CQUniversity Unit Profile
PBHL12001 Communicable Diseases and Public Health
Communicable Diseases and Public Health
All details in this unit profile for PBHL12001 have been officially approved by CQUniversity and represent a learning partnership between the University and you (our student).
The information will not be changed unless absolutely necessary and any change will be clearly indicated by an approved correction included in the profile.
General Information

Overview

The prevention of disease is recognised internationally as being of fundamental importance to quality of life and is a core skillset for any public health professional. This unit covers the important public health topic of communicable diseases and their control. Students will learn the value of participation by engaging in team activities and tutorial activities. They will learn about prevention by exploring the aetiologies, risk factors, epidemiological trends and underlying issues relating to a wide range of communicable diseases. Students will critique the public health literature and public health campaigns to discover the importance of partnerships in the effective control of communicable diseases. Topics will include the aetiology, transmission, epidemiological trends and control strategies relating to a range of communicable diseases, including enteric, vaccine preventable and sexually transmitted infections. The impact of communicable disease upon individual and population health will be explored, with particular emphasis on the indigenous community and global context. Students will develop skills in disease surveillance and/or the prevention or management of disease outbreaks. Residential school will be compulsory for Environmental Health students but optional for Health Promotion and other students.

Details

Career Level: Undergraduate
Unit Level: Level 2
Credit Points: 6
Student Contribution Band: 8
Fraction of Full-Time Student Load: 0.125

Pre-requisites or Co-requisites

48 credit points

Important note: Students enrolled in a subsequent unit who failed their pre-requisite unit, should drop the subsequent unit before the census date or within 10 working days of Fail grade notification. Students who do not drop the unit in this timeframe cannot later drop the unit without academic and financial liability. See details in the Assessment Policy and Procedure (Higher Education Coursework).

Offerings For Term 1 - 2021

Mixed Mode

Attendance Requirements

All on-campus students are expected to attend scheduled classes – in some units, these classes are identified as a mandatory (pass/fail) component and attendance is compulsory. International students, on a student visa, must maintain a full time study load and meet both attendance and academic progress requirements in each study period (satisfactory attendance for International students is defined as maintaining at least an 80% attendance record).

Residential Schools

This unit has a Compulsory Residential School for distance mode students and the details are:
Click here to see your Residential School Timetable.

Class and Assessment Overview

Recommended Student Time Commitment

Each 6-credit Undergraduate unit at CQUniversity requires an overall time commitment of an average of 12.5 hours of study per week, making a total of 150 hours for the unit.

Class Timetable

Bundaberg, Cairns, Emerald, Gladstone, Mackay, Rockhampton, Townsville
Adelaide, Brisbane, Melbourne, Perth, Sydney

Assessment Overview

1. Online Test
Weighting: 15%
2. Online Test
Weighting: 15%
3. Online Test
Weighting: 15%
4. Written Assessment
Weighting: 55%

Assessment Grading

This is a graded unit: your overall grade will be calculated from the marks or grades for each assessment task, based on the relative weightings shown in the table above. You must obtain an overall mark for the unit of at least 50%, or an overall grade of ‘pass’ in order to pass the unit. If any ‘pass/fail’ tasks are shown in the table above they must also be completed successfully (‘pass’ grade). You must also meet any minimum mark requirements specified for a particular assessment task, as detailed in the ‘assessment task’ section (note that in some instances, the minimum mark for a task may be greater than 50%). Consult the University’s Grades and Results Policy for more details of interim results and final grades.

Previous Student Feedback

Feedback, Recommendations and Responses

Every unit is reviewed for enhancement each year. At the most recent review, the following staff and student feedback items were identified and recommendations were made.

Feedback from Unit evaluation

Feedback

STI/AIDS lecture recordings need updating.

Recommendation

New lectures will be recorded for 2021.

Feedback from Unit evaluation

Feedback

Include information regarding pandemic management in unit material.

Recommendation

This is an excellent suggestion from one student. A case study of the COVID pandemic will be developed for inclusion in future offerings.

Feedback from Observation and student feedback.

Feedback

While online residential school worked reasonably well, it was not as successful as a face to face residential school. Students did not engage as effectively in an online context, particularly when they chose not to enable video.

