AY Honors/Biosafety/Answer Key

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1. Define the following terms:

a. Biosafety

Biosafety is defined as the discipline addressing the safe handling and containment of infectious microorganisms and hazardous biological materials; procedures intended to protect humans or animals against disease or harmful biological agents.

b. Biohazard

A biohazard is a biological substance that's dangerous to people or the environment. Many biohazards are made of bacteria or other microorganisms. Some biohazards are an unintentional side effect of biologists working with or studying toxins or viruses. One common type of biohazard is medical waste — things like used syringes or other tools contaminated with human blood, bacteria, or other microorganisms. The word biohazard was first used around 1973, from the Greek bio-, "life," and hazard, from the Old French hasard, "game of chance."

c. Risk Factor

A risk factor is something that increases a person's chances of developing a disease. For example, cigarette smoking is a risk factor for lung cancer and obesity is a risk factor for heart disease.

d. Biological material

Biological materials are natural biocompatible materials that comprise a whole or a part of a living structure or biomedical device that performs, augments, or replaces a natural function. Biological materials are most often engineered for medical, biotechnology and pharmaceutical applications.

e. Chemical or biological accident

A biological or chemical accident is the unintentional release of one or more hazardous substances which could harm human health and the environment. Chemical hazards are systems where chemical accidents could occur under certain circumstances. Such events include fires, explosions, leakages or release of toxic or hazardous materials that can cause people illness, injury, or disability. It may occur due to natural or human-made sources.

f. Chemical or biological incident

An incident is more general and accident is more specific, regarding hazardous materials. An incident can refer to any event – big or small, good or bad, intentional or unintentional. Accidents are always unintentional and they usually result in some damage or injury.

g. Pathogen

A pathogen is a bacterium, virus, or other microorganism that can cause disease. A pathogen may also be referred to as an infectious agent, or simply a germ.

h. Aerosols

Aerosols are a suspension of fine solid or liquid particles in gas. it is an abbreviation of "aero-solution." Smoke, fog, and mist are aerosols.

i. PPE

Personal protective equipment (PPE) is protective clothing, helmets, goggles, or other garments or equipment designed to protect the wearer's body from injury or infection. The hazards addressed by protective equipment include physical, electrical, heat, chemicals, biohazards, and airborne particulate matter.

2. Describe which PPEs are used by health professionals. What are they for? Discuss at least five other non-health care fields that routinely use PPE for protection from biohazards and why they are needed.

PPE used by health professionals

Gloves
Prevent the hands from coming into contact with contaminated material.
Face mask
Reduce the possibility of inhaling airborn pathogens. Also reduces the chances of an infected healthcare worker from contaminating others.
Face shield
Protects the face from being sprayed by contaminated material or bodily fluids.
Gown/Scrubs
Protects the body from coming into contact with contaminated materials.
Hazmat suit
Also called Positive Pressure Personnel Suit (PPPS). Offers maximum protection against biohazards. This equipment is typically used in research laboratories.

Examples of Non-Healthcare professions that use PPE

  • Wastewater (sewage) Engineer/technician/laborer
  • Waste management (garbage)
  • Cleaning Services
  • Law Enforcement
  • Fireman
  • Agriculture
  • Veterinary
  • Manufacturing
  • Coroners
  • Property Management
  • Food Preparation
  • Slaughterhouse/Meatpacking Operations
  • Laboratory
  • Hazmat Operations
  • Correctional Facilities

3. Differentiate between outbreak, epidemic, pandemic and endemic. Make a Venn diagram or chart that shows the things that are the same and those that are different.

  • Outbreak: Refers to the number of cases (disease) that exceeds what would be expected.
  • Endemic: An infection or disease that exists permanently in a particular region or population. For example, Malaria is a constant worry in parts of Africa.
  • Epidemic: An outbreak of a disease that is actively spreading over a wide geographic area and affects an exceptionally high proportion of the population.
  • Pandemic: A global endemic. It relates to geographic spread and is used to describe a disease that affects a whole country or the entire world.

An example of this is dengue fever. There are parts of the world where dengue fever is endemic, meaning that there are mosquitoes that are carrying dengue fever and transmitting it from person to person. But we also see imported cases and imported outbreaks in parts of the world where a disease is not endemic. There was an outbreak in the Big Island of Hawaii where somebody, unknown, must have come in with dengue fever, got bitten by mosquitoes, and then there were local chains of transmission where those mosquitoes then bit other people, they got dengue fever, and so on and so on. In this case, dengue fever is not endemic in the Big Island, however, there was an outbreak due to an imported disease with subsequent transmission.

