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Chapter 2a - Workforce Safety and Wellness

Emergency Care and Transportation of the Sick and Injured, Twelfth Edition
Across
Inflammation of the liver, usually caused by a viral infection, that causes fever, loss of appetite, jaundice, fatigue, and altered liver function
The contamination of food or water with an organism that can cause disease.
The primary federal agency that conducts and supports public health activities in the US. The CDC ispart of the US Dept of Health and Human Services.
The way in which an infectious disease is spread: contact, airborne, by vehicles, or by vectors.
The spread of an organism via droplets or dust
Reactions to stress that occur after a stressful situation.
A microorganism that is capable of causing disease in a susceptible host.
Procedures to reduce transmission of infection among patients and health care personnel
The organism or individual that is attacked by the infecting agent.
Treatments that increase the risk for transmission of infections that are spread through the air or by droplet. CPR is one example.
Down
A combination of exhaustion, cynicism, and reduced performance resulting from long-term job stresses in health care and other high-stress professions.
Reactions to stress that occur during a traumatic situation
The body's response to stress that begins with an alarm response, followed by a stage of reaction and resistance, and then recovery or, if the stress is prolonged, exhaustion.
A process that confronts the resonses to criticdal incidents defuses them, directing the emergency services personnel toward physical and emotional equilibrium.
Pathogenic microorganisms that are present in human blood and can cause disease in humans. These pathogens include but are not limited to, Hepatitis B, and HIV.
The present of infections organisms on or in objects such as dressings, water, food, needles, wounds, or a patient's body.
The use of objects to limit a person's ability to see you.
A negative response to a stressor
The tactical use of an impenetrable barrier for protection.
A situation in which a person has had contact with blood, body fluids, tissues, or airborne particles in a manner that suggests disease transmission may occur.
AIDS is caused by HIV, which damages the cells in the body's immune system so that the body is unable to fight infection or certain cancers.