Recommendation

Reinstate face to face residential school from 2021.

Unit Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of this unit, you will be able to:
  1. Describe risk factors and aetiology for a range of communicable diseases important to public health.
  2. Explain the impact of communicable diseases in the context of individual and population health.
  3. Identify and analyse primary, secondary and tertiary approaches for the prevention and control of communicable diseases.
  4. Evaluate the social and cultural impact of notifiable diseases.
  5. Explain the methods of measurement, monitoring, prioritisation and surveillance of communicable disease and how they are used to safeguard public health.

The learning outcomes of this unit relate to the enHealth Skills and Knowledge Matrix:

Part 1- all generic attributes

Part 2- underpinning skills and knowledge in the areas of

  • Science
    • basic human anatomy and physiology related to identifying disease causation and exposure pathways
    • microorganisms of significance for human health
    • transmission mechanisms and likely carriers
    • infective dose levels
  • Public & Environmental Health Concepts
    • The points of impact to influence environmental health determinants and related methods of impact
  • Research methods
    • Effective design and implementation of studies, policies and programs to protect public and environmental health and minimise risks

Part 3- Applied Skills and Knowledge

  • Prevention and control of notifiable and communicable conditions.

Alignment of Learning Outcomes, Assessment and Graduate Attributes
N/A Level
Introductory Level
Intermediate Level
Graduate Level
Professional Level
Advanced Level

Alignment of Assessment Tasks to Learning Outcomes

Assessment Tasks Learning Outcomes
1 2 3 4 5
1 - Online Test - 15%
2 - Online Test - 15%
3 - Online Test - 15%
4 - Written Assessment - 55%

Alignment of Graduate Attributes to Learning Outcomes

Graduate Attributes Learning Outcomes
1 2 3 4 5
1 - Communication
2 - Problem Solving
3 - Critical Thinking
4 - Information Literacy
5 - Team Work
6 - Information Technology Competence
7 - Cross Cultural Competence
8 - Ethical practice
9 - Social Innovation
10 - Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Cultures

Alignment of Assessment Tasks to Graduate Attributes

Assessment Tasks Graduate Attributes
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
1 - Online Test - 15%
2 - Online Test - 15%
3 - Online Test - 15%
4 - Written Assessment - 55%
Textbooks and Resources

Textbooks

Prescribed

Applied Communicable Disease Control

Edition: 1st (2018)
Authors: Liza Cragg, Will Nutland and James Rudge
Open University Press, McGraw Hill Education
Maidenhead Maidenhead , Berkshire , United Kingdom
ISBN: 9780335262922
Binding: Paperback
Prescribed

Control of Communicable Diseases

Edition: 20th edn (2015)
Authors: Heymann, DL
American Public Health Association
Waldorf Waldorf , MD , USA
ISBN: 9780875530185
Binding: Paperback

Additional Textbook Information

The Control of Communicable Diseases manual by Heymann is also available through digital subscription on the APHA website at https://ccdm.aphapublications.org/doi/book/10.2105/CCDM.2745

IT Resources

You will need access to the following IT resources:
  • CQUniversity Student Email
  • Internet
  • Unit Website (Moodle)
  • Zoom Capacity (microphone required; webcam optional)
Referencing Style

All submissions for this unit must use the referencing style: Harvard (author-date)

For further information, see the Assessment Tasks.

Teaching Contacts
Lisa Bricknell Unit Coordinator
l.bricknell@cqu.edu.au
William Mude Unit Coordinator
w.mude@cqu.edu.au
Robyn Preston Unit Coordinator
r.preston@cqu.edu.au
Schedule
Week 1 Begin Date: 08 Mar 2021

Module/Topic

Disease transmission and the immune response

Chapter

Events and Submissions/Topic

Week 2 Begin Date: 15 Mar 2021

Module/Topic

Disease transmission and the immune response

Chapter

Events and Submissions/Topic

Week 3 Begin Date: 22 Mar 2021

Module/Topic

Enteric diseases

Chapter

Events and Submissions/Topic

Week 4 Begin Date: 29 Mar 2021

Module/Topic

Parasitic diseases

Chapter

Events and Submissions/Topic

Week 5 Begin Date: 05 Apr 2021

Module/Topic

Vaccine preventable diseases

Chapter

Events and Submissions/Topic

Vacation Week Begin Date: 12 Apr 2021

Module/Topic

Chapter

Events and Submissions/Topic

Quiz 1 - Fundamentals of communicable disease control, enteric and parasitic diseases Due: Vacation Week Monday (12 Apr 2021) 11:59 am AEST
Week 6 Begin Date: 19 Apr 2021

