An illness due to an infectiousagent or its toxic products which is easilytransmitted or communicateddirectly or indirectly from one person or animal to another
Communicable Diseases are Primary Cause of Mortality Gap between Rich and Poor Countries
Non-communicable diseases account for 59% of all deaths worldwide – estimated to rise from 28m in 1990 to 50m in 2020
Communicable Diseases that account for about 60% of deaths
HIV/AIDS
Malaria
Tuberculosis
Measles
Diarrhealdisease
Acute respiratoryinfection
Communicable Disease
Any disease that spreads from one host to another, either directly or indirectly
Contagious Disease
Disease that easilyspreads directly from one person to another
Infectious Disease
Disease not transmitted by ordinary contact but require a direct inoculation of pathogenic agents (microbes). On the other hand, all contagiousdiseases are infectious.
Allcontagiousdiseases are communicable but notallcommunicable diseases are contagious
Both infectious and contagious diseases are communicable
An individual who harbors the organism and is capable of transmitting it to a susceptible host without showing manifestations of the disease
Contact
Any person or animal who is in close association with an infected person, animal, or freshly soiled material
Types of Diseases based on Occurrence
Sporadic Disease
Endemic Disease
Epidemic Disease
Pandemic Disease
Sporadic Disease
Disease that occurs only occasionally & irregularly with no specific pattern
Endemic Disease
Constantly present in a population, country or community
Epidemic Disease
Patient acquire the disease in a relatively short period of time; greater than normal number of cases in an area within a short period of time
Pandemic Disease
Epidemic disease that occurs worldwide
Types of Diseases based on Severity or Duration
Acute Disease
Chronic Disease
Latent Disease
Acute Disease
Develops rapidly (rapid onset) but lasts only a short time
Chronic Disease
Develops more slowly (insidious onset); disease likely to be continual or recurrent for long periods
Latent Disease
Causative agent remains inactive for a time but then becomes active to produce symptoms of the disease
Types of Infections based on State of Host Resistance
Primary Infection
Secondary Infection
Subclinical (Inapparent Infection)
Primary Infection
Acute infection that causes the initial illness
Secondary Infection
One caused by an opportunistic pathogen after primary infection has weakened the body's defenses
Subclinical (Inapparent Infection)
Does not cause any noticeable illness
Symptoms
Subjective evidence of disease that is experienced or perceived; subjective changes in body function noted by patient but not apparent to an observer
Signs
Objective evidence of a disease the physician can observe and measure
Syndrome
A specific group of signs and symptoms that accompany a particular disease
Incidence
The number of people in a population who develop a disease during a particular time period
Prevalence
The number of people in a population who develop a disease, regardless of when it appeared; refers to both old and new cases
Stages of Disease
Incubation Period
Prodromal Period
Period of Illness
Period of Decline
Period of Convalescence
Incubation Period
Time interval between the initial infection and the 1st appearance of any symptoms/signs; patient is not yet aware of the disease
Prodromal Period
Early, mild appearance of symptoms of the disease
Period of Illness
Time of greatest symptomatic experience (patient is sick); overt symptoms/signs of disease; WBC may increase or decrease; can result to death if immune response or medical intervention fails; communicable disease are most easily transmitted during this phase
Period of Decline
Symptoms/signs subside; pathogen replication is brought under control; vulnerable to secondary infection
Period of Convalescence
Replication of pathogenic organisms is stopped; regains strength and the body returns to its pre-diseased state; recovery has occurred
Conditions that Affect Infection Development
Pathogenicity
Infective dose
Virulence and Invasiveness
Organisms specificity
Resistance of the host
Immunity of the host
Pathogenicity
Ability to cause disease
Infective dose
Sufficient number of microorganisms needed to initiate infection