Disease If we had a Morgan Freeman moment could they all be stopped today?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Environmental Hazards and Human Health
Advertisements

Lesson 3 Common Communicable Diseases When you have a cold, the best thing to do is rest, eat nutritious foods, and drink plenty of fluids such as water.
Please draw the orographic cycle on your warmup paper.
African Health Issues.
Infectious Diseases. Infectious diseases Pathogen Organism which causes disease e.g. bacterium, virus, protocista (one celled organism) Transmission Transfer.
Transmission and control of infectious diseases
Microbe Unit Review. What do we call the spread of a disease in a small region? epidemic.
Mortality Rates LEARNING OBJECTIVES 1.TO DEFINE THE DIFFERENT MEASUREMENTS OF MORTALITY 2.TO IDENTIFY THE DIFFERENT GLOBAL MORTALITY TRENDS.
Tracking the AIDS Epidemic in the United States: Diffusion through Space and Time © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. This presentation may be used and adapted.
AIDS/Other Diseases Sub-Saharan Africa.
OCR AS Biology – F212 – Module 2 Food & Health. Learning ObjectivesSuccess Criteria  Understand the causes and means of transmission of malaria, HIV/AIDS.
HUMAN HEALTH & ENVIRONMENTAL RISKS
This is a global infectious disease.
The Spread of Disease IB Geography II.
Biological Hazards Disease in Developed and Developing Countries.
Best Practice Guideline for the Workplace During Pandemic Influenza Occupational Health and Safety Employment Standards.
General Principles of Diffusion. Diffusion – A Definition Diffusion is the process of spread in geographic space and growth through time of an innovation,
 A public health science (foundation of public health)  Impacts personal decisions about our lifestyles  Affects government, public health agency and.
What’s going to kill you?. What will you die of?
How do I understand Diffusion? Diffusion can be explained by…  Having everyone close their eyes and begin to peel an orange. Whoever smells the orange.
The Spread of Pathogens Starter 1. Why are most antibiotics no longer effective against MRSA? 2. Describe the pattern in Graph 1 and 2 3. Explain why deaths.
1 Spatial Diffusion of Disease Diffuse is defined as ‘to disperse or be dispersed from a centre; to spread widely, disseminate’. (Oxford English Dictionary)
IB GEOGRAPHY II THE SPREAD OF DISEASE. OBJECTIVE By the end of this lesson, students will be able to: Explain how the geographic concepts of diffusion.
It is a model consisting of four stages that helps to explain the rising and falling of natural increase over time in a country. Historically, no country.
Pathogen Epidemic & Pandemic Test Review. 1) Compare & Contrast Disease Pathogens Please use notes, book, info to complete chart BacteriaVirusParasiteFungus.
WORLD HEALTH THREATS. AIM: WHAT DISEASES CAUSE THE MOST DEATHS ALONG THE DTM? DO NOW: Predict which kinds of diseases would be most prevalent for each.
Unit 4 – Immunology and Public Health Infectious Disease and Epidemiology.
The Spread of Disease IB Geography II.
Global Infectious Diseases. Overview macro/micro economic impact Factors: demographics, hospital-acquired infections, environment, travel and commerce,
Chapter 18 Section 01. Core Case Study: The Global HIV/AIDS Epidemic According to the World Health Organization (WHO), in 2005 about 42 million people.
Topic: World Health Threats Aim: How do countries undergo an epidemiologic transition? Do Now: Describe what you feel are some of the greatest health threats.
Section 21.4 Emerging Infectious Diseases Slide 1 of 15 Objectives Define the term emerging disease. Identify five reasons why diseases emerge. Section.
Topic: World Health Threats
Geographic factors and impacts of disease
AIDS 8, 493 deaths per day 3.1 million deaths per year (2004 WHO estimates) More than 90% of those infected with HIV/AIDS live in developing countries.
Aim: To discuss the geographic factors that determine the relative emphasis placed by policy-makers, in one country or region, on prevention as opposed.
OCR AS Biology – F212 – Module 2 Food & Health. Starter Questions  Describe the differences between a parasite and a pathogen.  List two diseases caused.
+ Spatial Diffusion AP HUG. + Diffusion Definition: the movement of a phenomenon (i.e. culture, language, religion, disease) from one location to another.
Unit 1, Lesson 3 AOHS Global Health Communicable Disease Copyright © 2012–2014 National Academy Foundation. All rights reserved.
Notes: Spread, Treatment, and Prevention of Disease
Chapter 1 Key Issue 3 Why Are Different Places Similar?
Classifying infectious diseases Infectious Diseases Bacterial, e.g. cholera Viral, e.g. HIV/AIDS Other (helminths Protozoa, fungi), e.g. bilharzia ….one.
Chapter 3 Diffusion through Space and Time. Spatial Diffusion The spread of some phenomenon (not only diseases, but also cultural traits and innovations)
DISEASE Biological Hazards. 2 Catagories of Disease Nontransmissible disease- caused by something other than living organisms and does not spread from.
Warm Up p11 Talk to the text you have in front of you. Using your knowledge of word stems, what can you infer is the difference between an epidemic and.
Unit 4 - Immunology and Public Health
Vaccines.
What is an infectious disease?
How do I understand Diffusion?
Epidemiological Transitions
Human Health and Environmental Risks
Spread, Treatment, and Prevention of Disease
Types of Diffusion Name: Period: Relocation Diffusion
Starter: Watch this clip. Now watch this clip.
Introduction to Human Geography
How do I understand Diffusion. This is not Ms. Morrell’s powerpoint
What is the pattern of risk from a global pandemic
Epidemiological Transitions
Population: Health Risks
Key Issues Where is the world population distributed? Why is global population increasing? Why does population growth vary among regions? Why do some regions.
Section 21.4 Emerging Infectious Diseases Objectives
How do I understand Diffusion?
Emerging & Re-emerging Infectious Diseases
Health and Population: Part Three
Unit 2- Population, Health, and Migration
How do I understand Diffusion?
Unit 2- Population, Health, and Migration
EPIDEMIOLOGIC TRANSITION
Preventing and Treating Disease
Presentation transcript:

