CHN-Disease transmission-Synopsis-5-PHC

πŸ¦ πŸ“š Communicable Disease Transmission: Sources & Reservoirs


πŸ” Definition

βœ… A communicable disease is an illness caused by an infectious agent or its toxins that can be transmitted from:

  • Person to person
  • Animal to person
  • Environment to person

πŸ§ͺπŸ’₯ SOURCE vs. RESERVOIR – Important Concept!

πŸ”Ή Term🧾 Definition
πŸ₯ SourceThe immediate origin from where the infection is acquired
🧫 ReservoirThe natural habitat where the organism lives, multiplies, and survives

πŸ” Sometimes, source and reservoir are same (e.g., TB – human) or different (e.g., Tetanus: soil is reservoir, wound is source)


πŸ“ Examples of Reservoirs

πŸ”¬ Reservoir TypeπŸ”„ Examples
πŸ§β€β™‚οΈ HumanTB, measles, typhoid, hepatitis, HIV/AIDS
πŸ• AnimalRabies (dog), plague (rat), brucellosis (cattle), leptospirosis (rodents)
🌱 EnvironmentTetanus (soil), cholera (water), histoplasmosis (soil with bird droppings)

πŸ” Human Reservoir – Types

🧍 Type of Carrier🧾 ExplanationπŸ’‰ Example
πŸ‘¨β€πŸ”¬ Active CarrierPerson with symptomsMeasles, flu
πŸšΆβ€β™‚οΈ Healthy CarrierNo symptoms but can spread diseaseTyphoid (Typhoid Mary)
πŸ§‘β€πŸ¦½ Incubatory CarrierIn incubation period, before symptomsHIV, Hepatitis B
♻️ Convalescent CarrierRecovering but still infectiousCholera, diphtheria

🧬 How Source & Reservoir Relate to Disease Control?

πŸ”§ StrategyπŸ”‘ Target
🚫 IsolationSource – prevent spread from infected person
πŸ§ͺ TreatmentEliminate infection from reservoir
πŸ’‰ ImmunizationProtect host from reservoir or source exposure
🧼 SanitationReduce environmental reservoirs (e.g., feces, water)

🧠 πŸ’‘ Golden Points for Competitive Exams

  • βœ… Reservoir is the permanent dwelling place, source is the immediate transmitter
  • βœ… All sources are not reservoirs
  • βœ… Carriers can be symptomatic or asymptomatic
  • βœ… Zoonoses are diseases where animal is the reservoir
  • βœ… Disinfection of water interrupts environmental reservoir transmission

πŸ“˜ Example Question

Q. In case of tetanus, the source of infection is ____ and the reservoir is ____.
A. Water, Human
B. Wound, Soil
βœ… C. Wound, Soil
D. Soil, Wound

Rationale: The wound is where the infection enters (source), and soil is where the bacteria live and multiply (reservoir).

🌟🦠 Communicable Disease Transmission: Modes of Transmission 🌟🦠

πŸ” Definition: The mode of transmission refers to how an infectious agent moves from its source or reservoir to a susceptible host, enabling disease spread.

πŸ”– Modes of Transmission:

πŸ›‘ 1. Direct Transmission:

  • Direct Contact:
    • Transmission through physical touch (skin-to-skin, kissing, sexual contact).
    • Examples: STDs, scabies, herpes simplex.
  • Droplet Spread:
    • Transmission through respiratory droplets expelled during coughing, sneezing, or talking (distance ≀ 1 meter).
    • Examples: Influenza, COVID-19, pertussis.

πŸ”„ 2. Indirect Transmission:

  • Airborne Transmission:
    • Infectious agents travel in aerosols or dust particles suspended in the air (distance > 1 meter).
    • Examples: Measles, tuberculosis, varicella.
  • Vehicle-Borne Transmission:
    • Transmission via contaminated non-living objects (food, water, fomites, blood).
    • Examples: Cholera (water), Salmonella (food), HIV (contaminated blood/products).
  • Vector-Borne Transmission:
    • Transmission through vectors (living organisms like insects or animals).
      • Mechanical Vector: Pathogen carried externally by vector.
        • Example: Typhoid, cholera (houseflies).
      • Biological Vector: Pathogen multiplies or develops within the vector.
        • Example: Malaria, dengue (mosquitoes).

πŸ“Œ Special Transmission Modes:

  • Vertical (Transplacental): Mother-to-child transmission during pregnancy.
    • Examples: HIV, rubella.
  • Nosocomial (Hospital-acquired): Through medical procedures or hospital environment.
    • Examples: MRSA, catheter-associated infections.
  • Perinatal Transmission: Occurs during childbirth.
    • Example: Hepatitis B.

🧠 Key Points for Exams:

  • Droplet transmission (<1 meter) vs. airborne transmission (>1 meter).
  • Vehicle transmission involves inanimate objects.
  • Biological vectors support pathogen lifecycle; mechanical vectors do not.
  • Proper sanitation, vaccination, and isolation effectively interrupt transmission chains.

πŸ“ MCQ for Review: Q: Tuberculosis primarily spreads through which mode of transmission?

  • A) Vehicle-borne
  • B) Direct contact
  • βœ… C) Airborne
  • D) Vector-borne

Rationale: Tuberculosis bacteria remain suspended in air particles, enabling transmission over distances greater than one meter, characteristic of airborne transmission.

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Categorized as CHN-SYNOPSIS-PHC, Uncategorised