Addressing Infectious Disease Threats

 

Developed by the Association of State and Territorial Directors of Health Promotion and Public Health Education with support from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Infectious Diseases Permission granted to reprint or abstract. Comments to director@dhpe.org

 

What Are Infectious Diseases?

Infectious diseases are human illnesses caused by viruses, bacteria, parasites, fungi and other microbes. They may be spread by direct contact with an infected person or animal, by ingesting contaminated food or water, by insects like mosquitos or ticks (disease vectors), or by contact with contaminated surroundings like animal droppings or even contaminated air.

A Problem That Won’t Go Away

With the advent of antibiotics 50 years ago, scientists made sweeping predictions heralding the end of death and suffering from infectious diseases. During the past 25 years, however, microbes have demonstrated their tremendous ability to adapt, survive and challenge us anew.

Once thought almost eliminated as a public health problem, infectious diseases remain the leading cause of death worldwide. In 1996, infectious diseases killed about one third of the more than 52 million people who died that year.

In the United States, two of the ten leading causes of death are infectious diseases (HIV and pneumonia/ influenza). The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reports that 160,000 Americans die each year with an infectious disease as the underlying cause of death. Ranging from childhood ear infections to measles to sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), infectious illnesses account for 25% of all physician visits each year, and antimicrobial agents are second only to pain relievers as the most frequently prescribed class of drugs.

Anticipating and coping with these microbial threats requires vigilance. We must maintain global surveillance and a strong public health infrastructure with state-of-the-art laboratories and solid partnerships with colleagues in medical, scientific, and policy arenas. Research and creativity are crucial, as is targeted public education at all levels of society to assure a well- informed public. Knowing that local threats can balloon into national or global problems, partnerships must be formed at all levels to develop both local and global prevention strategies.

A Financial Burden

Societal costs of infectious diseases are staggering. In the United States, treatment of non-AIDS STDs alone costs $5 billion annually. The yearly price tags of other infectious diseases are $30 billion for intestinal infections, $17 billion for influenza, $1 billion for salmonella, and $720 million for Hepatitis B. Altogether, the cost of treatment and lost productivity associated with illness from infectious agents tops $120 billion each year.

Emerging Diseases

Although some infectious diseases, such as polio, have been nearly wiped out, the vast majority of these diseases will not be eliminated in our lifetime. Indeed, the World Health Organization reports that at least 30 new diseases have been scientifically recognized around the world in the last 20 years. These emerging diseases include sin nombre hantavirus, first identified in the US in 1993; cryptosporidiosis (a water-borne cause of diarrhea that recently affected more than 400,000 people in a single outbreak in the U.S.); the Ebola virus from Africa; and HIV.

Reemerging Diseases

Infectious diseases once thought under control are also reemerging. Diseases like tuberculosis, cholera, and even diphtheria are making a comeback.

 

Why Are Infectious Diseases Emerging and Reemerging?

Many factors are making it easier for infectious diseases to become an even bigger problem in the future.

 

The Good News About Infectious Disease Control

Many infectious diseases can be prevented through simple and inexpensive methods.

 

A Critical Role for Health Education Professionals

Thanks to modern technology, researchers continually have new answers to the age-old question: What makes people ill? As part of their trade, specialists in community and individual health education have an obligation to keep pace with such public health research. Recent findings, for example, show that some chronic diseases and conditions (including ulcers, certain heart diseases, C. pneumoniae, and chronic liver disease) may in fact have etiologic connections to infectious agents.

Since many infectious diseases cannot be prevented by vaccines or treated effectively once established, the only line of defense is often education so communities and individuals can take preventive measures. Health educators must be proactive in leading these prevention efforts or others may step in who lack the necessary skills and resources to do this critical job well.

 

Communicating About Disease Risk

Public health professionals must be conduits of information in times of complacency and crisis. When infectious disease outbreaks occur, there may be tension between the public’s right to know about potential health risks and the need to avoid undue alarm. The goals of risk communication are education, informed decision making about the acceptability of risks, persuasion to modify the behavior of individuals or communities, and cooperation among all involved parties (e.g., government, health experts, industry, and the public).

Strategies for Successful Risk Communication 

  1. Remember that risk communication is an interactive process. Trust is vital. Listen to people’s concerns and address real-life situations. As much as possible, explain what is known or suspected in terms that the public can easily understand. Strive to balance clarity and simplicity with accuracy and completeness. Avoid messages that are confusing or misleading. Public satisfaction and the perception that a message is helpful and truthful help establish trust.

     

  2. Recognize that public perceptions of risk are likely to differ from those of experts. The public may tend to overestimate the risk of sensationalized and infrequent events and underestimate the risk of more familiar causes of disease and death. Experts tend to define issues narrowly and technically, and to minimize the likelihood that something will go wrong.

     

  3. While media attention is given to dramatic illnesses, the public has little awareness of greater public health issues such as antimicrobial resistance. Health officials must be prepared to deal with the conflict between public complacency and crisis. They must not only understand the factors that promote the spread of different infectious diseases, but they must be able to communicate with diverse target audiences (such as parents of young children, the immune-compromised, the elderly, and migrants) without stigmatizing anyone.

 

Public CDC Hotlines (Information and referrals are anonymous and confidential.)

English Speakers Spanish Speakers Hearing Impaired

The CDC will also provide information via recorded message, fax, or surface mail. Call 1-888-232-3228.

 

Infectious Diseases, Agents, and Modes of Transmission

AGENT TYPE

 

MODE OF TRANSMISSION

 

 

 

Person-to-Person

 

(direct contact, airborne or droplet, blood, sexual contact)

 

Ingestion

 

Contaminated Environment

 

Vector-Borne

 

Animal

Contact

 

Bacteria

 

Chlamydia

Diphtheria, Gonorrhea

H. influenzae b

Meningococcal disease

Pertussis, Syphilis

Tuberculosis

Group A & B streptococcus

 

Botulism

Camphylobacter

Cholera, E. coli.

 

Salmonellosis

Shigellosis

Typhoid fever

 

Legionellosis

 

Lyme disease

Plague

 

Cat-scratch

disease

Q fever

brucellosis

 

Parasites

 

Head lice

Scabies

Pinworms

 

Amoebiasis

Cryptosporidiosis

Cyclosporiasis

Giardiasis

Hookworm

Tapeworm

 

Schistosomiasis

 

Malaria

 

Toxicara

 

Viruses

 

AIDS

Chickenpox, Cold viruses

Ebola haemorrhagic fever

Hepatitis B and C

Herpes, Influenza

Measles, Mumps, Rubella

 

Hepatitis A

Rotavirus

 

Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome

 

Encephalitis

Dengue

Yellow fever

 

Rabies

Monkey-pox

 

Fungi

 

Ringworm

 

 

Histoplasmosis

Valley fever

 

 


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