Disease If we had a Morgan Freeman moment could they all be stopped today?

Do you agree? https://www.ted.com/talks/shereen_el_feki_how_to_fight_an_epidemic_of_bad_laws

Spread of disease Objectives Explain how the geographic concepts of diffusion by relocation and by expansion apply to the spread of diseases Examine the application of the concept of barriers in attempts to limit the spread of diseases. Describe the factors that have enabled reduction in incidence of a disease

‘The greatest threat to our species is not global warming, warfare or poverty – the greatest threat is drug-resistant bacteria’

MEDCs at greatest risk from certain diseases.. Don’t make that mistake! People in MEDCs have compromised immune systems because of over-use of certain antibiotics both in the community and the food chain

How are diseases spread? Crowded working and living conditions Inadequate sanitation Unclean water supplies Inadequate nutrition Inadequate income  no medical help, no resources (e.g. soap/household cleaners, mosquito nets/repellent, antiseptic creams etc) Long working hours Inaccessible health care Exposure to health risks at work as legislation not enforced Inadequate education e.g. AIDS sufferers not understanding the concept of safe sex

Complete the worksheet as we go through the next few slides

Disease diffusion The spread of disease into new locations – when incidences of diseases spread out from an initial source. The frictional effect of distance (i.e. distance decay)  areas closer to the source are more likely to be affected by it; those further away less likely to be affected but might get affected at a later date. Incidence of disease X Distance from source of disease

Types of diffusion Expansion diffusion – including contagious diffusion, hierarchical diffusion and network diffusion Relocation diffusion Mixed diffusion

Expansion diffusion Occurs when the expanding disease has a source and diffuses outwards into new areas (it is the disease that moves not the people - therefore the disease remains at the source and often becomes more intense).

Contagious diffusion The spread of an infectious disease, through the direct contact of individuals with those infected. Disease spreads out in several directions from source affecting most individuals who come into contact (even if do not show symptoms)

Hierarchical diffusion Occurs when a phenomenon spreads through an ordered sequence of classes or places, e.g. city  large urban area  small urban area. Or, within socially structured populations, innovations may be adopted first on the upper level of the social hierarchy and then trickle down to the lower levels. Channels of diffusion among people or groups that are more susceptible to the disease - disease by passes individuals or groups that do not share this vulnerability

Network diffusion Occurs when a disease spreads via transportation and social networks E.g. the spread of HIV in Southern Africa along transport routes, or the spread of chicken pox in schools/playgroups

Relocation diffusion When the spreading disease moves into new areas, leaving behind its origin or source of the disease e.g. a person infected with HIV moving into a new location

Mixed diffusion A combination of contagious diffusion and hierarchical diffusion. AIDS is a prominent example in modern day society of a mixed diffusion disease, often spreading along the hierarchal, network, and contagious diffusion patterns. +

