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13 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
Re emerging disease |
Infectious agents that have been known for some time, had fallen to such low levels that they were no longer considered public health problems & are now showing upward trends in incidence or prevalence worldwide |
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Cholera |
Vibrio cholerae |
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Lassa fever host |
Rodent |
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Trend of infectious disease |
1. Receded in Western countries 20th century 2. Urban sanitation, improved housing, personal hygiene, antisepsis & vaccination 3. Antibiotics further suppressed morbidity & mortality 4. 20th century- new & resurgent infectious diseases 5.Unusually large number- Rotavirus, Cryptosporidiosis, HIV/AIDS, Hantaviraus, Lyme disease, Legionellosis, and Hepatitis |
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Common features of infectious disease |
All were caused by zoonotic pathogens All spread by modern transportation Most had Asian origin Laboratory and clinical diagnoses were problematic Poor communication among countries Major economic impact |
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After natural disaster |
Diarrhea Acute respiratory infections Malaria Leptospirosis Measles Dengue fever Viral hepatitis Typhoid fever meningitis tetanus |
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Host factors to emergence |
Human demographic change (inhabiting new areas) Human behaviour (sexual & drug use) Human susceptibility to infection (Immunosuppression) Poverty & social inequality |
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Environment factor emergencr |
Climate & changing ecosystems Economic development & Land use (urbanization, deforestation) Technology & industry (food processing & handling) Deterioration in surveillance systems Others Genetic drift/ genetic shift Mass immunocompromisation Economic development Breakdown of public health Poverty and social inequality Dam and irrigation system construction Interracial marriage
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Transmission of infectious agent |
Animal/ population displacement Climate patterns Uncontrolled urbanization Human behaviour Antimicrobial drug resistance
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Cause antibiotic resistance |
Wrong prescribing practices non-adherence by patients Counterfeit drugs Use of anti-infective drugs in animals & plants Loss of effectiveness Community-acquired (TB, Pneumococcal) & Hospital-acquired (Enterococcal) |
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Consequence antibiotic resistance |
Prolonged hospital admissions Higher death rates from infections Requires more expensive, more toxic drugs Higher health care costs |
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Disease spread diagram |
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Bioterrorism |
Possible deliberate release of infectious agents by dissident individuals or terrorist groups Biological agents are attractive instruments of terror- easy to produce, mass casualties, difficult to detect, widespread panic & civil disruption |