4. Develop a list of precautions that should be taken during an epidemic/pandemic.

Frequent hand washing

The most common pathway for a pathogen to enter the body is for it to come into contact with the hands, and then be transferred to the face. Doorknobs, shopping carts, light switches, or other high-touch surfaces which are shared by many people are potential points for transference of germs to the hands. Whenever you arrive at your home (or other safe zone), it is very important to wash your hands immediately. Try to minimize the things you touch before you can wash your hands and make a mental note of which things you do touch.

You should also always wash your hands at these times:

  • After you have used the bathroom
  • Before you prepare food.
  • Before you eat.

This guidance applies even if you are not caught in the middle of an epidemic.

Rinse your hands well. If you find that your hands are getting dry and crackly, you are probably not rinsing them well enough. Water doesn't generally cause your hands to dry out - soap does. Use a lotion if your hands dry out, and try to rinse them better next time. Don't let dry hands discourage you from washing them!

Avoid touching your face

See the discussion above on hand washing.

Disinfecting

When you arrive at your home you should have made a mental note of all the things you touched before you were able to wash your hands. Those are the surfaces should be disinfected. Clean them as soon as you finish washing your hands.

When you leave a public place and get to your vehicle, if you can use hand sanitizer before you get in your car, you can get away with not disinfecting your car when you get home. But if you forget, you need to use a disinfecting wipe to clean everything you touched in the car:

  • Door handles (inside and outside)
  • Steering wheel
  • Gear shift
  • Controls (power window buttons, A/C, heat/fan controls, cruise control, etc)
  • Seat belt buckles
  • Turn signal
  • Radio controls
  • Parking brake
  • Garage door opener

In the house:

  • Garage door closer
  • Doorknobs
  • Faucet handles
  • Light switches
  • Refrigerator handle
  • Countertops
  • Cell phone
  • Purse/wallet
  • Credit/debit cards

Other high-touch surfaces that should be regularly disinfected:

  • Laptop keyboards
  • Tablets
  • Remote controls
  • Reusable water bottles

Social Distancing

If the disease causing the outbreak does not have an effective treatment or vaccine, one of the only tools for slowing its spread is to keep people away from each other. This recommended separation distance depends on how the disease is spread. For COVID-19, which is spread by respiratory droplets, public health professionals recommend staying at least 6 feet (2 meters) from other people (especially strangers).

Face masks

A face mask should be worn when it is necessary to be in a public place during an epidemic which spreads by respiratory droplets. The mask will serve to reduce the amount of pathogens entering the wearer's mouth or nose, and also reduce the amount of pathogens emitted by the wearer. The latter point is especially important when the disease can be transmitted before the victim is aware of any symptoms.

Wearing a mask sends the message "I care about you, and if I am infected, I don't want to spread it to you."

When a mask is removed it should be placed in the laundry and the hands should be washed or sanitized as soon as possible.

Water Treatment/Hygiene

Some outbreaks, such as cholera, are spread through the use of water which has been contaminated by human feces. Proper sanitation prevents the cholera bacteria from getting into the water source in the first place. Water treatment kills any of the bacteria that may have been introduced into the water system. Water should be sterilized before drinking it, bathing with it, or cooking with it.

Mosquito Control

Yellow fever, malaria, West Nile, and Eastern equine encephalitis (EEE) are all spread by mosquitoes. To control the disease, you must control the mosquitoes. This is done by sleeping under mosquito netting, wearing mosquito repellent (DEET-based repellents being the most effective) emptying standing water where mosquitoes breed, and in extreme cases, through the use of pesticides.

5. Chart, list, or illustrate the differences between isolation and quarantine.

Chart - A simple T-chart can be created by folding a piece of copy paper (A3 or letter) in half "hotdog" style so that you have two long columns. On one side you write words or short phrases that describe Isolation and on the otherside you write comparable ideas that illustrate quarantine.

For example:

Isolation Quarantine
Protect public health Protect public health
Separate locations
for sick people
Staying separate to keep from
getting sick
Families stay away from
other groups of people
Individuals who are sick
stay away from others


A list is more paper-pencil without a manipulative but accomplishes the same purpose as the chart.

Illustrate means using photos, drawings, sketches, or pictures collected from the internet to illustrate the similarities and differences between the two words. The "Illustrate" option is by far the MOST FUN!

Definitions and Explanations: Isolation and quarantine are public health practices used to protect the public by preventing exposure to people who have or may have a contagious disease.

