and end of day - Before & after each patient contacting - Before and after gloving - Anytime after contact with: • Blood & body fluid • Secretions /excretions • Mucous membranes • Damaged skin • Contaminated environment • Contaminated equipment

match

You should _______________ on variables that are potential confounders AND are distributed very differently between the cases and an unmatched group of controls.

New

__________ information usually provides additional insight into the exposure of the disease; ex: Maybe a particular food or swimming in a pool is identified only after a case control study is performed. The food item would need to be taken of shelves and the pool would need to be closed to the public.

HAV

____________ is a potential problem in large collections of people with overcrowding, inadequate access to sanitation and access to clean water. If cases do occur, improve sanitation and safety of water supplies. Mass vaccination should not be used as a substitute to environmental measures

Ebola Hemorrhagic Fever

_____________ was first discovered in 1976 near the Ebola River in what is now the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Since then, outbreaks of this disease among humans have appeared sporadically in Africa.

Oysters and clams

______________ and ________________ tend to CONCENTRATE norovirus in their tissues, through contamination of their harvest areas; norovirus is also transmitted in cold foods, salads, sandwiches, bakery products, liquid items such as salad dressings etc

case

_______________ definitions should become more specific as the investigation continues and more data become available regarding: -Person, place, and time association -Clinical criteria -Classify cases based on certainty

Laboratory

_______________ tests may confirm the same strain of a pathogen in an environmental sample and an individual, confirming source of agent

Ebola vaccine

________________ Vaccine: Ervebo® is administered as a single-dose injection, and is a live, attenuated vaccine that has been genetically engineered to contain a protein from the Zaire vrius

Confirmed

________________ case of pertussis: • a case that is culture positive and in which an acute cough illness of any duration is present; • or a case that meets the clinical case definition and is confirmed by positive PCR; • or a case that meets the clinical case definition and is epidemiologically linked directly to a case confirmed by either culture or PCR

probable

________________ case of pertussis: • meets the clinical case definition for typical disease, is not laboratory confirmed and is not epidemiologically linked to a laboratory-confirmed case, • OR meets the clinical case definition for atypical disease and is confirmed by positive Direct Fluorescent Antibody (DFA)

Cholera

________________ is communicable for as long as stools test positive for V. cholerae - Symptomatic individuals: usually until a few days after recovery - Asymptomatic individuals: usually between 7-14 days

Humans

________________ only natural hosts for Shigella

Typical

________________ pertussis disease: A cough illness lasting at least 2 weeks with one of the following: paroxysms of coughing, inspiratory "whoop," or post-tussive vomiting, without other apparent cause (as reported by a health professional)

carriers

________________ play an important role in transmission, as they do not know they are infected and consequently do not seek treatment for the disease

Confirmed

_________________ cases are generally those with laboratory findings of the suspected organism.

Botulism

_________________ is under-recognized and under-reported; Worldwide incidence is unknown.

Contact

_________________ isolation precautions include: - Clean Hands - Gown - Gloves - Private room (*) - Gloves when entering room, - change glove after infectious contact - Gown when entering room if substantial contact will occur

Droplet

_________________ isolation precautions include: - Clean Hands - Surgical Mask - Eye Protection - Private Room - Mask when entering room

Airborne

_________________ isolation precautions include: - Clean hands - N-95 or PAPR - Negative Pressure/Door Closed

standard precaution

_________________ precaution: 1. Wash * Touch * Wash 2. If red, wet or dirty wash * glove * touch * unglove * wash 3. Know what is clean, know what is dirty, keep them apart

Oocysts

__________________ are highly resistant to chemical disinfectants used to purify drinking water

Pasteurization

__________________ is a sanitation process in which milk is heated briefly to a temperature high enough to kill pathogens, followed by rapid cooling

atypical

__________________ pertussis disease: A persistent cough illness lasting greater than 2 weeks with or without paroxysms and inspiratory whoop

Deterministic Models

___________________ Models: Fixed input rates and therefore the model's prediction will be "pre-determined"

restaurant

___________________ inspection may prove the source of the contaminated food

Norovirus

___________________ outbreaks have been associated with sources of contaminated water, including municipal water, well water, stream water, commercial ice, lake water and swimming pool water.

Investigators

___________________ should also be aware of background levels of disease

Influenza

___________________ syndrome: Fever, chills, myalgia, headache, Nasal congestion Sore throat, dry cough, Malaise, fatigue

Case Definition

____________________ Format includes: "We defined a case as..." -Person, place, time -Subcategories indicate status of a case and specificity -Confirmed (ex. laboratory) vs probable (epidemiologically linked or meeting a case definition except for laboratory information) -Primary (contracted infection from original source) vs Secondary (contracted infection from person infected through original source) -Consider existing surveillance case definition

Probable

____________________ cases are those who have certain symptoms meeting a clinical case definition, but do not have laboratory confirmation.

Laboratory

____________________ confirmation is important to determine what specific agent is responsible for the outbreak.

Handwashing

____________________ removes resident and transient flora

Stochastic Models

_____________________ Models: Input parameters vary by chance, rates may vary randomly and therefore the models provides a range of outcomes or the probability of the outcome occurring.

Hillandale

_____________________ farm cooperated early on with FDA and USDA and no major violations were found on the farms.

Supplemental

_____________________ studies may provide information that forces a modification in prevention and control measures

study design

______________________ is chosen based on: -Size and availability of the exposed population -The speed with which results are needed -Available resources

Bordetella pertussis

______________________ isolated in 1906 by Jules Bordet and Octave Gengou, who also developed the first serology test and vaccine

Descriptive

_______________________ Epidemiology: 1. Frequency Tables 2. Incubation Period 3. Epidemic Curve 4. Spot Maps 5. Attack Rates

communication

_______________________ is key to an effective outbreak investigation

Case finding

_______________________ techniques: -Enhanced surveillance, including review of existing surveillance data -Surveying hospitals, emergency rooms, or physicians -Obtaining credit card receipts or shopper card information -In some cases, use of internet, social media, or other media resources

Cryptosporidium; Crypto

_________________________ is a microscopic parasite that causes the diarrheal disease cryptosporidiosis. Both the parasite and the disease are commonly known as "________________."