Module/Topic

Vaccine preventable diseases- cont'd

Chapter

Events and Submissions/Topic

Week 7 Begin Date: 26 Apr 2021

Module/Topic

Sexually transmitted infections

Chapter

Events and Submissions/Topic

Week 8 Begin Date: 03 May 2021

Module/Topic

HIV

Chapter

Events and Submissions/Topic

Quiz 2- Immunisation and vaccine preventable diseases Due: Week 8 Monday (3 May 2021) 11:59 pm AEST
Week 9 Begin Date: 10 May 2021

Module/Topic

Disease surveillance & epidemiology

Chapter

)

Events and Submissions/Topic

Residential School for Environmental Health majors (optional for all other students), Rockhampton Campus 9am-5pm 10-12 May.

Week 10 Begin Date: 17 May 2021

Module/Topic

Public Health interventions- historical approaches

Chapter

Events and Submissions/Topic

Week 11 Begin Date: 24 May 2021

Module/Topic

Public Health interventions - contemporary approaches and future directions

Chapter

Events and Submissions/Topic

Quiz 3- Sexually transmitted infections and HIV Due: Week 11 Monday (24 May 2021) 11:59 pm AEST
Week 12 Begin Date: 31 May 2021

Module/Topic

Diseases of emerging public health concern

Chapter

Events and Submissions/Topic

Report Due: Week 12 Friday (4 June 2021) 11:59 pm AEST
Review/Exam Week Begin Date: 07 Jun 2021

Module/Topic

Chapter

Events and Submissions/Topic

Exam Week Begin Date: 14 Jun 2021

Module/Topic

Chapter

Events and Submissions/Topic

Assessment Tasks

1 Online Test

Assessment Title
Quiz 1 - Fundamentals of communicable disease control, enteric and parasitic diseases

Task Description

  • The quiz will open on the Monday of Week 5 and remain open until 9:00am on the following Monday (Vacation Week).
  • There is no time limit to complete the quiz and you can save your quiz and return to it later (while the quiz is available)
  • You will get your final result from the quiz showing which questions you got right or wrong. This will let you know what
  • areas you need to study/revise.
  • You should choose the most correct answer.


Assessment Due Date

Vacation Week Monday (12 Apr 2021) 11:59 am AEST


Return Date to Students

Results will be available once the quiz has closed.


Weighting
15%

Assessment Criteria

This quiz will assess the student's knowledge of the principles of disease causation, disease transmission and the aetiology, prevention and control of enteric and parasitic diseases.


Referencing Style

Submission
Online

Learning Outcomes Assessed
  • Describe risk factors and aetiology for a range of communicable diseases important to public health.
  • Explain the impact of communicable diseases in the context of individual and population health.
  • Identify and analyse primary, secondary and tertiary approaches for the prevention and control of communicable diseases.


Graduate Attributes
  • Communication
  • Critical Thinking
  • Information Literacy
  • Information Technology Competence

2 Online Test

Assessment Title
Quiz 2- Immunisation and vaccine preventable diseases

Task Description

  • The quiz will become available at 9:00am on the Monday of Week 7 and remain open until 9:00am Monday of Week 8.
  • There is no time limit to complete the quiz and you can save your quiz and return to it later (while the quiz is available)
  • You will get your final result from the quiz showing which questions you got right or wrong. This will let you know what
  • areas you need to study/revise.
  • You should choose the most correct answer.


Assessment Due Date

Week 8 Monday (3 May 2021) 11:59 pm AEST


Return Date to Students

Results will be available once the quiz has closed.


Weighting
15%

Assessment Criteria

This quiz will assess the student's knowledge of the principles of vaccination, the immune response and the aetiology of vaccine preventable diseases.


