1 / 27

Epidemiology

Epidemiology. Factors That Influence Epidemics Transmission and The Role of Nurses in the Identification of an Epidemic. Factors That May Influence Epidemics. Host susceptibility – How susceptible is individual to coming down with infectious disease? Immunization Genetic background

Download Presentation

Epidemiology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Epidemiology Factors That Influence Epidemics Transmission and The Role of Nurses in the Identification of an Epidemic.

  2. Factors That May Influence Epidemics • Host susceptibility – How susceptible is individual to coming down with infectious disease? • Immunization • Genetic background • Health of individual • Young and old are especially susceptible. • Culture • Hispanics might be more affected by flu because they are big huggers. • Religion • What you believe can help/hinder your chances of surviving an infectious disease. Some religions do not permit invasive procedures (vaccinations included), seeking medical attention etc...

  3. Factors That May Influence Epidemics • Time of year summer is usually the worst time because people are out socializing a lot.

  4. Factors That May Influence Epidemics • Parasite/infectious entity and its pathogenicity • Its ability to adhere to host (attach and stay with) • Its invasiveness (how easily does it get into the body)

  5. Factors That May Influence Epidemics • Parasite/infectious entity and its pathogenicity • Its antigenic variation (mutation) • Plagues mutate really quickly. You might treat it one way and then it mutates and you have to figure out how to treat the new mutation. • Ability of the pathogen to exist as an intracellular pathogen • Can it get inside the cell and propagate • HIV, AIDS, Malaria, Chlamydia

  6. Factors That May Influence Epidemics • Parasite/infectious entity and its pathogenicity • Ability of the pathogen to produce toxins • Botulism • Dose of an agent – how much of organism has to enter the body or come in contact with it. • Salmonella – need 100,000 cells • Shigella – need only 10 cells (more virulent than salmonella)

  7. Factors That May Influence Epidemics • Parasite/infectious entity and its pathogenicity • Incubation period – you can communicate a disease before you even know you have it. • HIV, Chlamydia

  8. Strategies of Pathogens to Exist/Survive Formation of cyst – dormant (protozoan) Endospores Mutation (antigenic variation) Intracellular pathogen Development of a complex life cycle Capsules (bacteria/yeast)

  9. Control of Epidemics Reduction of source of infection • Quarantine • Destroy infected host

  10. Control of Epidemics Disruption of chain of Transmission • Destroy vectors • Pasteurization – 60°C for 30 minutes • Flash pasteurization – 72°C for 15 seconds • Water treatment

  11. Control of Epidemics Immunization Best way to protect the entire population is to have as many citizens immunized.

  12. Control of Epidemics Control of hospital acquired and community acquired infection • Nosocomial – an infection acquired in a health related facility.

  13. Control of Epidemics Surveillance • The job of CDC and state health departments. There is a certain set of infectious diseases that doctors/schools/hospitals must report immediately. • Salmonella • Rabies • Botulism • Shigella • Anthrax

  14. Who is the primary defense against epidemics? NURSES!! (Healthcare Workers) They see things before anyone else. People who are really sick are going to the ER not to their family doctor.

  15. Manifestations of Disease: Symptoms, Signs, and Syndromes • Symptoms – subjective characteristics of disease felt only by the patient • Signs – objective manifestations of disease that can be observed or measured by others • Syndrome – group of symptoms and signs that characterize a disease or abnormal condition • Asymptomatic, or subclinical, infections lack symptoms but may still have signs of infection

  16. Signs and Symptoms: Warning Signals of Disease • Sign: any objective evidence of disease as noted by an observer • Symptom: the subjective evidence of disease as sensed by the patient • Syndrome: when a disease can be identified or defined by a certain complex of signs and symptoms

  17. Signs and Symptoms of Inflammation • Fever, pain, soreness, swelling • Edema • Granulomas and abscesses • Lymphadenitis • Lesion: the site of infection or disease

  18. Signs of Infection in the Blood • Changes in the number of circulating white blood cells • Leukocytosis • Leukopenia • Septicemia: general state in which microorganisms are multiplying in the blood and are present in large numbers • Bacteremia or viremia: microbes are present in the blood but are not necessarily multiplying

  19. Infections that Go Unnoticed • Asymptomatic, subclinical, or inapparent infections • Most infections do have some sort of sign

  20. Nosocomial Infections: The Hospital as a Source of Disease • Nosocomial infections: infectious diseases that are acquired or develop during a hospital stay • 2-4 million cases a year • The importance of medical asepsis

  21. Hospital Epidemiology: Nosocomial Infections • Types of nosocomial infections • Exogenous – pathogen acquired from the health care environment • Endogenous – pathogen arises from normal microbiota due to factors within the health care setting • Iatrogenic – results from modern medical procedures

  22. Hospital Epidemiology: Nosocomial Infections • Control of nosocomial infections • Involves precautions designed to reduce the factors that result in disease • Hand washing is the most effective way to reduce nosocomial infections

  23. Universal Blood and Body Fluid Precautions • Universal precautions (UPs): guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention • Assume that all patient specimens could harbor infectious agents • Include body substance isolation (BSI)techniques to be used in known cases of infection

  24. Epidemiology of Public Health • Agencies at the local, state, national, and global level share information concerning disease • The United States Public Health Service is the national public health agency • World Health Organization (WHO) coordinates public health services internationally • Public health agencies work to limit disease transmission • Monitor water and food safety • Public health agencies campaign to educate the public on healthful choices to limit disease

  25. Nationally Notifiable Infectious Disease

  26. Peppe Thanks You for Keeping us Safe

More Related