Cryptosporidium

___________________________ is a leading cause of waterborne disease among humans in the United States.

Norovirus (NOV)

a contagious gastrointestinal illness; Single-stranded RNA virus

Causative Agent

a pathogen, such as a bacterium or virus that can cause a disease

carriers

a person with an inapparent infection who is able to transmit disease

Communicability

ability to spread from one individual to others and cause disease

Source of infection

actual person, animal, object from which infection was acquired. Example: Potato salad

Odds ratio formula

ad/bc

Cholera

an acute intestinal infection caused by ingestion of contaminated water or food that causes severe diarrhea, dehydration, and if not treated properly, death.

outbreak

an incident in which two or more persons have the same disease, have similar clinical features, or have the same pathogen-thus meeting the case definition*- and there is a time, place, or person association among these persons.

Inactivated vaccines

contain killed pathogens, which induce a weaker immune response

Differential misclassification

different amounts of error in study groups. Results in bias in one direction or another

bacterial disease

disease caused by bacteria that destroys all living cells or releases chemicals that upset homeostasis

water borne

examples: Cholera, Hepatitis A by ________________ transmission

Botulism

food poisoning

fomites

inanimate objects laden with disease causing agents (skin cells, hair, clothing) ex: Varicella

carrier

individual which is colonized + more

case series

larger collection of cases of disease, often grouped consecutively and listing common features such as the characteristics of affected patients

Infectious period

length of time a person can transmit disease.

prospective cohorts

limitation of _____________ cohort: are expensive and follow-up often must occur for a number of years, often times making the study untenable.

retrospective cohorts

limitation of _____________ cohort: rely on data that has already been collected, meaning investigator do not have any say on how exposure and disease are defined.

resident flora

microorganisms that usually occupy a particular body site

contact

mode of transmission: Direct or indirect (direct=skin/sexual contact; indirect=contaminated objects like infected fomite, blood, or body fluid)

vector borne

mode of transmission: I.e., mosquito, tick, snail

food or water borne

mode of transmission: Ingestion of contaminated food or water

airborne

mode of transmission: Inhalation of contaminated air

perinatal/vertical

mode of transmission: Similar to contact infection, but contact may occur in utero during pregnancy or delivery

COVIS

o CDC database o Vibriosis is reportable by law in 26 states and territories o _______________ report includes: - clinical information - exposure history - seafood trace back information

Single blinded study

patients are blinded to exposure group.

Efficacy

performance of the vaccine under ideal and controlled circumstances

Latent period

period of infection without being infectious. This may occur right after exposure or late in the disease.

source of contamination

person, animal, object from which environmental media are contaminated. Example the cook is the source of contamination of the potato salad.

Reservoir

person, animal, plant, environmental medium (soil, water) in which microorganism: - normally lives & multiplies, - on which it depends primarily for survival, - where it reproduces itself in such a manner that it can be transmitted to the susceptible host.

Colonization

presence of a microorganism on/in a host, with growth and multiplication of the organism, but without interaction between host and organism (no clinical expression, no immune response).

s

proportion of susceptible persons in the populations

Non-differential misclassification

random error, or the same amount of error in each group. Results will always be biased towards the null.

Differential misclassification

rate of misclassification differs in different study groups

Acellular Pertussis vaccine

subunit vaccine that contain purified, inactivated components of B. pertussis cells

recombinant vaccines

subunit vaccines produced by genetically engineered microorganisms

R0

the average number of people likely to catch the illness from a single infected person in a totally susceptible population

Incubation Period

the period between exposure to an infection and the appearance of the first symptoms

viral shedding

the release of virus particles that can potentially spread the infection to others

Incubation period

the time between exposure to an infectious agent and the onset of symptoms or signs of infection

vector transmission

transmission of an infectious agent by an insect, arthropod, or animal; ex: Malaria, Dengue, Lyme Disease, Zika, Yellow fever

Edward Jenner

used cowpox inoculation to prevent smallpox (immunization)

Effectiveness

vaccine performance under 'real-world' conditions

SARS-CoV

viral respiratory disease of zoonotic origin caused by the SARS coronavirus (_______________)

Influenza

virus replicates in all respiratory tree, particularly terminal bronchi, bronchioles and alveoli

Non-differential misclassification

when measurement error and any resulting misclassification occur equally in all groups being compared

Fastidious

will only grow when specific nutrients are included

recombinant vaccines

• Antigens may also be produced by genetic engineering technology • 5 currently available in the U.S. • Viral: hepatitis B, human papillomavirus, influenza (one brand), live attenuated influenza • Bacterial: Salmonella typhi (Ty21a)

Live attenuated vaccines

• Can be viral or bacterial • Derived from "wild," or disease-causing, viruses or bacteria • Attenuated (weakened) in a laboratory • Must replicate in a vaccinated individual to produce a response

Enterohemorrhagic E.coli (STEC)

• Hemorrhagic colitis caused by E.coli 0157:H7 • less frequently O26:H11 • cytotoxins resembling Shigella dysenteriae, type 1: shigalike or verotoxins

Influenza Antigenic Shift

• Major Changes • Changes occur quickly • Completely new subtype or virus • No immunity • Type A viruses only • Pandemic

Influenza Antigenic Drift

• Minor Changes • Often not even recognized by the human immune system • Natural mutation over time • Continuous process • Vaccine strains must be updated each year • Type A & B viruses Seasonal epidemics

inactivated vaccines

• Produced by growing the bacterium or virus in culture media, then inactivating it with heat and/or chemicals • Not alive, cannot replicate • Cannot cause disease from infection even in an immunocompromised person Ex: polio, hepatitis A, rabies

active immunity

• Protection produced by the person's own immune system • Often a lifetime immunity

passive immunity

• Protection transferred from another animal or human • Effective Protection that wanes with time

Polysaccharide vaccines

• Unique type of inactivated subunit vaccine • Pure polysaccharide vaccines • Able to stimulate B cells without the assistance of T-helper cells • Repeat doses of polysaccharide vaccines usually do not cause a booster response • Conjugate polysaccharide vaccines • Polysaccharide is chemically combined with a protein molecule

resident flora

Flora: Survives on the skin more than 24 hours; low virulence

Phase 4 (Post marketing surveillance)

What clinical trial is the following? Evaluation in the real clinical setting

Phase 1

What clinical trial is the following? First in humans, safety

Phase 2

What clinical trial is the following? First in patient dose, dosage form

SARS

"____________ patients are most likely to be contagious when they have symptoms, such as fever or cough. Patients are most contagious during the second week of illness" (CDC)

infectivity formula

(# infected / # susceptible) X 100

Virulence formula

(# of severe disease or deaths / # with disease (cases)) X 100

Pathogenicity formula

(# with clinical disease / # of infected) X 100

Traveler's Diarrhea

-Not common in US -Associated with many enteropathogens -Usually ingestion of contaminated food or water

Initial case definition

-This approach emphasizes sensitivity over specificity. -As additional information on the cases, exposure, and the symptoms is gathered, an updated, more EPID6214 Fall 2021 specific case definition is introduced.

