A | B |
aerobic bacteria | microorganisms that require oxygen to live |
anaerobic bacteria | microorganisms that exist without oxygen |
antimicrobial agents | chemicals that limit the number of infectious microorganisms by destroying them or suppressing their growth |
antiseptics | chemicals such as alcohol that inhibit the growth of, but do not kill, microorganisms |
asepsis | practices that decrease or eliminate infectious agents, their reservoirs and vehicles for transmission |
aseptic techniques | measures that reduce or eliminate microorganisms |
biologic defense mechanisms | methods that prevent microorganisms from causing an infectious disorder |
carriers | asymptomatic clients or animals who harbor pathogens but do not show evidence of an infectious disease |
chain of infection | sequence that enables the spread of disease-producing microorganisms |
communicable/community-acquired/contagious diseases | infectious diseases that can be transmitted to other people |
concurrent disinfection | measures that keep the client environment clean on a daily basis |
disinfectants | chemicals that destroy active microorganisms but not spores |
exit route | means by which microorganisms escape from their original reservoir |
fomites | nonliving reserviors of pathogens |
hand antisepsis | removal and destruction of transient microorganisms from the hands |
hand hygiene | methods for removing surface contaminants on the skin |
hand washing | aseptic practice that involves scrubbing the hands with plain soap or detergent, water and friction |
means of transmission | How infectious microorganisms move to another location. Five routes: contact, droplet, airborne, vehicle and vector. |