Disease diffusion is over simplified Diffusion disease looks like it goes from one person to another. This is only true in DIRECTLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES Water borne and vector borne diseases are slightly different (we will come back to this later)

Barriers to stop the spread of disease? Think of ways that stop the spread of diseases For each way explain how it can and can’t contain the disease (if applicable) Can these ‘barriers’ be categorised? Use Encephalitis in India 2012 as an example

Barriers to stop the spread of disease? Natural? Mountains Water bodies – increase Water bodies – decrease Human? Political boundaries Economic boundaries Social boundaries Forced boundary – imprisonment, quarantine

Factors that have hindered reduction in incidence of disease.. India? Social stigma e.g. AIDs ‘gay disease’ Social stigma e.g. leprosy due to deformaties Education e.g. AIDs and denial in Sub-Saharan Africa Multiple use of water source e.g. washing, cooking, sewerage, garbage  diarrhoea Over use of pesticides  resistance and build up in food chain e.g. DDT Medication side affects e.g. Malaria and liver failure Cost e.g. TB vaccinations Food source e.g. stagnant water in rice padi fields Globalisation Increased air travel Risk of disease due to change in culture PANDEMIC VIDEO

The Pandemic Risk Index Pandemic disease: a disease epidemic over a wide geographic area and affecting a large proportion of the population, e.g. pandemic influenza (H1N1) Tasks: Read the worksheet about the PRI Do you think areas of a high risk pandemic are more likely to be found in an HIC or an LIC? Why?

The Pandemic Risk Index Question: Do you think areas of a high risk pandemic are more likely to be found in an HIC or an LIC? Why? Answer: equally likely in both but for different reasons LICs – usually, disease spreads easily and is hard to contain, owing to poor medical services and infrastructure. HICs – quite often there are large movements of people through international air travel (more globally connected) and therefore a focus for disease transmission

Mexico – the source area for the H1N1 pandemic (2009 – 2010)

H1N1 was first reported in April 2009 – 9 countries; 148 cases, 8 deaths

One month later – May 2009 – 48 countries; 13,398 cases, 95 deaths

H1N1 – exam questions Study the 4 maps (fig 10.18) – p.276 IB Geography course companion Describe the diffusion of the H1N1 (swine flu) virus in 2009. (3 marks) Name the type of disease diffusion indicated by the maps. Explain your answer. (5 marks) http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&oe=UTF8&msa=0&msid=106484775090296685271.0004681a37b713f6b5950

Exam question It is claimed that “the barriers to diffusion are more difficult to identify and define for diseases of affluence than they are for diseases of poverty”. Critically evaluate this statement. (10 marks) Use p.450-454 of Planet Geography to help you answer this question.

The Geography of Food and Health – part 3; disease Spread of disease Explain how the geographic concepts of diffusion by relocation and by expansion apply to the spread of diseases Examine the application of the concept of barriers in attempts to limit the spread of diseases. Describe the factors that have enabled reduction in incidence of a disease

Describe the factors that have enabled reduction in incidence of a disease Disease – Leprosy Information – World Health Organisation information sheet on leprosy Make notes to answer the above question under the following subheadings: What is leprosy? How is it transmitted? What has been done to try to reduce the incidence of leprosy? How effective have these attempts been? Give incidence of leprosy stats for before/after

Homework Read the IB Geography course companion case studies for Geography of Food and Health and answer the questions: What is a superbug? What is the link between agro-industrialisation and emerging/re-emerging diseases? Give examples. Can you think of any different cultural norms that may increase the likelihood of contracting disease? Can you think of any different cultural norms that may decrease the likelihood of contracting disease? Cholera in Haiti: What kind of disease diffusion did Haiti experience? Why was cholera such a big problem in Haiti, given that it is a disease that can be treated? What measures were taken to try to reduce the vulnerability of the Haitian people?

Disease diffusion and barriers to diffusion Tasks: Read p.447-449 of Planet Geography Briefly explain how leprosy is transmitted and explain what type of disease diffusion you think it is. Justify your answer. What are the barriers to diffusion for leprosy? What are the challenges in stopping/slowing the spread of leprosy? Briefly explain how 1 water borne and 1 vector borne disease is transmitted. What are the barriers to diffusion for your chosen water borne and vector borne disease ? What are the challenges in stopping/slowing the spread of your chosen water borne and vector borne disease? Explain why the principle of ‘disease diffusion’ cannot be so easily applied to water borne and vector borne diseases