Sue, Jill, Maria, and Marco have been diagnosed with meningitis. Sue was very tired with heavy fatigue, had a strong headache with a fever of 100.6°F. Jill was also fatigued and also with a small fever of 99.7°F. Maria had the strongest fever between Jill and Sue at 103°F. Marco had very strong headache and heavy fatigue but had no…
Meningococcal: This bacteria causes meningitis, which is a serious, life-threatening disease that causes inflammation of the membranes covering the brain and spinal cord. There can also be presence of a life-threatening infection in the blood.…
There are three elements necessary for the spread of infection. First there has to be a source of an infective organism. This source can be endogenous or exogenous. Endogenous sources of infection reside on or in the host’s body. In contrast exogenous sources arise from outside. Second there has to be a mode of transmission. Described in below are the three primary modes of transmission, vertical, horizontal or contact. Lastly there has to be a susceptible host. Susceptibility of the host to infection generally is determined by the integrity of the host’s immune system and their ability to fend off the infective organism. (Alonzo, p.79)…
4. The most common cause of meningitis in adults and children is from bacterial or viruses: True…
1. Why do you think college students living in dorms are often populations who see meningitis outbreaks?…
References: Center for Disease Control and Prevention. (December 13, 2002). Morbidity & Mortality Weekly Report (Version 51(49);1109-1112) [Report]. 2002. November 29, 2012, CDC Web site: http:/ / www.cdc.gov/ mmwr/ preview/ mmwrhtml/ mm5149a1.htm Center for Disease Control and Prevention. (November 15, 2012). The CDC and Public Health Response to the 2012 Fungal Meningitis and Other Infections Outbreak [2012 Testimony for HELP]. Available November 21, 2012, from U.S. Senate Web site: http:/ / www.help.senate.gov/ imo/ media/ doc/ Bell.pdf Center for Medicaid and CHIP Services. (October 31, 2012). CMCS Informational Bulletin (Version Unknown) [Meningitis Outbreak: Interim Treatment Guidance]. Available November 9, 2012, from Department of Health & Human Services Web site: http:/ / www.medicaid.gov/ Federal-Policy-Guidance/ downloads/ CIB-10-31-12.pdf Food and Drug Administration. (November 15, 2012). Statement of Margaret A. Hamburg, M.D [Testimony before HELP]. Available November 21, 2012, from U.S. Senate Web site: http:/ / www.help.senate.gov/ imo/ media/ doc/ Hamburg3.pdf Mercy Mount. (n.d.). In unknown (Ed.), Mercy Mount Country Day School. Retrieved December 3, 2012, from Mercy Mount Web site: http:/ / www.mercymount.org/ Capital/ CapitalListofDonors.htm O 'Reilly, K. B. (2012, October 29). In AMA (Ed.), Meningitis outbreak tests physician trust in compounding pharmacies [Article]. Retrieved October 29, 2012, from AMA Web site: http:/ / www.ama-assn.org/ amednews/ 2012/ 10/ 29/ prl21029.htm Pegues, D. A. (2006). Improving and Enforcing Compounding Pharmacy Practices to Protect Patients. Oxford Journal, 43(7), 838-840. Retrieved November 21, 2012, from JSTOR: http:/ / www.jstor.org/ stable/ 4484978 Perfect, J. R., & Schell, W. A. (1996). The New Fungal Opportunists Are Coming. Clinical Infectious Disease, 22(2), S112-S118. Retrieved November 22, 2012, from JSTOR Web site: http:/ / www.jstor.org/ stable/ 4459452 Professional Risk Advisor. (n.d.). In Unknown (Ed.), Professional Risk Advisor. Retrieved December 3, 2012, from Professional Risk Advisor Web site: http:/ / www.professionalriskadvisor.com/ 0303-settlement.html Serrie, J.…
is transmitted from human-to-human via contact with discharge from respiratory membranes or inhalation of infectious respiratory droplets…
Bacteria: These are tiny microorganisms, they cannot be seen with the naked eye. They exist on virtually every living thing or object in the environment i.e. dirt, water, caves, trees, dead animals, and within everybody living on earth. Its nutrition is from its surroundings. We carry bacteria in the body, mainly in the intestines, on the genitalia or on the skin. Bacteria can be good or bad. It can help our immune system but there are bad bacteria which make you become ill. Meningitis is a bacterial infection, this can be life threating to a young baby and is most common in young children. It is an infection of the membranes covering the brain and/or spinal cord, this is a reason it can be life-threatening. MRSA is another big bacteria illness, this commonly affect hospitals and is due to lack of hygiene. Food poisoning is a common cause of illness caused by bacteria. This is because bacteria lives on food. If cooked and food has not reached a high enough temperature to kill off bacteria then it can cause the bacteria to rapidly grow and cause sickness to a person. The types of food poisoning are; salmonella, E. coli, norovirus, campylobacter, listeria, clostridium perfringens. These are also linked with viruses too. Also most sexual transmitted diseases are a bacterial infection i.e. syphilis, gonorrhea. Also Lyme disease, this is spread by the bite of a deer ticks most common around wooded, rural areas. If untreated it causes an arthritis-like condition that can last for months.…
