Paper IPaper I · General Science
Diseases and Public Health
Communicable versus non-communicable diseases, pathogens (bacteria, viruses, protozoa, fungi, worms) and disease-to-organism matching, modes of transmission and vectors, epidemic-endemic-pandemic, immunity and vaccines, antibiotics and antimicrobial resistance, India's public-health programmes (UIP, NHM, eradication of smallpox and polio), and the security and human-rights angle for CAPF Paper I
CAPF wiki•9 min read•18 sections
At a glance
PaperPaper ISubjectGeneral ScienceSyllabusGeneral Science: general awareness, scientific temper, comprehension and appreciation of scientific phenomena of everyday observation, including new areas such as Information Technology, Biotechnology, and Environmental ScienceImportanceHigh
DiseasesPublic HealthCommunicable DiseasesNon Communicable DiseasesPathogensVectorsImmunityVaccines
Disease facts are among the most reliably tested general-science items: the disease-to-causative-organism match, the mode of transmission and the vector, the difference between communicable and non-communicable diseases, and the basics of immunity, vaccines and antibiotics. The CAPF angle adds public health as state capacity, India's eradication successes (smallpox, polio), the national immunisation and health programmes, and the security dimension of epidemics and biosecurity. This note deepens nutrition diseases and health. The standard references are NCERT Class VIII to X science, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare and WHO material, and PIB for programmes; treat outbreak and coverage data as currency-sensitive.
- Communicable (infectious) diseases are caused by pathogens and can spread from person to person or from a source, for example tuberculosis, malaria, COVID-19.
- Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are not spread by pathogens; they arise from lifestyle, genetics or environment, for example diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, cancer. NCDs are now the leading cause of death in India.
- Deficiency diseases (scurvy, rickets, beriberi, goitre) come from missing nutrients; see nutrition diseases and health.
- Hereditary (genetic) diseases (haemophilia, sickle-cell anaemia, thalassaemia, colour blindness) are inherited; see biotechnology and genetics.
Pathogens are disease-causing microbes: bacteria, viruses, protozoa, fungi, and parasitic worms (helminths).
| Disease |
Causative organism |
Type |
| Tuberculosis (TB) |
Mycobacterium tuberculosis |
Bacterium |
| Cholera |
Vibrio cholerae |
Bacterium |
| Typhoid |
Salmonella typhi |
Bacterium |
| Tetanus |
Clostridium tetani |
Bacterium |
| Leprosy (Hansen's disease) |
Mycobacterium leprae |
Bacterium |
| Plague |
Yersinia pestis |
Bacterium |
| Diphtheria, whooping cough |
Bacteria |
Bacterium |
| Malaria |
Plasmodium |
Protozoan (vector: female Anopheles mosquito) |
| Kala-azar (leishmaniasis) |
Leishmania |
Protozoan (vector: sandfly) |
| Amoebic dysentery |
Entamoeba histolytica |
Protozoan |
| COVID-19 |
SARS-CoV-2 |
Virus |
| Influenza, common cold |
Viruses |
Virus |
| Dengue, chikungunya, Zika |
Viruses (vector: Aedes mosquito) |
Virus |
| AIDS |
HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus) |
Virus |
| Hepatitis (A, B, C, E) |
Hepatitis viruses |
Virus |
| Polio (poliomyelitis) |
Poliovirus |
Virus |
| Rabies |
Rabies virus (animal bite) |
Virus |
| Measles, mumps, chickenpox |
Viruses |
Virus |
| Ringworm, athlete's foot |
Fungi |
Fungus |
| Ascariasis, filariasis |
Roundworms (filariasis vector: Culex mosquito) |
Helminth |
- AIDS is caused by a virus (HIV), not a bacterium; malaria and kala-azar are protozoan, not viral; these are common trap questions.
| Route |
Examples |
| Airborne / droplet |
TB, influenza, COVID-19, measles |
| Waterborne / food (faecal-oral) |
Cholera, typhoid, hepatitis A and E, amoebiasis |
| Vector-borne |
Malaria (Anopheles), dengue and chikungunya (Aedes), filariasis (Culex), kala-azar (sandfly), plague (rat flea) |
| Contact / sexual / blood |
HIV, hepatitis B and C, syphilis |
| Animal bite |
Rabies |
- A vector is an organism (often an insect) that carries a pathogen from one host to another.