Isolation

Isolation separates sick people with a contagious disease from people who are not sick. Hospitals use isolation for patients who have a known infectious disease that can be spread easily to others. Household members should use a separate bedroom and even a separate bathroom if possible. It is also recommended that the ill person should eat or be fed in their room away from other household members. Household items such as dishes, drinking glasses, cups, eating utensils, towels, bedding, or other items should not be shared with the person infected. It is important to prohibit all visitors and non-essential people from being in the home.

Quarantine

Quarantine separates and restricts the movement of people who were exposed to a contagious disease to see if they become sick. These people may have been exposed to a disease and do not know it, or they may have the disease but do not show symptoms. Quarantine helps to limit the spread of communicable disease. Quarantining means staying home and away from other people as much as possible for at least a 14-day period. This includes avoiding shopping, eating out, socializing, public places, and large crowds.

6. Choose two of the following historic diseases and answer: When did it occur? How many were infected? How was it spread? What were the symptoms? What were the biosafety precautions used? How was it abated?

• Smallpox

• Typhus

• 1918 Influenza (Spanish Flu)

The 1918 influenza, originally known as the Spanish flu, occurred from January 1918 to December 1920, it infected 500 million people.

The close quarters and massive troop movements during World War I hastened the pandemic, and probably both increased transmission and augmented mutation. Some speculate the soldiers' immune systems were weakened by undernourishment, as well as the stresses of combat and chemical attacks, increasing their susceptibility. A large factor in the worldwide occurrence of this flu was increased travel. Modern transportation systems made it easier for soldiers, sailors, and civilian travelers to spread the disease.

The sick experienced such typical flu symptoms as chills, fever and fatigue.

When the flu hit, doctors and scientists were unsure what caused it or how to treat it. Unlike today, there were no effective vaccines or antivirals, drugs that treat the flu. Officials in some communities imposed quarantines, ordered citizens to wear masks and shut down public places, including schools, churches and theaters. People were advised to avoid shaking hands and to stay indoors, libraries put a halt on lending books and regulations were passed banning spitting. According to The New York Times, during the pandemic, Boy Scouts in New York City approached people they’d seen spitting on the street and gave them cards that read: “You are in violation of the Sanitary Code.”

However, a second, highly contagious wave of influenza appeared with a vengeance in the fall of that same year. Victims died within hours or days of developing symptoms, their skin turning blue and their lungs filling with fluid that caused them to suffocate. In just one year, 1918, the average life expectancy in America plummeted by a dozen years.

After the lethal second wave struck in late 1918, new cases dropped abruptly – almost to nothing after the peak in the second wave. One explanation for the rapid decline in the lethality of the disease is that doctors became more effective in prevention and treatment of the pneumonia that developed after the victims had contracted the virus. Another theory holds that the virus mutated extremely rapidly to a less lethal strain. This is a common occurrence with influenza viruses: there is a tendency for pathogenic viruses to become less lethal with time, as the hosts of more dangerous strains tend to die out.

• Polio

• Swine Flu

7. Choose two of the following diseases and answer: What are the symptoms? How is it spread? Is there a cure today? Where and when was there an outbreak/epidemic/pandemic? Is there a prevention for this disease? What are the biohazard safety methods used to combat the spread of this disease?

• Cholera

• Tuberculosis

• Yellow Fever

• Measles

• Malaria

• Ebola

• AIDS

• COVID-19

8. Complete the following:

a. Which of the previous diseases studied are or were endemic to your local area?

b. Which of the previous diseases are current travel concerns and what locations are greater risks to encounter them?

c. Choose a place in the world you would potentially like to travel to and learn of the outbreaks and diseases that require or recommend a vaccine.

9. How do vaccines work? Why is it important to be up to date with your immunizations?

10. Name a national or global entity that assists in developing and applying disease prevention and control.

a. Where is this organization located?

b. What information does it relay and why is it important to know how to access that information?

11. Explain why it is so important to remove medical gloves properly. Demonstrate the proper way to remove medical gloves without transferring pathogens from the gloves to your hands through the following exercise:

The skin is your body’s largest organ. It protects your organs and acts as a barrier that guards against micro-organisms and chemicals; but as protective as skin is, it needs protection, too. That’s because while skin is working hard to keep contaminants out, some actually absorb through unless you’re wearing PPE. Then there’s the risk of cross contamination or carrying a contaminant elsewhere. Even if you were wearing gloves while working with the contaminant, if you remove disposable gloves incorrectly, it can deposit the very same hazard back onto the skin that you thought you’d protected.

a. Coat your gloved hands with a simulated “pathogen” (such as Glo-Germ, cooking oil, ketchup, corn syrup, tempera paint, etc.).

b. Remove the gloves using proper technique without transferring any of the simulated “pathogen” to your skin or clothing.

c. Dispose of the gloves.

d. Clean up the mess.