Spot Maps

-useful for visualizing clusters -not indicative of higher incidence where spots are more dense - no accounting for population (denominator) -many apparent clusters are due to chance and are not necessarily indicative of proximity to causal factors

Steps of an Outbreak Investigation

1. Verify an outbreak is occurring 2. Confirm the diagnosis 3. Assemble an investigation team 4. Create a tentative case definition 5. Count cases 6. Perform epidemiologic analyses 7. Perform supplemental laboratory of environmental investigation (if indicated) 8. Develop hypothesis 9. Introduce preliminary control measures 10. Decided whether observation or additional studies are indicated 11. Perform additional analyses or plan and perform additional study 12. Perform new investigation-derived control measures and/or ensure the compliance of existing control measures 13. Communicate prevention information and findings 14. Monitor surveillance data

transient flora

Flora: catheter, bedpan, urinal, patient care casual contact; Enterobacteria, Gram - bacilli, Pseudomonas...

hypothesis

A hypothesis should be developed regarding: -Time -Person -Place -Etiologic agent -Mode of transmission

Vibrios

A leading cause of GI illness and septicemia from seafood consumption; Wound infections due to this bacteria are increasing

Antigen

A live or inactivated substance capable of producing an immune response

commensal

A relationship between two organisms in which one organism benefits and the other is unaffected

confounder

A variable that is associated with the exposure and independently influences the occurrence of the outcome.

resident flora

Flora: mostly Gram + , very few Gram - ;Staphylococci, diphteroides

infection

Infectivity is the ability of an agent to cause _______________ in a susceptible host and is measured as the proportion of exposed persons who become infected.

misclassification

Information bias results in ________________________

hypothesis

Initial __________________ based on: -Initial case reports -Interviews/questionnaires of index cases -Laboratory findings

Adolescents and adults

After immunization of disease, who is susceptible to pertussis?

Cluster

Aggregation of cases in a given area over a particular period without regard to whether the number of cases is more than expected.

cytotoxins

All Shigella produce _____________________, particularly S. dysenteriae

biological characteristics

All are dependent upon the condition of the host: age, gender, genetics, climate and weather, nutrition, stress, sleep, smoking, stomach acidity, hygiene

VHF

All types of ____________ are characterized by fever and bleeding disorders and all can progress to high fever, shock and death in many cases

hypothesis

Initial __________________ help clarify: -What is known -What is missing -Actions needed to gather missing information

communication

An effective outbreak investigation will involve _____________________ between: 1. Members of the investigation team 2. Stakeholders in the investigation -Hospital staff, physicians or infection control nurses -Daycare workers, school principles, teachers, parents 3. The public

Pandemic

An epidemic occurring on a global or semi-global scale

Endemic

An epidemic whose incidence remains stable over a long period of time. This forms a baseline for comparison to determine if a new epidemic is EPID6214 Fall 2021 occurring.

infectious disease

An illness due to a specific infectious agent or its products that arises through transmission of that agent from an infected person, animal or reservoir to a susceptible host, either directly or indirectly, through an intermediate plant or animal host, vector or the environment.

actually occurring

An important early step in any outbreak investigation is to verify that an outbreak is _________________________-.

Carrier State

An individual with an inapparent infection who is able to transmit that infection is considered to be a carrier.

zoonotic disease

An infectious disease is transmitted between species (sometimes by a vector*) from animals other than humans to humans or from humans to other animals.

cholera

Approximately 80% of _________________ infected individuals do not demonstrate any symptoms.

high

Are the following a part of a high or low risk group for HAV? Anyone not previously vaccinated or infected

Yes, one is Zebov

Are there 2 vaccines for Ebola rn?

high

Areas with ____________ levels of infection of HAV: • Developing countries with poor sanitary conditions and hygienic practices • Most children infected by age 10 • Infections in childhood results in very few symptoms • Epidemics uncommon because older children and immune • Symptomatic disease rates are low

Giardia

Anyone may become infected with ____________ those at highest risk are: ◦ Travelers to countries where giardiasis is common ◦ People in childcare settings ◦ Those who are in close contact with someone who has the disease ◦ People who swallow contaminated drinking water ◦ Backpackers or campers who drink untreated water from lakes or rivers ◦ People who have contact with animals who have the disease ◦ Men who have sex with men

simple

Assumptions for _____________ models: • Everyone is susceptible at beginning of outbreak/epidemic • Assume no heterogeneity • Random mixing

systematic stool examination

Asymptomatic carriage of Salmonella can be detected by __________________________ examination

Noroviruses

At least 50% of all food borne outbreaks of gastroenteritis can be attributed to what?

Descriptive Information Laboratory Data Environmental Data

List the information used in developing a case definition

◦ Itchy skin ◦ Hives ◦ Swelling of the eyes and joints

List the less common symptoms of Giardia

community-wide; person 2 person

Before the HAV vaccine, most diseases occurred in __________________________ outbreaks and infection transmitted ___________________ in households

preformed

Botulism occurs from consumption of _________________ toxin in foods

chicken

Campylobacter jejuni Grows best at 37°C to 42°C body temperature of _________________ (41°C to 42°C)

Nausea Vomiting Diarrhea

Clinical features of foodbrone botulism include?