- Mosquito match: Anopheles carries malaria; Aedes carries dengue, chikungunya and Zika; Culex carries filariasis.
- Endemic: constantly present in a region (malaria in some areas).
- Epidemic: a sudden rise above the normal level in a community.
- Pandemic: an epidemic spread across countries or continents (COVID-19).
- Outbreak: a localised sudden rise in cases.
- Immunity is the body's defence against pathogens.
- Innate (non-specific) immunity is present from birth (skin, stomach acid, white blood cells).
- Acquired (specific) immunity develops after exposure and produces antibodies.
- Active immunity is built by the body (after infection or vaccination) and is long-lasting; passive immunity is borrowed (antibodies from the mother or an injection) and is short-lived.
- A vaccine introduces a weakened, killed or partial pathogen (or its genetic instructions) to train the immune system without causing the disease. Edward Jenner developed the first vaccine (against smallpox).
- Herd immunity: when enough of a population is immune, the pathogen cannot spread easily, protecting even the non-immune.
- Antibiotics (such as penicillin, discovered by Alexander Fleming, 1928) kill or stop bacteria. They do not work against viruses, so they are useless for colds, flu or COVID-19.
- Antiviral and antifungal drugs target viruses and fungi respectively.
- Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) arises when microbes evolve to survive the drugs, driven by overuse and misuse of antibiotics (including in livestock). AMR is a major global public-health threat; finishing prescribed courses and avoiding unnecessary antibiotics slow it.
| Item |
Note |
| Smallpox |
Eradicated worldwide; India free since the mid-1970s; the only disease eradicated globally |
| Polio |
India declared polio-free in 2014 (no wild case since 2011); the Pulse Polio programme used oral polio vaccine |
| Universal Immunisation Programme (UIP) |
Free vaccines against a set of childhood diseases (TB, polio, diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus, measles, hepatitis B and more) |
| National Health Mission (NHM) |
Umbrella programme for rural and urban health |
| Disease-specific programmes |
TB elimination, the National Vector Borne Disease Control Programme, the National AIDS Control Programme |
| Ayushman Bharat |
Health-insurance cover and health-and-wellness centres (see schemes) |
| ASHA workers |
Accredited Social Health Activists, the community health link |
| Item |
Fact |
| TB causative organism |
Mycobacterium tuberculosis (bacterium) |
| Malaria cause / vector |
Plasmodium (protozoan) / female Anopheles mosquito |
| Dengue vector |
Aedes mosquito |
| AIDS cause |
HIV (a virus) |
| Antibiotics work against |
Bacteria only (not viruses) |
| First vaccine / by whom |
Smallpox / Edward Jenner |
| Penicillin discoverer |
Alexander Fleming (1928) |
| Only globally eradicated disease |
Smallpox |
| India declared polio-free |
2014 |
| AMR driver |
Overuse and misuse of antibiotics |
| Pandemic |
A disease spread across countries or continents |
- Public health as state capacity: immunisation reach, disease surveillance and emergency response are tests of governance; the COVID-19 pandemic showed how an epidemic can strain the health system, economy and public order.
- Biosecurity and the Biological Weapons Convention: deliberate misuse of pathogens is a security threat; CAPF and the NDRF train for biological and CBRN incidents (see strategic and defence technology).
- Epidemic law and rights: outbreak responses use the Epidemic Diseases Act, 1897 and the Disaster Management Act, 2005, and during emergencies the balance between public-health restrictions (quarantine, movement curbs) and individual liberty under Article 21 is a recognised human-rights question.
- Right to health: read into the right to life under Article 21 by the Supreme Court; access to healthcare for vulnerable and border populations is part of inclusive governance.
All items below are authored practice, not verbatim PYQs.
-
Malaria is caused by:
a) a bacterium b) a virus c) a protozoan (Plasmodium) d) a fungus
Answer: c. Malaria is caused by the protozoan Plasmodium, spread by the female Anopheles mosquito.
-
Antibiotics are effective against:
a) viruses b) bacteria c) all microbes d) fungi only
Answer: b. Antibiotics work against bacteria, not viruses.
-
The dengue virus is transmitted by the:
a) Anopheles mosquito b) Aedes mosquito c) Culex mosquito d) sandfly
Answer: b. Aedes carries dengue, chikungunya and Zika.
-
The first vaccine, against smallpox, was developed by:
a) Louis Pasteur b) Edward Jenner c) Alexander Fleming d) Robert Koch
Answer: b. Edward Jenner developed the smallpox vaccine.