Infectious diseases are diseases that can be spread or transmitted from one organism to another.…
• Meningococcal Disease: A serious infectious disease that can be life threatening and can result in permanent complications and coma, shock, and even death.…
Diseases can be spread/become communicable as cough droplets from a common cold or flu can be spread into the atmosphere as a person sneezes or coughs. The bacteria from the droplets can be spread from person to person (making the disease communicable) this can lead to the individual within the area to suffer from the same cold as it may have passed on. This could make the disease airborne. This means disease can be spread through the atmosphere. Communicable disease can be known as being infectious as it is passed from person to person. Communicable disease are also known as being contagious, meaning easy to catch from another individual.…
According to VanMeter and Hubert (2014), meningitis is a bacterial infection caused in the meninges of the central nervous system. The pathophysiology of this infection, as the authors decribes, begins with microorganisms makes their way to the brain through blood, extension of tissues that are in proximity, or access directly from wounds. Microbes would then bind to nasopharyneal cells in order to cross the mucosal barrier, then entering into cerebrospinal fluid from being attached to the choroid plexus. Next, the membranes are now in the central nervous system and cerebrospinal flowing within the subarachnoid space, the infection extends quickly to the brain. The infection will send out an inflammatory response which leads to increased intracranial…
The first story was about a young boy Tyler from Colorado, who got meningococcal meningitis. The symptoms were flu-like at first: high-temperature, weakness in the body, dehydration, etc. But then he got a shortness of breath, very low blood pressure, rush and eventually blisters on his limbs. Only after running multiple tests for five days that a boy spent on life control doctors finally got the answer. Meningococcal meningitis is an inflammation of the brain and infection of the bloodstream caused by bacteria that traveled through boy’s vessels releasing toxins that clotted his bloodstream causing his vessels to burst into the tissue, and because of the lack of oxygen his arms and legs began to rote. This disease strikes 15,000 children and teenagers in the US annually, the vaccine exists but are not always compulsory because some people with weakened immune system are more prone to get the infection . The new prescribed antibiotics helped Tyler to survive, but doctors had to amputate his dead front feet and fingers on the right hand.…
Meningitis is a highly infectious disease that is very well known throughout the world today. It is an inflammation of the meninges of the brain and spinal cord. In 1805, Meningitis was discovered during an outbreak in Geneva, Switzerland. Furthermore, in 1996 Africa experienced the largest recorded outbreak of meningitis that caused more than 250,000 people to be infected with meningitis and more than 25,000 were killed. The largest and most recurring causes of meningitis occur in Africa. There is an area in Africa called the Meningitis Belt that is south of the Sahara desert, where meningitis is most common. Many countries in the Meningitis Belt have experienced some of the largest meningitis…
Pneumococcal pneumonia involves the aveoli and/or the bronchi causing them to fill up with pus (neutrophils) and fluids. Red blood cells are also found in the aveoli. There are four stages in the process of pneumonia. The immune system kicks in and tries to fight Streptococcus pneumoniae. The Center of Disease Control states, "There were an estimated 3,700 deaths in the United States from pneumococcal meningitis and bacteremia in 2013." If Streptococcus pneumoniae enters the cerebral spinal fluid, it can cause meningitis where it can cause brain damage or even death. Meningitis is common for newborn…