Intro Flashcards

0
Q

What is public health?

A

The branch of medicine, policy, and administration that protects populations of people from diseases.

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1
Q

What is Veterinary Public Health?

A

The contribution to the complete physical, mental, and social well-being of humans through an understanding and application of veterinary medical science.

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2
Q

What is veterinary public health the intersection of?

A

Veterinary medicine and public health.

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3
Q

What does veterinary public health help to do?

What is one way it does this?

A
  • It helps to protect populations of people from animal-related diseases.
  • Animals health affects, and reflects, human health.
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4
Q

What are 4 examples of sources of diseases of animal origin?

A
  • Zoonotic infectious diseases
  • Toxins/infections from animal-origin foods
  • Animal-related injuries
  • Pests/ectoparasites from animals
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5
Q

How many cases of food-borne diseases are there annually in the US?

A

Over 70 million.

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6
Q

Where do most food-borne disease agents originate from?

A

Animals

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7
Q

What are zoonoses?

A

Diseases with animal reservoirs.

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8
Q

What are some examples of zoonoses?

A
  • Rabies
  • Salmonella
  • Beef & pork tapeworms
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9
Q

Approximately how many species of pathogens can infect humans?

A

Over 1400

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10
Q

Zoonoses account for what percentage of pathogen species that can infect humans?

A

61%

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11
Q

T/F: “Old” diseases are no longer a problem.

A

False - ex) rabies: approximately 55,000 fatalities/year

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12
Q

Zoonoses account for what percentage of emerging diseases?

A

75%

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13
Q

What does SARS stand for?

A

Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome

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14
Q

When and where was SARS first noted?

A

Feb 2003 in China

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15
Q

What did SARS originate as?

A

A bat coronavirus

16
Q

How did SARS jump to humans?

A

Jumped to civets in adjacent cages in wild animal markets -> jumped to humans at the market.

17
Q

How did SARS emerge?

A

As a pandemic with human to human aerosol spread.

18
Q

T/F: SARS was slow to spread.

A

False - spread to over 25 countries w/in a few months

19
Q

How many cases/deaths were seen with the SARS outbreak?

A

About 8100 cases & over 700 deaths.

20
Q

How was the SARS outbreak controlled?

A
  • Aggressive contact tracing
  • Isolation
  • Quarantine of exposed & infected people
21
Q

What are 3 other aspects of veterinary public health?

A
  • Biomedical research
  • Therapy animals & guide dogs
  • Animal diseases that are not zoonotic still have human repercussions
22
Q

5 ways veterinary public health affects daily clinical practice.

A
  • Keeping yourself and your technicians free from zoonotic diseases & injuries.
  • Advising clients about zoonotic diseases & answering their questions.
  • USDA accreditation
  • Rabies quarantine/exams
  • Deciding which treatments/vaccines to use in animals.
23
Q

Name 4 possible career paths in veterinary public health.

A
  • Federal, state and local government
  • Academic institutions
  • Private non-profit institutions
  • Private business, pharmaceutical companies, laboratories
24
Q

What is epizootiology?

A

The study of the distribution and determinants of disease and other health outcomes in animal populations.

25
Q

What does the prefix “epi” stand for?

What does it mean in reference to epidemiology?

A
  • On, upon

- Above and beyond the normal levels of disease.

26
Q

What does the prefix “en” mean?

What does it mean in reference to epidemiology?

A
  • In, within

- Within normal limits for disease occurrence.

27
Q

What does the word root “zoo” mean?

What does it mean in reference to epidemiology?

A
  • Animals

- Refers to disease in animal populations only.

28
Q

What does the word root “demos” mean?

What does it mean in reference to epidemiology?

A
  • People

- Refers to disease in people, but may be used generally.