Q.1
How do bacteria and viruses make you feel ill?
  • They both damage the cells in your body
  • Bacteria irritate the cells of your body and viruses produce toxins
  • They take over the cells in your body
  • The waste materials from bacteria are toxic to the body and viruses damage your cells
Q.2
Which of the following can be used to help protect your body from microorganisms?
  • Vaccination and antibiotics
  • Antibiotics only
  • Vaccination only
  • Nothing
Q.3
In many hospital wards it is necessary for you to wash your hands with a special gel before going in or out. Before the middle of the 19th Century, not even doctors washed their hands. Why not?
  • They didn't know about microorganisms and how they can cause disease
  • They were too lazy
  • Hand cleaning gels for hospitals had not been invented
  • Hospitals could not afford to buy soap for them to use
Q.4
Which of the following is an example of passive immunity?
  • Mucus and cilia in the respiratory system
  • Hydrochloric acid in the stomach
  • Lysozyme (an enzyme) in tears
  • All three of the above
Q.5
Robert Koch discovered how to grow bacteria in a laboratory. How did this help medical science?
  • It prevented laboratory technicians from catching infectious diseases
  • It enabled him to identify some pathogenic microorganisms and linked them to specific diseases
  • It allowed doctors to make their own vaccines for their patients
  • It meant that hospitals could now save money on drugs
Q.6
A group of Y11 students carried out an investigation into antibiotics which required them to grow some bacteria cultures. Which one of the following is something they would have done whilst setting up the cultures?
  • Sterilise the Petri dishes and use sterilised agar gel
  • Sterilise the wire loops used for sampling in a flame
  • Seal the Petri dishes with sellotape
  • Pick up the antibiotic discs using their hands
Q.7
Why are bacteria cultures in a school or college laboratory grown at much lower temperatures (25 C compared to 37 C) than in a professional microbiology lab?
  • It is less dangerous as the bacteria grow more slowly
  • It is cheaper
  • School agar gel melts at temperatures above 25oC
  • Schools and colleges can't leave the heaters on all day and all night
Q.8
Vaccination is used to immunise people against diseases. Pick the statement:
  • When a vaccine is injected into the body, it stimulates the white blood cells to produce antibodies against the pathogen
  • There are no possible side-effects from any vaccination
  • Vaccines can contain the live pathogen that has been specially treated to make it harmless
  • Harmless fragments of the pathogen and toxins produced by pathogens can both be used as vaccines
Q.9
Why are antibiotics no good for treating colds and 'flu?
  • Colds and 'flu are viruses
  • Colds and 'flu are not viruses
  • Colds and 'flu are caused by bacteria that are resistant to antibiotics
  • Antibiotics work too slowly
Q.10
Which of the following statements is not true?
  • Unless it is controlled, HIV attacks the body's immune cells
  • HIV can be spread through sexual contact and by drug users who share needles
  • HIV develops from AIDS
  • The initial effect of HIV is usually a flu-like illness
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