Giardia

Communicability of this disease is that it can transmitted during the entirety of infection, which can last months

Wright County Egg

Company that had observations of concern highlighted by the FDA: • Failure "to eliminate rodent hiding places and nesting sites," and failure to properly seal its henhouses. • Failure to eliminate sources of water in the manure pits below the henhouses. • Failure to require employees to "change protective clothing when moving from house to house." • Failure to keep uncaged chickens out of the egg-laying operation.

publication

Considerations for ___________________ 1. Establish who will be the primary and senior author 2. Clearly define roles of individuals for the manuscript

Louis Pasteur

Created first rabies vaccination (live attenuated vaccine) on a nine year old boy

40%

Cruise ships have an overall high attack rate, up to ________%

human

Cryptosporidium parvum and C. hominis are the most relevant species for ___________________ health; Both can cause a self-limiting diarrhea in immunocompetent individuals, but can cause potentially life-threatening disease in the immunocompromised.

Nitazoxanide

Diarrhea from Crypto can be controlled by a 3-day course of what?

Enteroinvasive E.coli (EIEC)

Diarrhea with fever in all ages

disease Vaccines DONT PREVENT infection

Do vaccine prevent disease or infection?

identify

During the course of an outbreak investigation, the investigator should take steps to ________________ additional cases not known or reported at the time on the initial report

Incubation Period

Each disease has typical __________________________ but varies widely. Requires replication of the organism to some threshold level for producing symptoms.

-Rate of growth of the organism in the host -Dosage of the infectious agent -Portal of entry/route of inoculation -Immune response of the host

Each infectious disease has a characteristic incubation period dependent on: ? -? -? -? -?

prophylaxis

Epidemic Measures for HAV: 1. Determine mode of transmission (person-to-person or common vehicle) 2. Make special efforts to improve sanitation and hygiene practices 3. Outbreaks in institutions may warrant mass ____________________ with HAV vaccine or IgG

outbreak

Epidemic limited to a localized increase in the incidence of disease

information bias

Error that arises from systematic differences in the way information on exposure or disease is obtained from the study groups.

E. coli

Escherichia coli

Exposure

Estimating Risks Associated with "_________________": Compare attack rates among exposed and unexposed

Non-differential misclassification

Example: In a case-control study of alcohol consumption and risk of hepatocellular carcinoma, both cases and controls underreport exposure to alcohol

transient flora

Flora: Acquired during contacts with contaminated areas mouth, nose, perineal area, genitals, anal area

transient flora

Flora: Easily removed with soap and water

resident flora

Flora: Not easily removed, hours of scrubbing; complete sterilization impossible

Attack Rate (AR)

Expresses occurrence of disease among a particular at-risk population for a limited period of time, often due to a specific exposure. -Can be event or exposure specific

R

Factors influencing ______: • Transmission mode (airborne, large droplets, blood and body fluids, other) • Infection-control practices in place (see Ebola West Africa) • Incubation period short versus long, duration of infectiousness (SARS vs. HIV) • Extent of contact an infectious person has with others (infectious period) or duration of infectiousness (see Ebola West Africa) • Percent of the population that has been vaccinated (if a vaccine exists)

transient flora

Flora: Survive on skin less than 24 hours; may have high virulence

EpiInfo

Field statistical epidemiology software developed by the CDC for outbreak investigations

Prepare Investigation

Goal of ____________________________: each investigator knows their role and has the tools to successfully complete his or her deliverables

Influenza Antigenic Drift

Gradual changing of amino acid composition of influenza antigens Results in decreased ability of host memory cells to recognize them

Shigella

Gram negative rods of Enterobacteriaceae family that is divided into 4 major O antigenic group: A: S. dysenteriae B: S. flexneri C: S. boydii D: S. sonnei

Salmonella enterica

Gram-negative, food-borne pathogen that causes human diseases ranging from mild gastroenteritis to severe systemic infections

Salmonella enterica

Group 1 of Enterobacteriaceae where there is majority of human isolates

Botulism

Growth and toxin formation for foodborne _______________ to occur require: • an anaerobic environment • moisture • Neutral-to-alkaline pH • Energy source such as sugar or protein

Enterohemorrhagic E.coli (STEC)

Hemorrhagic colitis and hemolytic uremic syndrome in all ages and thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura in adults; bloody diarrhea

Whooping cough

Highly contagious respiratory infection caused by the bacteria Bordetella pertussis

Case Reports Surveillance

How are Potential Outbreaks Identified?

onset

Infectiousness of Ebola starts by ______________ of disease (not before) (again unlike influenza)

wet, red or dirty

If it is ________, ___________, or ____________ wash, glove then wash after removing gloves

decrease

If proportion of immunes is > HIT then infection should _______________

5-10 years

Immunity for Pertussis wanes approximately ______-______ years after vaccination

intermediate and low

In high transmission areas, little risk. In ____________________________ transmission areas risk factors include: • Poor sanitation • Lake of safe water • Use of recreational drugs • Living in a household with an infected person • Being a sexual partner of someone with acute HAV • Traveling to areas of high endemicity

Special Cases

In some cases, a single case of a severe disease demands investigation. Some example are: human rabies, anthrax, foodborne botulism, polio, and bubonic plague.

Cholera

In untreated severe disease: - Rapid dehydration - Acidosis - Circulatory collapse - Hypoglycemia in children - Renal failure that can lead rapidly to death

Enterotoxigenic E.coli (ETEC)

Infantile diarrhea in developing countries and travelers' diarrhea

Host

Infected or potentially infected person or animal

secondary attack rate

Infected/Susceptible after contact with a primary case (Quantified for many infections highest for airborne transmissions, Rabies e.g. 30% after bite from a rabid dog)

Universal Precaution Standard Precaution

Infection control includes what 2 precautions?

Giardia

Infection with _________________ is associated with: ◦ Drinking water from unfiltered surface water sources or shallow wells ◦ Swimming in bodies of freshwater ◦ Eating contaminated food. Transmission also occurs person 2 person and through anal-oral intercourse

infectious agent toxic transmission intermediate

Infectious Disease: An illness due to a specific _______________________ or its _______________ products that arises through _______________________ of that agent from an infected person, animal or reservoir to a susceptible host, either directly or indirectly, through an ____________________ plant or animal host, vector or the environment.

Infectious agent

Infectious microbe or parasite that produces disease, pathogen

surveillance

It consists of: -Ongoing, systematic collection of health data -Data analysis, -Interpretation of data, -Dissemination of the information, AND -Linking the health data to public health practice

phenolics

It has been suggested that double-strength phenolics may be effective for norovirus

Positive polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for B. pertussis

Laboratory Criteria for Diagnosis: -Isolation of Bordetella pertussis from clinical specimen -?

