Difference between revisions of "Host tracing"
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+ | =Host - definition= | ||
+ | A person or other living animal, including birds and arthropods, offers subsistence or lodging to an infectious agent under natural conditions. A transport host is a carrier in which the organism remains alive but does not undergo development. | ||
+ | A primary host is where a parasite reaches maturity or passes its sexual stage. A secondary host is where a parasite is in a larval or asexual stage. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==When is host-tracing useful?== | ||
+ | Host tracing has value in the following situations: | ||
+ | * When there is a reasonable suspicion that the host is still infectious. In such a situation, host tracing may allow effective prevention measures (isolation and/or treatment of the host) that reduce the risk of further transmission. | ||
+ | * To learn. For example, in case of communicable diseases that require timely host isolation and/or treatment, it may be relevant to learn why previous prevention measures failed. | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | =References:= | ||
+ | * David L. Heymann (editor). Control of Communicable Diseases Manual. APHA, 2008 | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | ==FEM PAGE CONTRIBUTORS 2007== | ||
+ | ; Editor | ||
+ | : Arnold Bosman | ||
+ | ; Contributors | ||
+ | : Arnold Bosman | ||
[[Category:Public Health Interventions]] | [[Category:Public Health Interventions]] |
Latest revision as of 16:45, 26 March 2023
Contents
Host - definition
A person or other living animal, including birds and arthropods, offers subsistence or lodging to an infectious agent under natural conditions. A transport host is a carrier in which the organism remains alive but does not undergo development.
A primary host is where a parasite reaches maturity or passes its sexual stage. A secondary host is where a parasite is in a larval or asexual stage.
When is host-tracing useful?
Host tracing has value in the following situations:
- When there is a reasonable suspicion that the host is still infectious. In such a situation, host tracing may allow effective prevention measures (isolation and/or treatment of the host) that reduce the risk of further transmission.
- To learn. For example, in case of communicable diseases that require timely host isolation and/or treatment, it may be relevant to learn why previous prevention measures failed.
References:
- David L. Heymann (editor). Control of Communicable Diseases Manual. APHA, 2008
FEM PAGE CONTRIBUTORS 2007
- Editor
- Arnold Bosman
- Contributors
- Arnold Bosman