Disease and Disease Transmission
Disease and Disease Transmission
Disease and Disease Transmission
TRANSMISSION
By Okello Innocent
Introduction to transmission of disease
• A variety of organisms exist, including some which can survive and
even develop in the body of people or animals.
• If the organism can cause infection, it is an infectious agent.
• Infectious agents which cause infection and illness are called
pathogens.
• Diseases caused by pathogens, or the toxins they produce, are
communicable or infectious diseases.
• To be able to persist or live on, pathogens must be able to leave an
infected host, survive transmission in the environment, enter a
susceptible person or animal, and develop and/or multiply in the
newly infected host.
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• The transmission of pathogens from current to future
host follows a repeating cycle.
• This cycle can be simple, with a direct transmission
from current to future host, or complex, where
transmission occurs through (multiple) intermediate
hosts or vectors.
• This cycle is called the transmission cycle of disease,
or transmission cycle.
The transmission cycle has different elements:
Protozoa Protozoa area single cell The pathogens are Forms a The immunity is
organisms. non-latent. resistant cyst which only maintained by
can survive for repeated infections
months. or vaccinations.
Helminths Helminths are worms The pathogen is The pathogen is Usually no immunity
(worms) latent. It often has a persistent and some is built up against
(roundworms, flukes or
complex lifecycle may the pathogen.
tapeworms). Often male and survive for years in
female must meet in host to with a development
in the environment the environment.
reproduce, and sometimes
they multiply in intermediate or intermediate
hosts. hosts.
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• Prevention of zoonoses often includes control of
animal hosts.
• This is possible by reducing the number of hosts (e.g.
controlling rats), immunising domestic animals, or
avoiding unnecessary contact with host animals.
Carriers: hosts without obvious illness
• A person or animal who develops an illness is an obvious example of a host.
• It is very common, however, for infections to occur without the disease
developing. The person or animal infected can potentially spread the
pathogen, but does not show clear symptoms.
• The symptoms may be mild, or may be completely absent.
• These hosts are called carriers, or asymptomatic carriers.
• The host can be infectious for a short period in transient carriers, or over a
prolonged period in a chronic carrier.
• Incubating carriers have been infected and can spread the pathogen, but do
not yet show the symptoms of the illness.
• Convalescent carriers continue to spread the pathogen even though they
have recovered from illness.
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• In many infections carriers play an important role in
transmitting the pathogen.
• It is usually not possible to identify asymptomatic
carriers, and unless the family and other close
contacts of the sick person or even the whole
population can be treated, carriers will remain a
threat to the health of those surrounding them.
3. Transmission of disease
• To survive as a species, pathogens must infect new people or animals.
• To do this, they must leave the body of the host, find their way to a
new susceptible person or animal, and enter the body of that person
or animal
• Interventions that aim to improve the health of a population usually
try to reduce the risk of transmission of infection.
• To do this appropriately, the public Health specialist needs to be
familiar with the pathogens’ transmission route(s).
• It is this understanding that enables the specialist to determine which
control measures will be most effective in a particular situation.
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• The most useful categorisation is based on the transmission
cycles of the infections.
• Diseases with similar transmission cycles can be controlled
by similar preventive measures, and will occur in similar
environments.
• Some terms relating to the transmission or classification of
infections are defined below:
• Food-borne infections: infections which can be transmitted
through eating food containing the pathogen.
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• Vector-borne infections: infections transmitted through vectors.
Vectorborne infections are only for infections with a biological vector, that is a
vector in which the pathogen goes through a development before further
transmission is possible (e.g. mosquitoes, tsetse fly, body louse).
• In those infections which are transmitted by mechanical vectors, the animal
is only a vehicle for transporting the pathogen (e.g. domestic flies,
cockroaches).
• Water-borne infections: infections which can be transmitted through
drinking water which contains the pathogen.
• Water-washed infections: infections caused by pathogens whose
transmission can be prevented by improving personal hygiene.
• Infections can have either direct or indirect transmission routes.
Infections with direct transmission
• A pathogen with a direct transmission route can infect a
susceptible person or animal immediately after leaving the
host.
• The pathogen does not need to develop in the
environment, in an intermediate host, or in a vector.
• In faecal pathogens these are the non-latent infectious
agents.
• This group contains three disease-groups: faecal-oral
infections, leptospirosis, and infections spread through
direct contact.
Faecal-oral infections
• These pathogens leave the host through faeces, and enter the susceptible
person or animal through ingestion.
• Transmission occurs mainly through direct contact with contaminated
fingers; food contaminated directly with excreta, contaminated hands,
domestic flies, soil, or water; contaminated drinking-water; or contaminated
soil.
• Faecal-oral infections are food-borne, water-borne, and water-washed.
• As faecal-oral infections are transmitted directly, any route that will take
matter polluted with faeces directly or indirectly to somebody’s mouth could
potentially transmit the pathogen.
• Faecal-oral infections include diarrhoeal diseases such as cholera and
bacillary dysentery, typhoid, hepatitis A, and poliomyelitis.
Infections of direct contact
• All the diseases covered in this category are infections which
affect the skin or eyes. Pathogens are present on the skin or in
the discharges of affected body parts or eyes.
• The pathogens are transmitted directly through
contaminated hands, clothes, domestic flies, or any other
contaminated material.
• The pathogen enters the body through skin or mucous
membranes such as the eyes.
• These infections are associated with poor personal hygiene
and are water washed.
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• Few of these infections have animal hosts. The diseases in this
category include conjunctivitis, trachoma, yaws, and scabies.
Infections with indirect transmission
• A pathogen with an indirect transmission route must go through a
development phase outside the host before it can infect a new
susceptible person or animal.
• This development will take place in a specific intermediate host,
vector, or type of environment.
• This need to go through a particular organism or environment gives
the transmission route a focus, which preventive measures can
target, for example by vector control or improved food preparation.
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Communicability
Latent period Period of communicability
Time
Figure 2.6. Communicability and disease over time in one person
( adapted from 73)
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• The period of communicability is the period in which the host is
infectious, or the period in which pathogens are shed in the
environment.
• The time between entrance of pathogen and the onset of
communicability is the latent period. This is shown on a timeline in
Figure 2.6.
• In some infections the period of communicability starts before illness
is apparent.
• Hosts who can transmit the pathogen before showing symptoms are
called incubating carriers.
• If the period of communicability extends beyond the end of the
illness, the hosts are called convalescent carriers.
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