Transcript Ch. 21-4

Section 21.4 Emerging Infectious Diseases
Emerging Infectious Diseases
Objectives
Define the term emerging disease.
Identify five reasons why diseases emerge.
Slide 1 of 15
Section 21.4 Emerging Infectious Diseases
Health Stats The map shows how dengue fever, a viral disease carried
by mosquitoes, has spread since 1960.
Should the United States be concerned about dengue
fever? Explain.
Slide 2 of 15
Section 21.4 Emerging Infectious Diseases
What Is an Emerging Disease?
• An epidemic (ep uh DEM ik) is an unusually high
occurrence of a disease in a certain place during a
certain time period.
• When an epidemic affects many areas of the world, it
is sometimes called a pandemic.
• An emerging disease is an infectious disease that
has become increasingly common in humans within
the last 20 years or threatens to become more
common in the near future.
Slide 3 of 15
Section 21.4 Emerging Infectious Diseases
For: Updates on modern epidemics
Click above to go online.
Slide 4 of 15
Section 21.4 Emerging Infectious Diseases
Why Do Diseases Emerge?
• Diseases can emerge when humans come into
contact with infected animals; pathogens become
resistant to existing drugs; or people lack
appropriate immunizations.
• The increased frequency of international travel and a
global food supply can enable emerging diseases to
spread very quickly.
Slide 5 of 15
Section 21.4 Emerging Infectious Diseases
Contact With Infected Animals
• Some diseases that are common in animals can
spread to humans.
• There have been recent cases in Asia in which
people have become sick after being exposed to
infected birds.
• Scientists fear that another deadly flu epidemic could
result if the virus takes on a form that can spread
easily between people.
Slide 6 of 15
Section 21.4 Emerging Infectious Diseases
Slide 7 of 15
Section 21.4 Emerging Infectious Diseases
Slide 8 of 15
Section 21.4 Emerging Infectious Diseases
Drug Resistance
• Some diseases are caused by pathogens that can
mutate, or change, over time.
• Sometimes these mutations result in a strain, or type,
of pathogen that no longer responds to medicine.
Slide 9 of 15
Section 21.4 Emerging Infectious Diseases
Lack of Immunization
• Diseases that were common many years ago can
pose a threat again if people don’t get the
proper immunizations.
• The polio virus remains a threat in several Asian and
African countries because many people in those
countries have not received the vaccine.
Slide 10 of 15
Section 21.4 Emerging Infectious Diseases
International Travel
• Globalization refers to the fact that people around the
world are no longer geographically isolated from
each other.
• Not only can people travel much more easily, but so
can any pathogens that live in their bodies.
• World travelers could spread the pathogen around
the world in a short amount of time.
Slide 11 of 15
Section 21.4 Emerging Infectious Diseases
Global Food Supply
• Food also travels around the world.
• If a pathogen is present in a food product, it can
spread quickly.
Slide 12 of 15
Section 21.4 Emerging Infectious Diseases
Vocabulary
epidemic
emerging disease
An unusually high occurrence of a disease in a
certain place during a certain time period.
An infectious disease that has become more
common within the last 20 years or threatens to
become more common in the near future.
Slide 13 of 15
Section 21.4 Emerging Infectious Diseases
QuickTake Quiz
Click to start quiz.
Slide 14 of 15
Section 21.4 Emerging Infectious Diseases
For: Chapter 21 self test
Click above to go online.
Slide 15 of 15
Section 21.4 Emerging Infectious Diseases
End of Section 21.4
Click on this slide to end this presentation.
Slide 16 of 15