12. Regarding the cleaning of hands:

a. Why is hand washing recommended rather than hand sanitizing whenever possible?

Hand washing reduces the amounts of all types of germs and chemicals on hands. But if soap and water are not available, using a hand sanitizer with at least 60% alcohol can help you avoid getting sick and spreading germs to others.

Hand sanitizers may not be as effective when hands are visibly dirty or greasy. When hands are heavily soiled or greasy, hand sanitizers may not work well. Hand washing with soap and water is recommended in such circumstances.

Hand sanitizers also might not remove harmful chemicals, like pesticides and heavy metals, from hands. Although few studies have been conducted, hand sanitizers probably cannot remove or inactivate many types of harmful chemicals. In one study, people who reported using hand sanitizer to clean hands had increased levels of pesticides in their bodies.&

b. What steps should be taken to make sure all parts of the hands are clean? Explain why it is important to follow each step.

c. What song have you found that is long enough that you can sing it completely while scrubbing your hands?

Singing the Pathfinder Song at a good regular tempo can easily take up to 30 seconds!

d. Why is the use of paper towels preferable over cloth towels that will be used several times?

e. Make a video or other presentation to demonstrate to your instructor how to properly wash and dry your hands.

The World Health Organization recommends the technique shown in this video. You will need to make your own video (or a poster, or a live demonstration, or some other creative method to illustrate the method).

13. Regarding hand sanitizer:

a. Why is 70% isopropyl alcohol the most effective concentration as the main cleansing sanitizer ingredient?

70% alcohol takes a longer time to evaporate from any surface, hence there is enough contact time. In the case of 100% alcohol, evaporation will be very fast, contact time will be less and it will not be so effective against microbes.

70 % isopropyl alcohol solution kills microorganisms by dissolving the plasma membrane of the cell wall. Plasma membrane of gram negative bacteria consist of thin layer of peptidoglycon that is easily destroyed by the alcohol.

Water plays key important role which used to denature the proteins of cell membrane and acts as a catalyst in the reaction. Contact time of the alcohol with the organism also plays an important role. A 70% solution of alcohol takes more time in evaporation from the surface, increasing the contact time. Therefore, 70% isopropyl alcohol fulfills the both requirements.

The 100% isopropyl alcohol coagulates the proteins instantly by creating a protein layer that protects the other proteins from further coagulation. Because of this, microbes are not killed but remain in a dormant stage.

b. What is the correct way to use hand sanitizer?

Apply about a teaspoon (5 ml) of hand sanitizer to your hands. Rub it in thoroughly, being sure to get the palms, the backs of the hands, between the fingers, and the finger tips. Do not wipe the hands dry, but rather, allow the sanitizer to evaporate. This leaves the sanitizer in contact with any germs long enough for it to disinfect the hands.

c. Explain when it is appropriate to use hand sanitizer instead of soap and water.

Hand sanitizer can be used when soap and water are not readily available. Using soap and water is always the more effective way to wash your hands.

14. Regarding face masks:

a. Explain the rationale for using a homemade mask.

b. Learn how to improvise a face mask using materials commonly found around your home.

YouTube video with U.S. Surgeon General demonstrating a technique:

c. Research and make a face mask using ideal fabric and design per instructions.

d. Under what conditions would it be advantageous to upgrade to a certified commercial face mask?

15. Regarding coughing:

a. Perform the following:

i. Position yourself 12 inches (30 cm) in front of a clean pane of glass or a mirror and cough on it. Observe the amount and distribution of the droplets produced by the cough. Clean the glass.

ii. While maintaining the same distance from the glass as with the uncovered cough, repeat by coughing into the crook of your arm. Compare the amount and distribution of droplets. Clean the glass.

iii. Repeat this exercise while wearing a mask. Compare the amount and distribution of droplets. Clean the glass when you are finished.

b. Based on your observations, identify what actions should be taken when coughing or sneezing to avoid contaminating other people.

16. Study the protocol that the Lord gave Moses concerning leprosy in Leviticus 13:1-46. How do the social distancing and quarantine principles of this passage compare to modern recommendations?

17. According to Matthew 24:3-8, what does the Bible say about end-time diseases?

18. According to 1 Corinthians 15:51-58 and Revelation 21:1-5, what will happen to sicknesses and diseases when we go to Heaven?



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References

  1. [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3866960/pdf/nihms375512.pdf Do workplace and home protective practices protect farm workers? Findings from the “For Healthy Kids” study.