Airborne Droplet Contact (direct and indirect) **Another that is not as important for isolation guidelines include vector-borne

List the main modes of transmission that isolation guidelines in institutions are based off of

Giardia; Giardia

Life Cycle 1. Infections occurs when _____________ infected cysts are ingested by a susceptible host. 2. Cysts are hardy and can survive well in the environment, particularly in cold water. 3. Trophozoites live and multiply in the small intestine. 4. Trophozoites and cysts are shed in stool 5. Animals are infected with ______________, but their role in transmission is unclear

Rabies WNV H1N1, H5N1, H5N1 etc. (pandemic flu) Salmonella serotypes (Except Salmonella typhi) Yersinia pestis Tuberculosis (Mycobacterium tuberculosis, M. bovis) Baylisascaris procyonis

List 3 types of zoonotic diseases

◦ Diarrhea ◦ Gas ◦ Greasy stools that tends to float ◦ Stomach or abdominal cramps ◦ Nausea/vomiting ◦ Dehydration

List at least 4 acute symptoms of Giardia

-Frequent, non-bloody, watery diarrhea -Abdominal cramps -Fatigue -Fever -Nausea/Vomitting -Weight Loss -Dehydration

List at least 4 symptoms of Crypto

• Fever • Fatigue • Loss of appetite • Nausea • Vomiting • Abdominal pain • Dark urine • Clay-colored bowl movements • Joint pain • Jaundice • Malaise

List at least 4 symptoms of HAV

-Alcoholism -Cancers, particularly on chemo or radio-therapy, leukemia, lymphoma, Hodgkin's -Diabetes -Gastric disease -Hemochromatosis -Immune suppression (HIV) -Kidney chronic disease -Liver disease -Long term steroid use -Old age

List at least 4 underlying conditions that increases the risk for serious V. vulnificus infection

Pneumonia Seizures Encephalopathy Hospitalization Death

List some complications of pertussis

Human rabies Anthrax Foodborne botulism Polio Bubonic plague

List some diseases where a single case of severe disease demands investigation

-Closing a business: pool, restaurant, daycare center, so on. -Mass vaccinations -Boil water advisory

List some examples of extreme control measures

-Water temperature -Air temperature -Harvest technique -Cooling method -Post-harvest processing method

List some factors that affect Vibrio illnesses

Mechanical Biological

List the 2 types of vector transmission

Infectivity Pathogenicity Virulence Carrier state/inapparent infection Immunogenicity Herd immunity

List the Biologic Characteristics of Organisms

◦ Person-to-person ◦ Animal-to-person ◦ Waterborne (including recreational waters) ◦ Foodborne

List the fecal-oral transmission route for Cryptosporidium

Mosquirix

Malaria vaccine: Plasmodium falciparum vaccine vaccine to generate antibody and T-cell immune response recombinant protein Phase 3

human reservoirs

Many common infectious diseases have ___________________ reservoirs. These are diseases that are transmitted person to person without intermediaries, including STDs, measles, mumps, and many other respiratory infections.

temporal; seasonal

Many diseases undergo ___________________ variation in incidence. When this variation depends on the time of year, the variation is called _____________________.

asymptomatic

Many infections of Giardia are _____________________ (symptomatic/asymptomatic)

seasonal

Many respiratory illnesses have a __________________ variation, including influenza and pertussis. However, the reason why is still unclear.

Live attenuated vaccines

May cause severe/fatal reactions as a result of uncontrolled replication of the virus • Only occurs in the immunocompromised Ex: Measles, mumps, rubella, yellow fever

acceptable

Milk can be contaminated and infect persons with Mycobacterium bovis, Listeria monocytogenes, Q fever (Coxiella burnetii), Brucella, Campylobacter, Salmonella, Escherichia coli O157:H7 etc. Milk is tested following pasteurization to confirm that bacteria have been killed to an _____________________ level.

Giardia

The following are complications of _______________ in children: ◦Delayed mental and physical growth ◦Slow development ◦Malnutrition because of failure to absorb fat, lactose, vitamins A and B12

500

More than ___________ health care workers (only 3 outside the hot zone) have contracted Ebola since the outbreak began in December 2013, and 269 have died, (WHO, Nov 2014).

Model

Most Common __________________ Structures: SI: Susceptible - Infectious (HIV) SIS: : Susceptible - Infectious - Susceptible (STIs) SIR: Susceptible - Infectious - Recovered/Removed (=Immune) (MMR) SIRS: Susceptible - Infectious - Recovered - Susceptible (Pertussis, Flu, COVID-19?) SEIR: Susceptible - Exposed- Infectious - Recovered/Removed (=Immune) (MMR) SEIRS: Susceptible - Exposed - Infectious - Recovered - Susceptible (Pertussis & Flu)

RN

NET OR EFFECTIVE REPRODUCTION NUMBER

Negative predictive value

NPV = TN / (TN + FN)

Vibrios

Naturally occurring bacteria in salt-water (halophilic-SALT LOVING); highest levels in warmer months

herd immunity

Necessary conditions for ____________________: ◦ Agent restricted to single host species ◦ Relatively direct transmission ◦ No reservoir outside human host ◦ Infections induce solid immunity

supportive

Norovirus treatment is only ___________________ and there is only short term and strain specific immunity

Epidemic

Occurrence of more cases of illness than expected in a given area or among a specific group of people over a particular period of time. Causes usually presumed to have a common cause or be related to one another in some way.

Airborne

Occurs when aerosolized droplet nuclei less than 5 microns (< 5 µ) are expelled into the air via cough or sneeze; Nuclei have the ability to stay suspended in the air for a greater amount of time; ex: Measles, TB, varicella, smallpox

Droplet

Occurs when aerosolized droplet nuclei more than 5 microns (> 5 µ) are expelled into the air via cough or sneeze; Droplet nuclei usually travel less than three feet. Exposure does not usually occur outside of this distance; ex: Mumps, pertussis, and influenza

Differential misclassification

Occurs when the accurate measurement of a disease depends on the exposure and results in a biased estimate of effect.

colonization

Often the term ________________________ is applied for relationship host-agent in which the immune response is difficult to elicit.

supportive

Only ____________________ treatment is used for Ebola: Fluid management to prevent shock, blood transfusions, oxygen, ventilations, pain control and ulcer prophylaxis

mud party and petting zoo

Outbreaks of E. Coli in Louisiana are due to what?

