Diseases: food/water borne, fecal-oral route, blood borne Flashcards

1
Q

food and water borne disease acronym

A

SCHNuT

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2
Q

what are the 5 food and water borne diseases

A
salmonella
cholera
hepatitis A
norovirus
typhoid
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3
Q

are water borne diseases

  • acute or chronic
  • vaccine preventable
A

acute, yes vaccine preventable

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4
Q

what is the fecal-oral route disease

A

poliomyelitis

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5
Q

how is poliomyelitis spread

A

person to person contact

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6
Q

what does the polio virus do INITIALLY

A

destroys neurons of spinal cord

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7
Q

what are two CONSEQUENCES of thsi

A

irreversible paralysis

death - due to immobilisation of breathing muscles

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8
Q

polio cure?

A

none

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9
Q

polio vaccine?

A

exists

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10
Q

what population group is most affected by polio?

A

those under 5

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11
Q

what are the 3 blood borne diseases

A

HIV
Hep B
Hep C

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12
Q

how is HIV spread? 3 ways

A

mother –> child
sex
blood

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13
Q

what does the HIV virus do INITIALLY

A

it inhibits helper T cells, which prevents immune function

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14
Q

what are two CONSEQUENCES of this

A

flu like symptoms

opportunistic infections

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15
Q

is there a vaccine for HIV?

A

no

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16
Q

4 ways HIV can be prevented? think back to sex and blood

A

safe sex
safe injecting rooms
disposing of sharps
checking blood to be transfused

17
Q

what drugs are used to manage HIV

A

antiretrovirals

18
Q

where is HIV most common

A

africa and surprisingly america

19
Q

hepatitis in general

  • definition
  • what type of infectious agent is it caused by
  • two risk factors
A

inflammation of the liver
virus
drug and alcohol use

20
Q

hepatitis b: vaccine preventable?

A

yes

21
Q

hepatitis B: how is it transmitted? 5 ways; 3 shared with HIV

A
mother --> child
blood/body fluid exposure
unsafe sex
unclean needles
unclean medical equipment
22
Q

is hep b chronic or acute

A

chronic

23
Q

2 consequences of hep B

A

liver cancer

death

24
Q

there’s a drug used to treat hep B and HIV, what is it

A

tenofovir

25
Q

hep C: chronic or acute?

A

chronic

26
Q

hep C: vaccine preventable?

A

no

27
Q

hep C: discuss treatment

A

high cure rates