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Review of Epidemiologic Concepts in Infectious Disease Paul K. Mills, Ph.D., M.P.H. The Infectious Disease Process The Infectious Disease Process Agents Reservoirs Portals of Entry and Exit Transmission Host Immunity Herd Immunity Herd immunity is the proportion of resistant individuals in the population. If the proportion is large enough, disease transmission cannot occur. Stages in the natural history of disease and prevention Spectrum Stage Prevention Exposure Occurs Stage of Susceptibility Primary prevention Incubation period Stage of Subclinical Disease Secondary prevention Pathologic changes occur Onset of Symptoms Time of Clinical Diagnosis Stage of Clinical Disease Stage of recovery, Disability or Death Tertiary prevention Agent, Host, Environment • • • • • • • • • • Epidemics arise when the relative influence and balance of agent, host and environment are thrown out of balance. Examples may include: 1. Introduction of a new agent. 2. Increases in the ability of the agent to survive in the environment. 3. Increases in the agents ability to infect the host (infectivity). 4. Increases in the ability of the agent to cause disease once inside the host (pathogenicity). 5. Increases in the severity of disease once it has established itself inside the host (virulence). 6. Increase in the proportion of susceptible in the population. 7. Environmental changes that favor growth. 8. Environmental changes that favor transmission of the agent. 9. Environmental changes that compromise host resistance. Epidemiologic Concepts of Person, place and time. • Sporadic: occurring rarely and without regularity. • Endemic: Occurring predictably and with only minor or predictable fluctuations. • Point epidemic: occurring in clear excess over time, then rapidly returning to normal. • Propagating epidemic: occurring in clear excess with continuing increases over time. • Pandemic: epidemics that affect several countries or continents.