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OUTBREAK!. Portrait of an Epidemic. http://phil.cdc.gov/Phil/details.asp. THE BLACK DEATH. 25 million dead over 5 years One-third of Europe’s population “Victims often had lunch with their friends and dinner with their departed ancestors”. WHAT CAUSES DISEASE. Basically, 4 causes:
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OUTBREAK! Portrait of an Epidemic http://phil.cdc.gov/Phil/details.asp
THE BLACK DEATH • 25 million dead over 5 years • One-third of Europe’s population • “Victims often had lunch with their friends and dinner with their departed ancestors”
WHAT CAUSES DISEASE • Basically, 4 causes: • Bacteria • Viruses • Parasites • Prions http://phil.cdc.gov/Phil/details.asp
BACTERIA http://phil.cdc.gov/Phil/details.asp • Not all cause disease • Koch’s Postulates • Show the bacterium is present in every case of the disease • Isolate the bacterium from the infected individual and grow it outside the individual • Infect a healthy individual with the bacterium and have it produce the same symptoms • Recover the bacterium from the newly sick individual
E. coli commtechlab.msu.edu http://www.lbl.gov/ www.nasa.gov www.geocities.com/avinash_abhyankar/ Salmonella
www.life.umd.edu/classroom/bsci424 Streptococcus Causes strep throat Round phil.cdc.gov/Phil/ www.uiowa.edu/~cemrf/ Borrelia Causes Lyme disease Spiral-shaped phil.cdc.gov/Phil/
phil.cdc.gov/Phil/details.asp Bacillus anthracis
Viruses • Not really alive? • Require host to reproduce www.nsf.gov/od/lpa/
Influenza Virus Avian Influenza phil.cdc.gov/Phil/
www.cdc.gov/ncidod www.aids-info.ch/bilder/schule_aids
PARASITES • Protists • Malaria • African sleeping sickness • Other parasites • Hookworms • Wuchereria bancroftii phil.cdc.gov/Phil/
PRIONS • Bits of self-replicating protein • Mad cow disease • Creutzfeldt-Jakob • Spongiform encephalitis picasso.ucsf.edu/~ulyanov/Structures/prion.html phil.cdc.gov/Phil
INVESTIGATING AN OUTBREAKCenter for Disease Control (CDC) • Prepare for field work • Establish the existence of an outbreak • Verify the diagnosis • Define and identify the cases • Describe and orient the data in terms of time, place, and person • Develop hypotheses • Evaluate hypotheses • Refine hypotheses and carry out additional studies • Implement control and prevention measures • Communicate findings
INVESTIGATING AN OUTBREAKCenter for Disease Control (CDC) • Prepare for field work • Establish the existence of an outbreak • Verify the diagnosis • Define and identify the cases • Describe and orient the data in terms of time, place, and person • Develop hypotheses • Evaluate hypotheses • Refine hypotheses and carry out additional studies • Implement control and prevention measures • Communicate findings
Is the incidence of the disease greater than what is normal for the area and time?
INVESTIGATING AN OUTBREAKCenter for Disease Control (CDC) • Prepare for field work • Establish the existence of an outbreak • Verify the diagnosis • Define and identify the cases • Describe and orient the data in terms of time, place, and person • Develop hypotheses • Evaluate hypotheses • Refine hypotheses and carry out additional studies • Implement control and prevention measures • Communicate findings
INVESTIGATING AN OUTBREAKCenter for Disease Control (CDC) • Prepare for field work • Establish the existence of an outbreak • Verify the diagnosis • Define and identify the cases • Describe and orient the data in terms of time, place, and person • Develop hypotheses • Evaluate hypotheses • Refine hypotheses and carry out additional studies • Implement control and prevention measures • Communicate findings
SGOT Alt SGOT S*=Sclera;, N=Nausea; V=Vomiting; A=Anorexia; F=Fever; DU=Dark urine; J=Jaundice; HAIgm=Hepatitis AIgM antibody test
INVESTIGATING AN OUTBREAKCenter for Disease Control (CDC) • Prepare for field work • Establish the existence of an outbreak • Verify the diagnosis • Define and identify the cases • Describe and orient the data in terms of time, place, and person • Develop hypotheses • Evaluate hypotheses • Refine hypotheses and carry out additional studies • Implement control and prevention measures • Communicate findings
LEGIONELLOSIS • What Is It? A type of pneumonia caused by the bacterium Legionella pneumophila. • Source: Contaminated water sources, such as showers, fountains, cooling systems, humidifiers, hot tubs and spas • Cause of Spread: Spray from contaminated sources • Normal Incidence: For Virginia, a 5-year average of 20 cases per year (about 2/month). • Historical Relevance: 1996 outbreak in the Lynchburg, VA, region. 23 confirmed cases with 2 deaths. phil.cdc.gov/Phil
INVESTIGATING AN OUTBREAKCenter for Disease Control (CDC) • Prepare for field work • Establish the existence of an outbreak • Verify the diagnosis • Define and identify the cases • Describe and orient the data in terms of time, place, and person • Develop hypothesis • Evaluate hypothesis • Refine hypothesis and carry out additional studies • Implement control and prevention measures • Communicate findings
CALCULATE AN ODDS RATIO (a)(d)/(b)(c) = 5.8
Attack Rates by Items Served at a Church Supper,Oswego, New York, April 1940
INVESTIGATING AN OUTBREAKCenter for Disease Control (CDC) • Prepare for field work • Establish the existence of an outbreak • Verify the diagnosis • Define and identify the cases • Describe and orient the data in terms of time, place, and person • Develop hypothesis • Evaluate hypothesis • Refine hypothesis • Implement control measures • Communicate findings
OUTBREAK AT MIDDLIN HIGH • Students are getting sick …. Why? • 15 sick, so far • Began getting sick Sunday. • It’s now Wednesday… is the epidemic over?
YOU ARE A CDC INVESTIGATOR • Your group is a CDC team • Your assignment is to investigate the illness, determine its source, and recommend action • You must follow the proper CDC steps as previously discussed
TREATMENTS • Antibiotics • Only for bacteria • Resistance becoming a problem • Innoculations