Deck 8: Infectious Disease Epidemiology

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Question
Which of the following types of epidemiology focuses on the distribution, control, and spread of infectious diseases?

A) Pharmacoepidemiology
B) Environmental epidemiology
C) Social epidemiology
D) Infectious disease epidemiology
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Question
Which of the following is the only infectious disease to be successfully eradicated globally?

A) Smallpox
B) Poliovirus
C) Dracunculiasis
D) Tuberculosis
Question
In infectious disease epidemiology, a case is a person who has been exposed to an infectious agent.
Question
An animal or insect that carries an infectious disease is called an):

A) Vector
B) Host
C) Microbe
D) Fomite
Question
Which scientist proposed that if a microbe was responsible for a specific disease then it should be possible to isolate that microbe from an individual with the illness, grow the microbe in a laboratory, infect another individual, and re-isolate the same microbe from the newly infected individual?

A) John Snow
B) Robert Koch
C) Louis Pasteur
D) Antoine van Leeuwenhoek
Question
If you create an epidemic curve for an outbreak and see that there are multiple peaks in the number of infections over time, indicating the disease is spreading from person to person, what type of outbreak has occurred?

A) Point source
B) Propagated
C) Continuous source
D) Vector-borne
Question
A vaccine that is made up of an infectious microbe that has been altered weakened) in the laboratory so that it will cause an immune response but will not cause illness is called an):

A) Live vaccine
B) Live attenuated vaccine
C) Inactivated vaccine
D) Component vaccine
Question
Dracunculiasis Guinea worm disease) is a vaccine-preventable disease that requires a single dose for lifelong immunity.
Question
The final step of an outbreak investigation should be to report the findings to others so that future outbreaks might be prevented.
Question
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome SARS) was a completely unique type of coronavirus that had not been seen before it caused a pandemic in 2002.
Question
An infectious disease outbreak occurs when there is a higher than expected number of cases of a particular disease.
Question
The descriptive epidemiology practice of identifying person, place, and time factors is also used in infectious disease epidemiology to describe an outbreak.
Question
Which of the following factors makes a disease a good candidate for eradication?

A) It mutates frequently
B) There is limited funding available in developing nations to control the disease.
C) There are multiple animal reservoirs.
D) It can be prevented with a single dose of vaccine.
Question
In infectious disease epidemiology, what measure is a useful indicator of the severity of an outbreak, calculated as the number of cases out of the number of susceptible people?

A) Relative risk
B) Odds ratio
C) Attack rate
D) Incubation period
Question
When an infectious disease is spread by contact transmission, the source releases the microbe into the air, usually by breathing, coughing, or spitting, and the host is exposed.
Question
Which of the following terms is used to describe the phenomenon that not all members of a community must be vaccinated in order to protect the community from an infectious disease outbreak?

A) Eradication
B) Variolation
C) Herd immunity
D) Inapparent infection
Question
The process of identifying people who came into contact with an infected person is known in infectious disease epidemiology as the chain of infection.
Question
Poliovirus is spread through the fecal-oral route and causes inapparent infection in the vast majority of people who contract it.
Question
The emergence of Human Immunodeficiency Virus HIV) has led to an increase in the number of cases of which other infectious disease, previously in decline for over 30 years?

A) Smallpox
B) Poliovirus
C) Dracunculiasis
D) Tuberculosis
Question
Variolation, an early practice of preventing the spread of disease, was developed using an influenza-like virus from pigs and infecting humans to prevent more serious disease.
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Deck 8: Infectious Disease Epidemiology
1
Which of the following types of epidemiology focuses on the distribution, control, and spread of infectious diseases?

A) Pharmacoepidemiology
B) Environmental epidemiology
C) Social epidemiology
D) Infectious disease epidemiology
Infectious disease epidemiology
2
Which of the following is the only infectious disease to be successfully eradicated globally?

A) Smallpox
B) Poliovirus
C) Dracunculiasis
D) Tuberculosis
Smallpox
3
In infectious disease epidemiology, a case is a person who has been exposed to an infectious agent.
False
4
An animal or insect that carries an infectious disease is called an):

A) Vector
B) Host
C) Microbe
D) Fomite
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5
Which scientist proposed that if a microbe was responsible for a specific disease then it should be possible to isolate that microbe from an individual with the illness, grow the microbe in a laboratory, infect another individual, and re-isolate the same microbe from the newly infected individual?

A) John Snow
B) Robert Koch
C) Louis Pasteur
D) Antoine van Leeuwenhoek
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6
If you create an epidemic curve for an outbreak and see that there are multiple peaks in the number of infections over time, indicating the disease is spreading from person to person, what type of outbreak has occurred?

A) Point source
B) Propagated
C) Continuous source
D) Vector-borne
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Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
A vaccine that is made up of an infectious microbe that has been altered weakened) in the laboratory so that it will cause an immune response but will not cause illness is called an):

A) Live vaccine
B) Live attenuated vaccine
C) Inactivated vaccine
D) Component vaccine
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Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Dracunculiasis Guinea worm disease) is a vaccine-preventable disease that requires a single dose for lifelong immunity.
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Unlock Deck
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9
The final step of an outbreak investigation should be to report the findings to others so that future outbreaks might be prevented.
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10
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome SARS) was a completely unique type of coronavirus that had not been seen before it caused a pandemic in 2002.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
An infectious disease outbreak occurs when there is a higher than expected number of cases of a particular disease.
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12
The descriptive epidemiology practice of identifying person, place, and time factors is also used in infectious disease epidemiology to describe an outbreak.
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13
Which of the following factors makes a disease a good candidate for eradication?

A) It mutates frequently
B) There is limited funding available in developing nations to control the disease.
C) There are multiple animal reservoirs.
D) It can be prevented with a single dose of vaccine.
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Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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14
In infectious disease epidemiology, what measure is a useful indicator of the severity of an outbreak, calculated as the number of cases out of the number of susceptible people?

A) Relative risk
B) Odds ratio
C) Attack rate
D) Incubation period
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Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
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15
When an infectious disease is spread by contact transmission, the source releases the microbe into the air, usually by breathing, coughing, or spitting, and the host is exposed.
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Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Which of the following terms is used to describe the phenomenon that not all members of a community must be vaccinated in order to protect the community from an infectious disease outbreak?

A) Eradication
B) Variolation
C) Herd immunity
D) Inapparent infection
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Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
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17
The process of identifying people who came into contact with an infected person is known in infectious disease epidemiology as the chain of infection.
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18
Poliovirus is spread through the fecal-oral route and causes inapparent infection in the vast majority of people who contract it.
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19
The emergence of Human Immunodeficiency Virus HIV) has led to an increase in the number of cases of which other infectious disease, previously in decline for over 30 years?

A) Smallpox
B) Poliovirus
C) Dracunculiasis
D) Tuberculosis
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Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
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20
Variolation, an early practice of preventing the spread of disease, was developed using an influenza-like virus from pigs and infecting humans to prevent more serious disease.
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