Chapters 2-4
1. Which of the following is a condition which may occur during the incubation
period?
a. Onset of clinical illness
b. Receipt of infection
c. Signs & symptoms of disease
d. Transmission of infection
e. Isolation of disease carrier through quarantine
Rationale: The incubation period is defined as the interval from receipt of
infection to the time of onset of clinical illness. Accordingly, individuals may
transmit infectious agents during the incubation period as they show no signs of
disease that would enable the isolation of sick individuals by quarantine.
2. Chicken pox is a highly communicable disease. It may be transmitted by direct
contact with a person infected with the varicella-zoster virus (VZV). The typical
incubation time is between 10 to 20 days. A boy started school 2 weeks after
showing symptoms of chicken pox including mild fever, skin rash, & fluid-filled
blisters. One month after the boy returned to school, none of his classmates had
been infected by VZV. The main reason was:
a. Herd immunity
b. All had been immunized prior to the school year
c. Contact was after infectious period
d. Subclinical infections were not yet detected
e. Disease was endemic in the class
Rationale: The disease is spread by contact with an infected individual who can
transmit the agent (VZV) to immunologically naive persons during the
incubation period & for several days after onset of clinical illness. Since the boy
started school 14 days after showing signs consistent with chicken pox, it is
most likely that he was no longer infectious.
3. Which of the following is characteristic of a single-exposure, common-vehicle
outbreak?
a. Long latency period before many illnesses develop
b. There is an exponential increase in secondary cases following initial exposures
c. Cases include only those who have been exposed to sick persons
d. The epidemic curve has a normal distribution when plotted against the logarithm of
time
e. Wide range in incubation times for sick individuals
Rationale: Single-exposure, common-vehicle outbreaks involve a sudden, rapid
increase in cases of disease that are limited to persons who share a common
exposure. Additionally, few secondary cases develop among persons exposed to
primary cases. A histogram of the outbreak can plot the number of cases by
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