Referencing Style

Submission
Online

Learning Outcomes Assessed
  • Describe risk factors and aetiology for a range of communicable diseases important to public health.
  • Explain the impact of communicable diseases in the context of individual and population health.
  • Identify and analyse primary, secondary and tertiary approaches for the prevention and control of communicable diseases.
  • Explain the methods of measurement, monitoring, prioritisation and surveillance of communicable disease and how they are used to safeguard public health.


Graduate Attributes
  • Communication
  • Critical Thinking
  • Information Literacy
  • Information Technology Competence

3 Online Test

Assessment Title
Quiz 3- Sexually transmitted infections and HIV

Task Description

  • The quizzes will become available at 9:00am on the Monday of Week 9 and remain open until 9:00am on the Monday of Week 11 to allow students time to attend residential school.
  • There is no time limit to complete the quiz and you can save your quiz and return to it later (while the quiz is available)
  • You will get your final result from the quiz showing which questions you got right or wrong. This will let you know what areas you need to study/revise.
  • You should choose the most correct answer.


Assessment Due Date

Week 11 Monday (24 May 2021) 11:59 pm AEST


Return Date to Students

Results will be available once the quiz has closed


Weighting
15%

Assessment Criteria

This quiz will assess the student's knowledge of the aetiology, prevention and control of sexually transmitted infections and HIV.


Referencing Style

Submission
Online

Learning Outcomes Assessed
  • Describe risk factors and aetiology for a range of communicable diseases important to public health.
  • Explain the impact of communicable diseases in the context of individual and population health.
  • Identify and analyse primary, secondary and tertiary approaches for the prevention and control of communicable diseases.
  • Evaluate the social and cultural impact of notifiable diseases.
  • Explain the methods of measurement, monitoring, prioritisation and surveillance of communicable disease and how they are used to safeguard public health.


Graduate Attributes
  • Communication
  • Critical Thinking
  • Information Literacy
  • Information Technology Competence

4 Written Assessment

Assessment Title
Report

Task Description

There are two options for this assessment task. Option 1 is for Environmental Health students and students from other disciplines who have attended residential school for this unit. Option 2 is for Health Promotion students and students from other disciplines who have not attended residential school.

Option 1: Environmental Health majors and other students who have attended residential school

While at residential school, you will be involved in the investigation of a simulated outbreak of a communicable disease.

For this assignment, you will write a report including:

  1. a description of the disease, its aetiology and the mechanism of the outbreak
  2. factors leading to the outbreak
  3. the actions taken to control the spread of the disease
  4. a critical evaluation of these actions
  5. future public health interventions that could prevent the outbreak from reoccurring.

Although you will work as a team while investigating the outbreak, you will need to submit an individual report. Students will be evaluated on their critical evaluation of the outbreak, drawing on the core themes and topics presented throughout the unit. If you use any information provided by your team members, you should reference these appropriately in your report. Report writing will be addressed at residential school and an exemplar will be provided on Moodle.

Word count: 2500- 3000 words

Option 2: Health Promotion majors

For this assignment, you will need to write a report which argues for a Communicable Disease to be given priority as part of a State Health Strategy. Students will need to select a disease (HIV or Viral Hepatitis or a Sexually Transmitted Infection) and a priority population ‘of concern’ from the Kirby Institute’s National update on HIV, viral hepatitis and sexually transmissible infections in Australia 2009–2018 based on trends in diagnosis, prevalence and morbidity. Examples of diseases and priority populations will be provided on Moodle and discussed in the Assessment 4 online Zoom session.

The report will include the following:

1. a background to the disease, including

  • the nature of the problem (description of the disease and a brief aetiology);
  • the extent of the problem (trends in diagnosis, prevalence and morbidity); and
  • the risk factors and protective factors.

2. a description of the population of concern, including

  • a definition of the population group at risk;
  • an explanation of the extent of the problem in the population group (eg. trends in diagnosis, prevalence and morbidity); and
  • an investigation of the factors contributing to trends in population group.

3. a rationale for inclusion in State policy, including

  • the impact of the disease (eg. cost to individuals and community); and
  • the potential for prevention and early intervention in reducing this burden.