Crypto

Outbreaks of ______________ occur: -Contamination of public water ◦At least 3 major outbreaks -Daycare centers worldwide Recreational use of water ◦Swimming pools, water slides, pools, and lakes -Consumption of infected foods and water

botulinum toxin

Outbreaks of foodborne botulism occur when food is prepared under conditions that permit the formation of _________________ _____________.

2-6 months

Outside the body oocysts may remain infective for ___-____ months or longer in a moist environment

Positive predictive value

PPV = TP / (TP + FP)

Pertussis pathogenesis

Pathogenesis of _________________: • Toxin mediated disease •Attach to cilia of respiratory epithelial cells • Inflammation interferes with clearance of pulmonary secretions

disease

Pathogenicity is the ability of a microbial agent to induce ________________ is measured as the proportion of infected persons who develop clinical disease.

DROPLET & CONTACT

Patient Placement for what? • Private room preferred • or cohort with same infection • or at least 3 feet between beds • Use common sense: do not mix immunocompromised patient with infected one

AIRBORNE

Patient Placement for what? Private room with ventilation control

10

People who recover from Ebola infection develop antibodies that last for at least _______ years.

environmental reservoirs

Plants, soil, and water in the environment are also reservoirs for infectious disease.

existing

Practically, it is important to ensure ________________ control measures are adhered to. Issues can arise when those responsible for implementing control measures are not convinced the measure is sound or they do not trust the information.

Airborne Precautions

Precautions include: 1-ROOM WITH VENTILATION CONTROL • Negative air pressure • >6 air exchange /hour • HEPA filtered or exhaust out 2-PERSONAL RESPIRATOR 3-PATIENT wears surgical mask if coughing & when transported

team; surveillance; supervisor's; supplies; state and local

Prepare the Investigation -Identify outbreak investigation ____________ -Share __________________ information -Get appropriate __________________ approval -Gather __________________ and equipment -Review scientific information -Notify __________________ departments

Contamination

Presence of a microorganism on a body surface or an inanimate object.

newborn

Prevention of pertussis in this group is the main goal due to when this group becomes infected they have the most severe infection

Crypto

The following are complications of people who develop ________________: People with weakened immune systems may develop serious, chronic, and sometimes fatal illness from this GI infection. Exs: ◦ Persons infected with HIV/AIDS ◦ Cancer and transplant patients taking immunosuppressive drugs ◦ Those with inherited diseases affecting the immune system

Annual Variation

Prior to the development of vaccines, diseases such as measles, mumps, and varicella, would propagate through the population, leaving no susceptible individuals. As new individuals were born, the number of susceptible would go up and epidemics would occur again. These factors led to ___________________ variation in disease incidence

Antibody

Protein molecules (immunoglobulins) produced by B lymphocytes to help eliminate an antigen

norovirus

The following are complications that may happen with _____________________: Severe dehydration is possible and may be fatal to the very young/old.

Appropriate Ethical Intelligible Omni competent Unambiguous Coded Unbiased Piloted

Questionnaire Design- Guidelines include? AEIOU CUP

-Is the item needed? -Can I analyze it? -Can it be answered accurately? -Will it be answered accurately?

Questionnaire Design—Criteria

Influenza Antigenic Shift

RNA exchange between different viruses Occurs during coinfection of a host cell More likely to produce pandemic strains

negative association

RR/OR<1 means?

no association

RR/OR=1 means?

positive association

RR/OR>1 means?

shifts

Reasons as to why there are ________________ in Colonization Flora: - Modification of the skin environment due to skin changes still poorly understood - Invasive procedures provides portal of entry to different flora: - Antibiotic therapy:

Antibiotic Chemoprophylaxis

Recommended for all close contacts of pertussis, regardless of age and immunization status

hydrogen peroxide

Relatively new "accelerated, stabilized ___________________ __________________" .... Good activity against Feline calicivirus, good success in norovirus outbreak management aboard ships

communicate; contribute

Remember—one of your responsibilities as an epidemiologist is to ______________________ findings and _____________________ to the literature.

True

T/F: Diseases with only a human reservoir are good candidates for vaccination and disease eradication.

Cholera

Risk Groups of ________________: Increased Risk: - Lowest SES groups, particularly people without access to clean water and adequate sanitation - Persons with blood group O are more vulnerable to severe cholera if infected Reduced Risk: - Breastfeeding infants

True

T/F: HAV vaccine should be considered for all high-risk populations

True

T/F: HAV vaccine should be given ASAP, but no more than 2 weeks after exposure

True

T/F: Immunity of HAV is life long and there is no chronic carriage

True

T/F: Immunization decreases pertussis cases but did not change cycles

True

T/F: Norovirus does not multiply in foods

2x2 table

STUDY

True

T/F: Over time the number of immunes will increase and the number of susceptible persons will decrease therefore; R0 > Rn

FALSE; STEAMING DOES NOT INACTIVATE NOROVIRUSES

T/F: Steaming inactivates noroviruses

foodborne

Salmonella, E. coli, Shigella by _____________________ transmission

external validity

Selection bias affects _______________________ of the study.

sensitivity

Sensitivity = TP / (TP + FN)

True

T/F: Stool samples are best collected 48-72 hours after exposure (i.e. acute phase of norovirus), but stools are positive up to 7-10 days after onset

incubation period

Take the average and range of all cases to describe the ____________________

Phase 3

What clinical trial is the following? Efficacy, adverse drug reactions

low

Shigella has a ___________ infective dose: 10-200 bacteria by mouth

Influenza virus

Single stranded RNA virus: • Evolve rapidly Lipid envelope with 2 important glycoprotein • Hemagglutinin HA • Neuraminidase NA

Resident Flora Transient Flora

Skin Hand Flora includes what 2 types of flora?

severe

Some control measures for are already established and incorporated into state and federal legislation. This is especially true for ___________________ disease.

specificity

Specificity = TN / (TN + FP)

