Spread of Infectious Diseases

 
Lesson 
Objectives:
 
After finishing today’s lesson you will be able to:
 
explain the process by which a disease spreads.
 
explain the effects of vaccination on the spread of a disease.
 
 
 
 
 
Do Now
 
W
hat would you expect to observe if a disease is
contagious?
 
Activity
:
Simulating the spread of an infectious
disease
 
Discussion
 
If we vaccinated half the class and ran the
simulation again how many people would get
infected?
No vaccination
 
If 50% of people were vaccinated…
Let’s look at some data!
 
Here is a graph of the spread over 15 days
 
Wrap Up
 
How would you prove a disease is caused by an
infectious agent?
 
Wrap Up
 
How would you prove a disease is
caused by an infectious agent?
 
Robert Koch
 
Koch’s postulates
 
1.
Association
 – It must 
always
 be present in 
every
 case – but not in healthy animals.
2.
Isolation
 – It must be isolated from the sick animal 
into pure culture
.*
3.
Causation
 – The pure microbe must 
cause the disease
 in a healthy animal.
4.
Re-isolation 
– When the microbe is re-isolated from the sick animal it must 
be the
same
 as the original.
 
*Pure culture of a microbe means that there is only one type of microbe growing.
 
 
 
Homework
 
Review Koch’s postulates and explain whether
typhoid fever (lesson 2.1) fulfills each postulate.
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Explore the dynamics of disease spread, vaccination effects, and simulation activities in a lesson on infectious diseases. Dive into data analysis and Koch's postulates to understand the role of infectious agents in disease causation.

  • Infectious diseases
  • Disease spread
  • Vaccination
  • Simulation activities
  • Kochs postulates

Uploaded on Sep 30, 2024 | 0 Views


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  1. Infectious Diseases Lesson 2.3

  2. Lesson Objectives: After finishing today s lesson you will be able to: explain the process by which a disease spreads. explain the effects of vaccination on the spread of a disease.

  3. Do Now What would you expect to observe if a disease is contagious?

  4. Activity: Simulating the spread of an infectious disease

  5. Discussion If we vaccinated half the class and ran the simulation again how many people would get infected?

  6. Lets look at some data! No vaccination DAY 1 2 3 4 5 6 Total cases New cases 100 200 400 800 1,600 3,200 0 100 200 400 800 1600 If 50% of people were vaccinated DAY 1 2 3 4 5 6 Total cases New cases 100 150 225 337.5 506.25759.375 0 50 75 112.5 168.75253.125

  7. Here is a graph of the spread over 15 days

  8. Wrap Up How would you prove a disease is caused by an infectious agent?

  9. Wrap Up How would you prove a disease is caused by an infectious agent? Koch s postulates Robert Koch 1. 2. 3. 4. Association It must always be present in every case but not in healthy animals. Isolation It must be isolated from the sick animal into pure culture.* Causation The pure microbe must cause the disease in a healthy animal. Re-isolation When the microbe is re-isolated from the sick animal it must be the same as the original. *Pure culture of a microbe means that there is only one type of microbe growing.

  10. Homework Review Koch s postulates and explain whether typhoid fever (lesson 2.1) fulfills each postulate.

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