Assessment Due Date

Week 12 Friday (4 June 2021) 11:59 pm AEST


Return Date to Students

After confirmation of grades


Weighting
55%

Minimum mark or grade
You must achieve a minimum grade of 50% for this item, in addition to an overall composite grade of 50% or greater, to be eligible to pass this unit.

Assessment Criteria

Option 1: Environmental Health majors and other students who have attended residential school

Relevance (30%)

  • summarises relevant disease information from credible and reputable sources
  • report is relevant to the disease under investigation
  • interventions are appropriate
  • interventions are thoroughly explained
  • effectiveness of the intervention is evaluated
  • public health interventions to prevent future outbreaks are presented

Validity (50%)

  • depth and extent of discussion of the investigation
  • evaluation is thorough and logically presented
  • accuracy of the information used to support statements
  • recommendations for future public health interventions have been based on critical thought, analysis of the
  • evidence and synthesis of new ideas
  • depth and range of research

Organisation (10%)

  • structure and flow of information
  • coherence and clarity of expression (spelling, grammar, syntax)
  • all sources attributed

Presentation (10%)

  • style and formatting of report
  • typographical matters (types, font, headings etc)
  • referencing is consistent and in accordance with Harvard style
  • length

Option 2: Health Promotion majors and other students not attending residential school

Relevance (30%)

  • summarises relevant disease information from credible and reputable sources
  • population group is appropriate and justified
  • impact of disease is thoroughly explained
  • potential for prevention and early intervention in reducing burden has been thoroughly explored

Validity (50%)

  • depth and extent of discussion of the disease, priority population and rationale for inclusion
  • argument for rationale is thorough and logically presented
  • accuracy of the information used to support statements
  • depth and range of research

Organisation (10%)

  • structure and flow of information
  • coherence and clarity of expression (spelling, grammar, syntax)
  • all sources attributed

Presentation (10%)

  • style and formatting of report
  • typographical matters (types, font, headings etc)
  • referencing is consistent and in accordance with Harvard style
  • length



Referencing Style

Submission
Online

Learning Outcomes Assessed
  • Explain the impact of communicable diseases in the context of individual and population health.
  • Identify and analyse primary, secondary and tertiary approaches for the prevention and control of communicable diseases.
  • Evaluate the social and cultural impact of notifiable diseases.


Graduate Attributes
  • Communication
  • Problem Solving
  • Critical Thinking
  • Information Literacy
  • Team Work
  • Information Technology Competence
  • Cross Cultural Competence
  • Ethical practice

Academic Integrity Statement

As a CQUniversity student you are expected to act honestly in all aspects of your academic work.

Any assessable work undertaken or submitted for review or assessment must be your own work. Assessable work is any type of work you do to meet the assessment requirements in the unit, including draft work submitted for review and feedback and final work to be assessed.

When you use the ideas, words or data of others in your assessment, you must thoroughly and clearly acknowledge the source of this information by using the correct referencing style for your unit. Using others’ work without proper acknowledgement may be considered a form of intellectual dishonesty.

Participating honestly, respectfully, responsibly, and fairly in your university study ensures the CQUniversity qualification you earn will be valued as a true indication of your individual academic achievement and will continue to receive the respect and recognition it deserves.

As a student, you are responsible for reading and following CQUniversity’s policies, including the Student Academic Integrity Policy and Procedure. This policy sets out CQUniversity’s expectations of you to act with integrity, examples of academic integrity breaches to avoid, the processes used to address alleged breaches of academic integrity, and potential penalties.

What is a breach of academic integrity?

A breach of academic integrity includes but is not limited to plagiarism, self-plagiarism, collusion, cheating, contract cheating, and academic misconduct. The Student Academic Integrity Policy and Procedure defines what these terms mean and gives examples.

Why is academic integrity important?

A breach of academic integrity may result in one or more penalties, including suspension or even expulsion from the University. It can also have negative implications for student visas and future enrolment at CQUniversity or elsewhere. Students who engage in contract cheating also risk being blackmailed by contract cheating services.

Where can I get assistance?

For academic advice and guidance, the Academic Learning Centre (ALC) can support you in becoming confident in completing assessments with integrity and of high standard.

What can you do to act with integrity?