Disease outbreak
In epidemiology, an outbreak is a sudden increase in occurrences of a disease when cases are in excess of normal expectancy for the location or season. It may affect a small and localized group or impact upon thousands of people across an entire continent. The number of cases varies according to the disease-causing agent, and the size and type of previous and existing exposure to the agent. Outbreaks include many epidemics, which is a term normally only used for infectious diseases, as well as diseases with an environmental origin, such as a water or foodborne disease. They may affect a region in a country or a group of countries. Pandemics are near-global disease outbreaks when multiple and various countries around the Earth are soon infected.
Definition
The terms "outbreak" and "epidemic" have often been used interchangeably. Researchers Manfred S. Green and colleagues propose that the latter term be restricted to larger events, pointing out that Chambers Concise Dictionary and Stedman's Medical Dictionary acknowledge this distinction.Outbreak investigation
When investigating disease outbreaks, the epidemiology profession has developed a number of widely accepted steps. As described by the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, these include the following:- Identify the existence of the outbreak
- Verify the diagnosis related to the outbreak
- Create a case definition to define who/what is included as a case
- Map the spread of the outbreak using Information technology as diagnosis is reported to insurance
- Develop a hypothesis
- Study hypotheses
- Refine hypothesis and carry out further study
- Develop and implement control and prevention systems
- Release findings to greater communities
Outbreak debriefing and review has also been recognized as an additional final step and iterative process by the Public Health Agency of Canada.
Types
There are several outbreak patterns, which can be useful in identifying the transmission method or source, and predicting the future rate of infection. Each has a distinctive epidemic curve, or histogram of case infections and deaths.- Common source – All victims acquire the infection from the same source.
- * Continuous source – Common source outbreak where the exposure occurs over multiple incubation periods
- * Point source – Common source outbreak where the exposure occurs in less than one incubation period
- Propagated – Transmission occurs from person to person.
- Behavioral risk related
- Zoonotic – The infectious agent is endemic to an animal population, infection is transferred to humans.
- Endemic – a communicable disease, such as influenza, measles, mumps, pneumonia, colds, viruses, and smallpox, which is characteristic of a particular place, or among a particular group, or area of interest or activity.
- Epidemic – when this disease is found to infect a significantly larger number of people at the same time than is common at that time, and among that population, and may spread through one or several communities.
- Pandemic – occurs when an epidemic spreads worldwide.
Condition for declaring an outbreak over
Outbreak legislation
Outbreak legislation is still in its infancy and not many countries have had a direct and complete set of the provisions.However, some countries do manage the outbreaks using relevant acts, such as public health law.
World Health Organization member states are obligated by International Health Regulations to report outbreaks. WHO member states are holding a special session in November 2021 to consider the International Treaty for Pandemic Preparedness and Response to establish further legal obligations in managing disease outbreaks.