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Disease Transmission January 21 st , 2010

Disease Transmission

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Disease Transmission. January 21 st , 2010. Basic Terms. Pathogen Microorganism that causes disease Commensal Microorganisms that live in the human or animal without affecting them Colonization Living bacteria are present in the host You can be colonized but not infected - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Disease Transmission

Disease Transmission

January 21st, 2010

Page 2: Disease Transmission

Basic Terms• Pathogen

– Microorganism that causes disease• Commensal

– Microorganisms that live in the human or animal without affecting them

• Colonization– Living bacteria are present in the host– You can be colonized but not infected– Example: antibiotic resistant Staphylococcus aureus

• Infection– Invasion by microorganisms that starts the disease

process

Page 3: Disease Transmission

Basic Terms• Incubation period

– Time between infection and appearance of symptoms

• Prodromal period– Time when symptoms are mild

• Morbidity– Illness

• Mortality– Death

Page 4: Disease Transmission

Basic Terms• Fomite

– Inanimate object that transmits disease (your cell phone!)

• Vehicle– Medium that transmits disease– Water– Food– Air– Blood

Page 5: Disease Transmission

Basic Terms• Vector

– Arthropods that carry infectious disease– The microorganism can multiply in the vector

• Reservoir– Any site where an infectious agent survives– Animal– Natural environment (water, soil)– Diseases can be acquired from their reservoirs– A reservoir does not have to play a role in disease

transmission, but it provides a source of pathogens

Page 6: Disease Transmission

Basic Terms• Zoonotic disease

– Disease that can be transmitted from humans to animals

– Some very important environmentally transmitted diseases are zoonotic

– Transmission cycles of many diseases go on naturally among animals until we blunder into the cycle

Page 7: Disease Transmission

Epidemiology terms• Incidence

Number of new cases of diseasePerson-time at risk

• Incidence always incorporates time- the duration of observation

Page 8: Disease Transmission

Epidemiology terms• Prevalence

Number of new cases of diseaseNumber of people at risk

• Prevalence is at a single point in time

• A snapshot of the disease in the population

Page 9: Disease Transmission

Epidemiology terms• Attack rate

Number of new infectionsPerson-time at risk of infection

• Attack rate is usually used during an epidemic

• Incidence during a limited period of time• Example: people who ate at a certain

restaurant

Page 10: Disease Transmission

Epidemiology terms• Epidemic

– Large number of cases of a disease in a relatively short period

– An epidemic of measles in unvaccinated schoolchildren

• Endemic– Always present in a population– Malaria endemic regions of the world

Page 11: Disease Transmission

Epidemiology concepts

• R0: The reproductive number• the average number of secondary

infections produced when one infected individual is introduced into a host population where everyone is susceptible

• infection can get started in a fully susceptible population if and only if R0 > 1

Page 12: Disease Transmission

A model of disease transmission: The SIR model

• Common model for describing the transmission of infectious diseases

• Can be used for mathematical modeling of disease transmission, but is also a conceptual model

• Describes a population where individuals fall into three main categories:– Susceptible (S): can get disease– Infectious (I): Have disease, can spread to

others– Recovered (R): Can no longer spread disease

Page 13: Disease Transmission

A model of disease transmission: The SIR model

• Different individuals within this population can be in one of a few key states at any given time– Susceptible to disease (S)– infectious/asymptomatic (I): transmission risk

because they do not know they are ill– infectious/symptomatic (I)– non-infectious/asymptomatic; recovered (R)

Page 14: Disease Transmission

A model of disease transmission: The SIR model

• A dynamic model: individuals are moving from state to state over time

• This is key: the transmission of infectious diseases is a dynamic process– Within human populations– Within animal populations– Between humans, animals, and insect vectors– From humans to the environment and back to

humans

Page 15: Disease Transmission

The SIR model: key detailsThere are two sets of variables:• Variables describing the states people are in

– S=susceptible– I=infectious– R=non-infectious/asymptomatic

• Variables describing how many people are moving between these states (parameters)– Example: γ=Fraction of people in state R

who move to state S

Page 16: Disease Transmission

•S: Susceptible•I: Infectious (symptomatic+asymptomatic)•R: Non-infectious•W: Concentration of pathogens in the environment•β: Infection rate due to exposure to pathogen•δ: Fraction of people who move from state I to state R•γ: Fraction of people who move from state R to state S•Solid lines: Individuals moving from state to state•Dashed lines: Pathogen flows between individuals in different states

The SIR Model

ENVIRONMENTW

S R

I

Page 17: Disease Transmission

Epidemiology concepts: Epidemic curves

• An epidemic curve can provide information on the following characteristics of an outbreak:– Pattern of spread– Magnitude– Outliers– Time trend– Exposure and/or disease incubation

period

Page 18: Disease Transmission

Epidemic curves• The overall shape of the epi curve

can reveal the type of outbreak– Common source– Point source– Propagated

Page 19: Disease Transmission

Epidemic curve: a point source outbreak

Example: Legionnaire’s Disease

Page 20: Disease Transmission

Epidemic curve: a point source outbreak

A gastroenteritis outbreak in a nursing home

Page 21: Disease Transmission

Epidemic curve: a common source outbreak

a foodborne outbreak from a widely distributed food product

Page 22: Disease Transmission

Epidemic curve: a propagated outbreak

Page 23: Disease Transmission
Page 24: Disease Transmission

SARS in Toronto: A propagated outbreak with two waves of cases