Causes of Disease
Causes of Disease
Causes of Disease
Epidemiology
Causes of Disease
Identifying causes of disease and the mechanisms by
which they spread remains a primary focus of
epidemiology
Vertical Transmission
Horizontal Transmission
Vertical transmission of infectious
communicable diseases
Examples:
yeast infection, hepatitis B, C, rabies
Horizontal transmission of infectious
communicable diseases
Examples:
Touching with contaminated hands
Skin-to-skin contact
Kissing
2. Indirect transmission:
Confirmed
Different levels of diagnosis
As more info (such as lab results) becomes available to
the physician, he/she generally upgrades his/her diagnosis
When all criteria are met and they meet the case
definition, the case is classified as a confirmed case.
Categories of Disease Carriers
5 major types of carriers
1. Active carrier: persons who have been exposed to
and who harbor a pathogen (disease-causing
organism)
Has done so for some time even though may have
recovered from the disease
Objective is to:
Stop or slow the progression of disease and to prevent limit permanent
damage through early detection and treatment
Level of Disease Prevention
Tertiary Prevention
Targeted at people with chronic diseases and disabilities that
can’t be cured
Objective is to:
Prevent further disability or death and limit impacts of disability through
rehabilitation
KEY Epi CONCEPT:
Herd immunity
Viewed as resistance a
population has to
invasion/spread of an ID
Based on notion that if a
population or group is
mostly protected from a
disease by immunizations
(> 85%), then chance of a
major epidemic occurring is
limited
Herd Immunity
Herd immunity provides barrier to direct transmission of
infections through population
Lack of susceptible persons stops spread of a disease
through throughout group
Herd Immunity
Public health
immunization program
goal: attain as close to
100% coverage as is
possible to prevent
even one case from
occurring
Diseases for which vaccines are used
Anthrax Plague
Cholera Pneumonia
Chickenpox Polio
Diphtheria Rabies
German measles Smallpox
(rubella) Spotted fever
Hepatitis A Tetanus
Hepatitis B Tuberculosis
Influenza Typhoid fever
Measles Typhus
Meningitis Whooping cough
Mumps Yellow fever
Pertussis