Hand Sanitizers

These can quickly reduce the number of germs on hands in some situations, but they do not eliminate all types of germs: Not effective on spores (particularly Clostridium difficile)

authorities

State public health codes require physicians and laboratories to report certain infectious disease to public health _____________________

CDC

States report nationally notifiable diseases to the ___________ through the NNDSS

antigens

Studies of _______________ that produce protective immunity after natural infections often lead to development of vaccines.

variant viruses

Swine flu viruses do not normally infect humans but when they do these viruses are called '_____________________'

True

T/F: 2 oral vaccines (Dukoral and Shanchol) are prequalified by the WHO and available in many countries for Cholera

True

T/F: A single reported case of botulism is enough to initiate an outbreak investigation

True

T/F: Children are infected with Giardia more frequently than adult

Botulism

These conditions for ________________ to occur most often present in lightly preserved foods and inadequately processed, home-preserved foods, and home-canned foods

viral shedding

The Norovirus has _____________ __________________: -Up to 72 hours after recovery -Up to 2 weeks in both symptomatic and asymptomatic people

persons experiencing homelessness

The Updated Vaccine Recommendations 2019 stated that what other specific population should received the HAV vaccine?

media

The _________________ can be a useful tool in communicating with the public: -Effective medium to communicate to the public what they need to know. -Can be less than scientific or overzealous in communication of information.

journalist

The ______________________ limited by the amount of time of his/or her broadcast or the length of his or her column. Thus, it is important to be concise and provide the media with a cohesive message.

communicability

The _______________________ of HAV begins a week or two before symptoms manifest (most infective) and diminishes rapidly afterwards

true positive rate

The ability of a diagnostic test to correctly identify individuals with disease; it is the proportion of individuals with the disease who are correctly identified by the test as positive (i.e., have the disease). Also called sensitivity.

true negative rate

The ability of a diagnostic test to correctly identify individuals without disease; it is the proportion of individuals without the disease who are correctly identified by the test as negative (i.e., do not have the disease). Also called specificity.

Sensitivity

The ability of a test (case definition) to correctly identify those with the disease

Specificity

The ability of a test (case definition) to correctly identify those without the disease

Immunogenicity

The ability of an organism to produce an immune response after an infection that is capable of providing protection against reinfection with the same or a similar organism

secondary attack rate

The attack rate in susceptible people who have been exposed to a primary case.

1. Small enumerable exposed groups 2. Large enumerable exposed groups 3. Large or small groups where the exposure situation can be pinpointed, but the exposure population cannot be enumerated 4. The exposed population is not known or enumerable

The characteristics of the exposed population are determined after interviewing initial cases and fall into four categories?

sensitivity and specificity

The creation of a case definition must always weigh what?

hypothesis

The development of a ___________________ is an early stage of outbreak investigation.

2-4

The duration of Giardia is self-limiting infections usually resolving in ______ - _______ weeks

Influenza

The duration of viral shedding for ___________________ is from 1 day before onset to 5 days after onset

New Orleans

The first reported human Baylisascaris case in ______________________ raised concerns that very little was known about this zoonotic disease in the increasing urban racoon population

prevention

The primary goal of an investigation is always _________________

Natural History of Disease

The progress of a disease process in an individual over time, without intervention

pathogenicity

The proportion of individuals with asymptomatic infections is a measure of what?

Herd Immunity

The resistance of a group to an attack by a disease to which a large proportion of the members of the group are immune.

80%

The secondary attack rate for pertussis is up to _____%

Epidemic Curves

These plot the number of cases by the time of disease onset.

Inapparent Infections

These potentially play a large importance in the propagation of epidemics. The understanding of the transmission of a disease during an epidemic can help control transmission

Standard Precautions

These precautions are designed to reduce the risk of transmission of microorganisms from both recognized and unrecognized sources of infection in hospitals

efficacy and effectiveness

There are many factors that influence this critical percent (herd immunity), including ________________ and ____________________ of the vaccine and infectivity of the disease.

Cryptosporidium

There are many species of __________________________ that infect animals, some of which also infect humans. The parasite is protected by an outer shell that allows it to survive outside the body for long periods of time and makes it very tolerant to chlorine disinfection.

"Sky is falling" syndrome

There are risks and benefits of involving others early on in Outbreak Investigations. What is one?

Colonization Protects the Host

There are several mechanisms for protection: - Non specific stimulation of immune responsiveness - Specific cross reactive immunization - Competitive bacterial interference

N95 Mask PAPR Powered Air Purifying Respirators

These airborne precautions are for Personnel: • In AIRBORNE ISOLATION ONLY • To prevent inhalation of droplet nuclei • Main leak comes from poor fit around face

Standard Precautions

These are an expansion of universal precautions: -Precautions should be taken for any contact with Blood and Body Fluid (UP) -AND for any contact with secretions and excretions, mucous membranes, damaged skin, contaminated environment and equipment

Isolation Quarantine

These are necessary Public Health measures to prevent exposure to people who have or may have a contagious disease.

Hand sanitizers

These are not effective when hands are visibly dirty

Surgical Masks

These are used for DROPLET PRECAUTIONS to prevent large droplets (>5mu m) on/from patient and for patients to prevent emission of droplet (large and droplet nuclei)

Surgical Masks

These are used for STANDARD PRECAUTIONS for personnel to protect from splashes /sprays of blood and body fluids (BBF), secretions (S) and excretions (E)

Eye Protection Face Shield

These are used in risk of spray or splash: - of blood, - body fluid, - secretion - excretion in FACE OR EYE

Frequency Tables

These can be used to describe the general patterns of the outbreak.

carrier

Think about ______________ as: - Potential Source for infection - Explanation for persons who don't show signs or symptoms

Inapparent Infections

This an infection that can be documented by isolation of an organism by culture, positive PCR, or demonstration of an immune response in persons who remain asymptomatic.

Shigella

This bacteria is ale to penetrate cells

Wright County Egg

This company is still allowed to sell eggs, but they must go to a "breaker" facility where the eggs are removed from their shells and heated to kill salmonella for use in prepared foods such as cake mixes

exposed

This definition relies on mode of transmission and other information that may not be all known

initial case definition

This definition will start broadly as opposed to narrowly, with the goal of identifying as many cases as possible.