-
AIDS is caused by:
a) a bacterium b) a protozoan c) a virus (HIV) d) a fungus
Answer: c. AIDS is caused by the Human Immunodeficiency Virus.
-
India was declared polio-free in:
a) 2005 b) 2011 c) 2014 d) 2020
Answer: c. India was declared polio-free in 2014, with no wild case since 2011.
- Bacterial versus viral disease: TB, cholera and typhoid are bacterial; AIDS, dengue, COVID-19 and polio are viral. Antibiotics work only on bacteria.
- Malaria is protozoan, not viral: a frequent trap; kala-azar and amoebic dysentery are also protozoan.
- Anopheles versus Aedes versus Culex: Anopheles carries malaria; Aedes carries dengue; Culex carries filariasis.
- Active versus passive immunity: active is built by the body and lasts; passive is borrowed (mother's milk, an injection) and is short-lived.
- Epidemic versus pandemic: an epidemic is a sudden community rise; a pandemic spans countries or continents.
- Communicable versus non-communicable: communicable spreads via pathogens; NCDs (diabetes, heart disease) do not.
- "Anopheles for malaria, Aedes for dengue, Culex for filaria" (A-A-C, M-D-F).
- "Antibiotics fight Bacteria, not Bugs that are viruses."
- "Jenner the first jab, Fleming the first antibiotic."
- "Active lasts, Passive passes" (immunity duration).
- TB, cholera, typhoid are bacterial; AIDS, dengue, polio, COVID-19 are viral; malaria and kala-azar are protozoan.
- Anopheles carries malaria, Aedes dengue, Culex filariasis.
- Antibiotics work only on bacteria, not viruses; AMR comes from overuse.
- Edward Jenner made the first vaccine (smallpox); Fleming discovered penicillin (1928).
- Smallpox is the only globally eradicated disease; India was declared polio-free in 2014.
- Outbreak law uses the Epidemic Diseases Act, 1897, and balances public health with Article 21 rights.
- Communicable diseases are caused by pathogens and can spread; non-communicable diseases are not.
- Tuberculosis, cholera, typhoid, tetanus and leprosy are bacterial diseases.
- AIDS, dengue, polio, COVID-19, influenza and rabies are viral diseases.
- Malaria, kala-azar and amoebic dysentery are protozoan diseases.
- The female Anopheles mosquito spreads malaria.
- The Aedes mosquito spreads dengue, chikungunya and Zika.
- The Culex mosquito spreads filariasis.
- A vector carries a pathogen from one host to another.
- Antibiotics kill or stop bacteria but do not work against viruses.
- Penicillin was discovered by Alexander Fleming in 1928.
- Edward Jenner developed the first vaccine, against smallpox.
- Active immunity is built by the body and lasts; passive immunity is borrowed and short-lived.
- Herd immunity protects a population when enough members are immune.
- Antimicrobial resistance comes from overuse and misuse of antibiotics.
- Smallpox is the only disease eradicated worldwide.
- India was declared polio-free in 2014.
- The Universal Immunisation Programme gives free childhood vaccines.
- A pandemic is a disease spread across countries or continents.
- Pathogen: a disease-causing microbe (bacterium, virus, protozoan, fungus, worm).
- Communicable disease: an infectious disease that can spread.
- Non-communicable disease: a disease not spread by pathogens (lifestyle, genetic).
- Vector: an organism that carries a pathogen between hosts.
- Immunity: the body's defence against pathogens.
- Antibody: a protein the immune system makes to fight a specific pathogen.
- Vaccine: a preparation that trains immunity without causing the disease.
- Active immunity: long-lasting immunity built by the body.
- Passive immunity: short-lived borrowed immunity (antibodies received).
- Herd immunity: population-level protection when enough are immune.
- Antibiotic: a drug that kills or stops bacteria (not viruses).
- Antimicrobial resistance (AMR): microbes evolving to survive drugs.
- Epidemic / pandemic: a community-level / multi-country disease surge.
- Universal Immunisation Programme (UIP): India's free childhood vaccination programme.
Disease outbreaks (dengue and chikungunya seasons, new viral threats), vaccine rollouts and coverage, the push to eliminate tuberculosis, and antimicrobial-resistance action plans are recurring current-affairs hooks. Treat case numbers, vaccination coverage and elimination-target years as currency-sensitive and verify the latest from the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare and the WHO.