Answer: Endemic
( It is a kind of condition where disease is transmitted from one person to the other in a given specific region or geographical area.)
A disease occurring at a much higher rate than expected under normal conditions that is spread...
. Which of the following terms refers to a persistent, expected level of disease in a defined population? a. Epidemic b. Outbreak c. Endemic d. Pandemic
Under normal conditions (76% probability), Financing Plan A will produce a $30,000 higher return than Plan B. Under tight money conditions (24% probability), Plan A will produce $35,000 less than Plan B. What is the expected value of return? A $100,800 B $114,400 C $14,400 D $13,600
Under normal conditions (68% probability), Financing Plan A will produce $24,000 higher return than Plan B. Under tight money conditions (32% probability), Plan A will produce $31000 less than Plan B. What is the expected value of returns? A) 6400 B) 44800 C) 5600 D) 50400
86. Which organisms are NOT involved in food fermentations? A) lactic acid bacteria B) sulfuric acid bacteria C) acetic acid bacteria D) propionic acid bacteria 87. The MOST common source of individual foodborne botulism outbreaks are due to consumption of A) honey B] milk/dairy products D) undercooked meat 88. Coliforms in a water sample indicate A) arthropod B) chemical C) fecal D) All of the above. 89. Legionella pneumophila is generally transmitted by A) contaminated food. B) contaminated drinking water....
2. Under normal conditions (68% probability), Financing Plan A will produce $21,000 higher return than Plan B. Under tight money conditions (32% probability), Plan A will produce $31,000 less than Plan B. What is the expected value of returns? O $4,360 O $30,520 $34,080 o $3,560
Choose the best response for each term. Antibody functions Pandemic Herd immunity Communicable disease Incidence Notifiable infectious disease Prodromal period Septic shock Endemic disease Prevalence Zoonoses Focal infection A. Agglutination, opsonization, neutralization B. Same epidemic in Asia, South America, Africa C. Protective effect from vaccinating many D. Can spread from host to host E. Number in population with specific disease/unit time; indicates spread of disease F. Healthcare worker must report G. Patient has mild, early symptoms H. Drop in blood...
Find an example of an infectious disease for each of the term(s) or concept(s) below. Give the name of the disease and its causal agent and whether it is viral (V), prion (PR), bacterial (B), fungal (F), protozoan (P), or helminthic (H). All of the diseases must be infectious diseases. 10. Give an example of each of the following categories of disease relating to occurrence. a. sporadic b. endemic to MN c. epidemic d. pandemic e. causes localized outbreaks: f....
If a person had higher than normal levels of plasma proteins, would glomerular filtration rate increase, decrease, or stay the same? Assume that autoregulation is not occurring. Explain why GFR would change this way.
Part A - SIR model for the spread of disease Overview. This part of the assignment uses a mix of theory and data to estimate the contact number c=b/k of an epidemic and hence to estimate the infection-spreading parameter b. The point is that once you know the value of b for a certain disease and population, you can use it in your model the next time there is an cpidemic, thus cnabling you to make predictions about the demand...
1.- Concepts: Pathology, Etiology, Pathogen, Pathogenesis, Infection, Disease. 2.- Normal Microbiota - Transient Microbiota. 3.- Opportunists. 4.- Factors that increase infection susceptibility 5.-Factors to maintain Normal Microbiota. 6.- Areas of the body with Normal Microbiota and sterile areas. 7.-Symbiosis: Commensalism - Mutualism - Parasitism. 8.- Exceptions to Koch's postulates. 9.- Symptom-Sign-Syndrome. 10. Communicable and Non-communicable infectious diseases. Contagious disease. 11.- Incidence - Prevalence and Sporadic - Endemic - Epidemic - Pandemic diseases. 12.- Acute - Chronic - Latent diseases. 13.-...