SARS-COV2

This disease is mainly transmitted through droplets > 5 micron which will fall on the ground within 6 feet

Asymptomatic infection

This does not mean that "all is quiet". It may cover some very active processes as in the asymptomatic phase of HIV infection, tuberculosis infection, hepatitis B carrier state.

Filoviridae

This enveloped RNA virus can lead to Ebola

vehicle transmission

This includes transmission via water-borne, foodborne, and fomites

Rn

This is a reproduction number and is the average number of successful transmissions per infectious person

carrier

This is an individual that harbors a specific microorganism in the absence of discernible clinical disease and serve as a potential source of infection.

vector

This is any agent that carries and transmits an infectious pathogen to another living organism

botulinum toxin

This is one of the most lethal substances in existence; this toxin is produced by the bacterium Clostridium botulinum

zoonosis

This is termed "_________________" refers to an infectious disease that is transmissible under natural conditions from vertebrate animals to humans. Examples: brucellosis (cows and pigs), plague (rodents), tularemia (rabbits), and rabies (bats, raccoons, dogs, and other mammals).

Pathogenicity

This is the ability of a microbial agent to induce disease is measured as the proportion of infected persons who develop clinical disease

Infectivity

This is the ability of an agent to cause infection in a susceptible host and is measured as the proportion of exposed persons who become infected

R0

This is the basic reproduction number; If an infectious person is introduced into a totally susceptible population, average of secondary infectious persons resulting from this infectious person

Surveillance

This is the continuous monitoring of the occurrence of a disease (or other important health event) in a population.

reservoir

This is the long-term host of the pathogen of the infectious disease. Hosts often do not get the disease carried by the pathogen or it is carried as an asymptomatic subclinical infection.

mode of transmission

This is the means by which an infectious agent infects a susceptible host

Test positivity

This is the number of positive tests/ total number of tests per day

oocysts; oocyst

Transmission of Cryptosporidium results from the ingestion of ________________; one single _________________ is enough to make a person ill with crypto

Person to Person Large Droplets Airborne Contact, fomites

Transmission of Season Flu?

Vibrio

Transmission of _______________: - Ingestion of raw or undercooked shellfish (ie oysters, clams) - Direct skin exposure to seawater or raw seafood drippings

botulism antitoxin

Treatment for botulism should include supportive care and careful administration of what?

Biological

Type of vector transmission: : the vector uptakes the agent, replicates and/or develops it, and then regurgitates the pathogen onto or injects it into a susceptible animal

Mechanical

Type of vector transmission: the disease agent does not replicate or develop in/on the vector, it is simply transported by the vector from one animal to another

90

Up to ________% of Salmonella infections in the US are foodborne

blood

Upon recovery from Ebola, virus clears fast from _____________ but is longer persistent in kidneys, gonads and other organs

standard

Use ______________________ precautions at ALL times for ALL patients

Campylobacter jejuni (gram-negative & don't like oxygen)

Well adapted to birds who are carriers

Compartmental

What Model classification is the following? -Populations are divided into categories/compartments -Tracks infectious process in populations, can be either deterministic or stochastic

Transmission dynamics or "Dynamic transmission" models

What Model classification is the following? Includes contacts (hence transmission) between individuals. Risk or force of infection depends on number of infectious persons in the population and therefore changes over time...

Network

What Model classification is the following? Network of individuals is explicitly modelled, especially for STDs

Static

What Model classification is the following? Risk or force of infection is "pre-determined". Used when risk of infection is known, not good when evaluating interventions i.e. to reduce the prevalence of infectious persons with vaccinations or treatment interventions because the risk of infection might change

Individual based or microsimulation

What Model classification is the following? Tracks infection process for every individual of the population, most likely stochastic models

-Chronic, severe diarrhea -Malnutrition -Dehydration -Death

What are some complications of Crypto that may happen to people with HIV?

Diarrhea, Nausea, Abdominal pain, Vomiting, Myalgia, Fatigue, Headache Low fever, Chills

What are some gastroenteritic symptoms that may develop after getting infected with the norovirus?

cough & mild URTI

What are some of the symptoms of pertussis in the catharrhal stage?

cough w/ inspiratory whoop & vomit; minimal fever

What are some of the symptoms of pertussis in the paroxysmal stage?

Handwashing Sanitary disposal of feces Protection of water supply Food prep Control of vectors (specifically flies)

What are some prevention methods of Shigellosis?

Organize questions to facilitate recall Offer "not sure" response

What are some solutions to Foodborne Questionnaires or food histories?

DTaP (pediatric) Tdap (adolescent and adult)

What are the 2 Pertussis-containing vaccines?

R0 and Rn (Reproduction Numbers not Rates)

What are the 2 measures for measure of transmissibility?

Hand washing Avoid contaminated water

What are the 2 methods of control for Crypto?

Active Passive

What are the 2 types of immunity?

Preschool and school children

What are the core transmission groups for influenza?

• Ingestion of food or water contaminated with feces of infected person (Vehicle) • Person-to-person transmission • Indirect through environmental fomites • Waterborne outbreaks

What are the fecal-oral routes of transmission for HAV?

Restaurant and catered meals (36%), nursing homes (23%), schools (13%) and vacation settings or cruises (10%)

What are the most common settings for food-borne outbreaks of norovirus?

• Sewage contamination of well water • Recreational waters: (swimming pools etc.) • Commercial ice • Lake and river water (see Colorado river rafters, Grand Canyon, Summer 2002)

What are the most common settings for waterborne outbreaks of norovirus?

Education Proper water treatment and distribution systems and sewage disposal Pre-exposure immunization

What are the prevention methods for HAV?

Humans and environment (brackish water or estuaries)

What are the reservoirs for Cholera?

Humans Wild and domestic animals such as cats, dogs, cattle, and beavers

What are the reservoirs of Giardia?

Primates such as gorillas and chimpanzees *become infected and can have high case fatality rate

What are the vectors for Ebola?

subclinical or inapparent infection

an infection with signs and symptoms too mild to be recognized, except by special tests

matching

any attempt to force a sample to resemble specified attributes of the population

herd immunity formula

𝑉 = 1 − (1/𝑅0) -where V equals the herd immunity threshold and 𝑅0 equals the basic reproductive number


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