Description
Book SynopsisUnderstanding Public Health is an innovative series published by Open University Press in collaboration with the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, where it is used as a key learning resource for postgraduate programmes. It provides self-directed learning covering the major issues in public health affecting low-, middle- and high-income countries.
Communicable diseases are ever present in the world today. Social and economic issues like poverty, access to essential vaccinations and lack of substantive healthcare systems contribute to mortality rates alongside epidemiological factors like portals of entry and bacterial sources.
This public health textbook, in exploring the causes and conditions of communicable diseases like ebola and malaria, clearly outlines communicable disease control and prevention measures as well as how to apply these measures effectively in different contexts and populations
Table of Contents
Section 1: Understanding communicable disease
Chapter 1: A brief history of the development of communicable disease control
Chapter 2: Concepts in communicable disease causation
Chapter 3: The chain of infection and modes of transmission
Section 2: Measures to control communicable diseases
Chapter 4: Surveillance
Chapter 5: Vaccination
Chapter 6: Prevention
Chapter 7: Outbreak response
Section 3: Application of measures to control communicable diseases
Chapter 8 – Communication
Chapter 9: Ethics and communicable disease control
Chapter 10: Health systems and communicable disease control
Chapter 11: Emerging trends, challenges and opportunities in communicable disease control