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Glossary Terms

Active surveillance involves actively seeking out information about health events

Case report is a research design that provides a detailed description of the clinical aspects of a particular health-related state or event from a single person within their real-life context

Case-control study is an observational research design aimed at investigating the potential causes of a health outcome by comparing two groups

Case-fatality rate is an important measure in epidemiology that quantifies the severity of a disease by calculating the proportion of individuals diagnosed with a specific condition who die from it within a specified period

Cohort studies are equivalent to a “video” of the health status of a given population. In cohort studies, data on exposure(s) is collected at baseline and participants are followed-up over time to monitor the presence or absence of outcomes

Communicable diseases are a disease that arises from transmission of a specific infectious agent to a susceptible host

Contagious disease is disease that is caused by direct and indirect contact with a pathogenic or
infectious agent

Cross-sectional study is an observational research design in which data are collected at the individual level

Cumulative incidence is the proportion of a population that develops a disease over a specified

Diagnosis is the act or process of determining or identifying the nature and cause of disease or injury

Ecological study is an observational research design that describes measures (e.g., rates, percentages, etc.) of exposures and outcome(s) at the population or group level rather than at the individual level

Incidence is a key epidemiological measure that quantifies the occurrence of new cases of a disease or health condition in a population over a specified period

Incidence rate accounts for varying time periods of risk among individuals and is particularly individuals with subclinical forms of the disease

Infection is the entry and development of infectious agents in people, animals, or the environment

Infectious disease is a disease caused by an infectious agent, which includes, bacteria, viruses, fungi, parasites, and other organisms

Intervention studies, also referred to as experimental studies, are designed to evaluate the effect of specific interventions on health outcomes

Microorganisms or Agents are disease producing, also called pathogens

Modes of transport is how a pathogen moves from reservoir to susceptible host

Portal of entry is the opening where the pathogen may enter

Reservoir/Source is the environment/habitat where a pathogen can live and multiply

Susceptible host is the person at-risk: patient or healthcare worker

Morbidity refers to the occurrence of disease, injury, or disability in a population and indicates how widespread or common a health condition is.

Mortality rate is a key measure in epidemiology that quantifies the frequency of deaths in a specific population during a certain period

Parasitic diseases are an infection caused by a parasite

Passive surveillance, data is reported by healthcare providers or laboratories to public health officials

Period prevalence is the proportion of a population that has a specific disease or condition

Point prevalence is the proportion of a population that has a specific disease or condition at a population and indicates how widespread or common a health condition is

Portal of Exit is how the pathogen exits or leaves reservoir

Primary prevention consists of measures aimed at a susceptible population or individual

Screening of disease involves using tests or procedures to identify disease or health concerns

Secondary prevention emphasizes early disease detection, and it targets healthy appearing

Sensitivity is the percentage of people with the disease who are correctly identified by the test single point in time

Specificity is the percentage of people without the disease who are correctly excluded by the test

Tertiary prevention targets both the clinical symptoms or screening results and outcome stages of a disease

 

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Introduction to Epidemiology Copyright © by Christy N Bazan; Rachel A. Hoopsick; and Andiara Schwingel is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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