Table of Contents
ToggleIntroduction to communicable diseases
Communicable diseases, also known as infectious diseases or transmissible diseases are diseases that spreads from one person or animal to another or from a surface to a person.
Communicable diseases occur at all age groups outmost serious in childhood due to intensive exposure and poorly developed immunity. These diseases are to a great extent preventable
In countries where the disease have been largely prevented, other conditions like accidents, and degenerative and malignant diseases that occur at an old age have become the commonest, the process known as epidemiological transmission
Tropical countries, Uganda, inclusive have continued to struggle with poverty related diseases that occur at an old age which include: diarrhea, parasite infestations, respiratory infections, immunizable childhood infections, eye infections and malnutrition. These countries are at the same time facing steady increase of diabetes, CVA, rheumatic conditions and cancer
Communicable’ diseases are divided into
- Contact contagious diseases
- STDs and HIV/AIDs
- Vector borne diseases
- Diseases related to contaminated water and food
- Airborne diseases
- Blood borne diseases
- Diseases from the animals and their products
- Helminthic diseases
Some Communicable diseases and there causative agents.
Causative Organism | Disease/Infection |
---|---|
Rabies virus | Rabies |
Influenza A virus | Avian influenza (Bird flu) |
Vibrio cholerae | Cholera |
Plasmodium species | Malaria |
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV) | Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) |
Trypanosoma species | Trypanosomiasis |
Tsetse fly | Sleeping sickness (African trypanosomiasis) |
Wuchereria bancrofti | Elephantiasis |
Dracunculus medinensis | Guinea worm disease |
Rotavirus | Diarrhea (caused by rotavirus) |
Mumps virus | Mumps |
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) | HIV/AIDS |
Varicella-zoster virus | Chickenpox |
Measles virus | Measles |
Yellow fever virus | Yellow fever |
Arboviruses | Arboviral diseases |
African swine fever virus | African swine fever |
Brucella species | Brucellosis |
Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi | Typhoid fever |
Schistosoma species | Schistosomiasis |
Poliovirus | Poliomyelitis |
Shigella species | Dysentery |
Bacillus anthracis | Anthrax |
Why are communicable diseases important in Africa?
- Many of them are very common
- Some of them are very serious and cause death and disability
- Some of them cause widespread outbreaks of the disease- epidemics 4. Many of them are preventable by fairly simple means
- Many are particularly serious and more common in infants and children.
Organisms and agents of disease
The living organisms that cause communicable diseases are of different sizes and sorts. The largest, like tape or filarial worms are visible to the eyes. They are made of many cells and are called metazoa.
Complicated but single celled organisms like malaria parasites and amoeba are called protozoa. They are smaller and can only be seen when magnified with a microscope. Smaller still are bacteria which are simple, single cell, best seen under a microscope after they have been stained with dyes.
Rickettsiae and chlamydiae are smaller and can only multiply within cells. Smallest of all are the viruses. These cannot be seen with an ordinary microscope.
Epidemiological Triad
Patterns of communicable diseases
Different diseases are common in different places and different times. To understand why this happens we need to consider the living organisms of disease- the agent; the people they infect the host and the surrounding in which they live- the environment.
The agents need a suitable environment in which to grow and multiply and must be able to spread and infect other hosts. If they do not succeed in doing this, they die out.
There is therefore a balance between the agent, the host and the environment which can change and be made to change in different ways.
Hosts (people) are affected by environment, for example, they may live in a hot climate in which there many mosquitoes. But people can also change this environment by draining swamps, changing the vegetation and adding competing hosts such as animals.
Similarly, the environment can affect the agent, for example, the altitude and the temperature for malaria.
Terminology
Infectious disease
An infectious disease is an illness due to a specific infectious agent or its toxic products that arise through a transmission of that agent or its products from an infected person, animal or reservoir to a susceptible host, either directly through an intermediate plant or animal host, vector or inanimate environment.
Infection
Infection is the entry and development of an infectious agent in the body accompanied by an immune response.
Disease
Manifestation of infection through symptoms and signs
Exposed
Someone who has met with an infectious agent in a way that is known to cause disease
Colonization
Colonization is the presence of a replicating microorganism without clinical or subclinical infection or disease. No immune response.
Carrier
Carrier is a person that harbours a specific infectious agent in the absence of clinical disease and serves as a potential source of infection.
Reservoir
The reservoir of infection is the animal or place in which a particular organism usually lives and multiplies. Most of the important communicable diseases humans are the main reservoirs.
Route of transmission
The route of transmission is the way in which an organism leaves the infected host or source and travels to a new susceptible person.
Source
The source of infection is the animal or place from which the particular organism spreads to its new host.
Incubation period
The incubation period is the time between infection and the appearance of signs and symptoms of illness.
Epidemiology
Epidemiology is the study of the distribution and patterns of health events, health characteristics and their causes or influences in a well defined population. Or
It is a branch of medicine that deals with the study of the causes, distribution and control of diseases in the population.
Endemic
It means the disease is present in the community at all times but in a relatively low frequency Something that is endemic is typically restricted or peculiar to a locality or region. For example malaria is endemic in some areas of Africa.
Epidemic
An epidemic is a sudden severe outbreak of an infectious disease that spreads rapidly within a region or group, affecting a large proportion of people.
Pandemic
A pandemic occurs when an epidemic becomes widespread and affects a whole region, a continent or the entire world.
Clinical disease
A clinical disease is a disease which has physical manifestations (clinical signs and symptoms).
Susceptible host
A susceptible is someone that is exposed to an infectious disease.
Vector
A vector is an animal, usually an insect that transmits parasitic microorganisms from person to person or from infected animals to human beings.
Transmission cycle
The transmission cycle describes how organisms grow, multiply and spread. In some cases humans may be the only host, in which case the infection spreads directly from person to person, e.g. measles. In other cases, humans are the final hosts from whom the organism has no chance to pass further, e.g. tetanus.
There are three parts of a transmission cycle for an agent or organism:
Source —-> Transmission —-> Susceptible Host
Source
The source of an infection can be an infected person or animal, or soil. People and animals may have clinical disease, subclinical disease or be carriers.
Transmission
The main routes of transmission are:
- ❖ Direct contact (skin, mucous membrane, sexual intercourse)
- ❖ Vector transmission
- ❖ Fecal contamination of soil, food and water which are ingested.
- ❖ Contact with animals or their products (e.g. biting)
- ❖ Airborne transmission (inhalation)
- ❖ Transplacental (mother to child) transmission
- ❖ Blood contact (injections, surgery, blood transfusion)
Susceptible Host
A susceptible host is one with low resistance to a particular infection. Low resistance may be due to:
- Not having met the organism before and therefore not having any immunity to it. For example, at the age of 6-12 months, a child loses the passive immunity against measles which was acquired from the mother during pregnancy. When in contact with another child who has measles, the child will develop the disease because of no immunity against measles
- Having another serious illness like AIDS at the same time. Such people have a higher risk of developing tuberculosis.
- Malnutrition which can make the infection worse.
Principles of communicable disease control and prevention
The aim of control is to tip the balance against the agent. This may be done by:
- Attacking the source
- Interrupting route of transmission
- Protecting the host
Attacking the Source |
Interrupting Transmission |
Protecting the Host |
Treatment |
Environmental sanitation |
Immunization |
Isolation |
Personal hygiene |
Chemoprophylaxis |
Reservoir control |
Vector control |
Personal protection |
Notification |
Disinfection and sterilization |
Better nutrition |
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