Jove
Visualize
Contact Us
JoVE
x logofacebook logolinkedin logoyoutube logo
ABOUT JoVE
OverviewLeadershipBlogJoVE Help Center
AUTHORS
Publishing ProcessEditorial BoardScope & PoliciesPeer ReviewFAQSubmit
LIBRARIANS
TestimonialsSubscriptionsAccessResourcesLibrary Advisory BoardFAQ
RESEARCH
JoVE JournalMethods CollectionsJoVE Encyclopedia of ExperimentsArchive
EDUCATION
JoVE CoreJoVE BusinessJoVE Science EducationJoVE Lab ManualFaculty Resource CenterFaculty Site
Terms & Conditions of Use
Privacy Policy
Policies

Related Concept Videos

Transmission-based Precautions I: Contact, Enteric, and Droplets01:17

Transmission-based Precautions I: Contact, Enteric, and Droplets

Transmission-based precautions are for patients known to be infected or suspected to be infected or colonized with organisms that pose a significant risk to others. Some transmission-based precautions include contact, enteric, and droplet.
Contact Precautions:
Contact precautions are the measures taken to prevent the transmission of infectious agents, especially epidemiologically important microorganisms such as MRSA or influenza, primarily transmitted through direct or indirect contact with an...
Techniques of therapeutic communication I: Active Listening, Sharing Observations, Validation, and Using Touch01:15

Techniques of therapeutic communication I: Active Listening, Sharing Observations, Validation, and Using Touch

The history of therapeutic communication can be traced back to Florence Nightingale, who emphasized the importance of developing trusting relationships with patients. She taught that the presence of nurses with patients results in therapeutic healing.
Therapeutic communication is not the same as social interaction. Social interaction has no goal or purpose and consists of casual information sharing, whereas therapeutic communication has a plan or purpose for the conversation. Therapeutic...
Transmission-based Precautions II: Airborne and Protective Environment01:25

Transmission-based Precautions II: Airborne and Protective Environment

Transmission-based precautions are for patients infected or suspected to be infected (or colonized) with organisms posing a significant risk to others. The transmission precautions include airborne and protective environment precautions.
Airborne precautions:
Use airborne precautions when treating patients known or suspected to have diseases that spread through the air—for example, tuberculosis or measles. These organisms are present in smaller droplets expelled by an infected person and...
Standard Precaution01:26

Standard Precaution

Standard precautions are the minimum infection control safeguards used while caring for all patients, irrespective of their disease condition. They help prevent the spread of common infectious microorganisms to healthcare workers, patients, and visitors in all healthcare settings.
Hand hygiene is the most crucial means to prevent the transmission of disease. Employers are legally required to provide their workers with personal protective equipment (PPE) to minimize exposure or contact with...
Contact-dependent Signaling01:19

Contact-dependent Signaling

Contact-dependent signaling, as the name suggests, requires that communicating cells be in direct contact with each other. This is achieved either through receptor-ligand interactions or by specialized cytoplasmic channels that allow the flow of small molecules between cells. In animal cells, channels called gap junctions facilitate contact-dependent signaling in certain tissues, whereas, plasmodesmata perform a similar function in plants.
Gap Junctions
In animal cells, gap junctions are formed...
Transmission of Pathogens01:24

Transmission of Pathogens

Pathogens spread from their reservoirs to susceptible hosts through three main routes: contact transmission, vehicle transmission, and vector transmission. Each route involves distinct mechanisms of transfer.Contact TransmissionThis category includes direct contact, indirect contact, and droplet transmission:Direct contact involves immediate physical interaction between individuals—such as a handshake—which can spread pathogens like Streptococcus pyogenes, the bacterium responsible for...

You might also read

Related Articles

Articles linked to this work by shared authors, journal, and citation graph.

Sort by
Same author

Supercapacitors empower sustainable energy storage.

Nanotechnology·2016
Same author

Fostering strategies in materials design.

Nanotechnology·2016
Same author

ALD--tooling up nanotechnology step by step.

Nanotechnology·2016
Same author

DNA sequencing: nanotechnology unravels the code for life.

Nanotechnology·2015
Same author

Nano-cartography: knowing where to look.

Nanotechnology·2015
Same author

Nanophotonics and plasmonics: a great look for the International Year of Light.

Nanotechnology·2015
Same journal

Quantitative Mechanism Separation of Single-Event Transients in Nanosheet Transistors via TCAD Simulation.

Nanotechnology·2026
Same journal

Antibacterial, mechanical and curing properties of PMMA bone cement loaded with copper nanoparticles.

Nanotechnology·2026
Same journal

Deep learning-enabled self-powered bimodal flexible sensor for intelligent access control.

Nanotechnology·2026
Same journal

Thickness-Dependent Decoupling Charge Transport and NH 3 Sensing in Multilayer MoS 2 Transistors.

Nanotechnology·2026
Same journal

Symmetry-Based Tight-Binding Hamiltonian for Monolayer 1T'-MoS 2 : Spin Textures and Spin-Resolved Transport in Nanoribbons.

Nanotechnology·2026
Same journal

Compact Modeling of Pd-MoS2 Self-rectifying RRAM based on modulated Schottky barrier equation.

Nanotechnology·2026
See all related articles

Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jun 12, 2026

Contact-Free Co-Culture Model for the Study of Innate Immune Cell Activation During Respiratory Virus Infection
07:36

Contact-Free Co-Culture Model for the Study of Innate Immune Cell Activation During Respiratory Virus Infection

Published on: February 28, 2021

Close contact

Anna Demming

    Nanotechnology
    |June 23, 2010
    PubMed
    Summary

    No abstract available in PubMed .

    More Related Videos

    Contact Hypersensitivity as a Murine Model of Allergic Contact Dermatitis
    08:25

    Contact Hypersensitivity as a Murine Model of Allergic Contact Dermatitis

    Published on: September 26, 2022

    Estimation of Contact Regions Between Hands and Objects During Human Multi-Digit Grasping
    09:41

    Estimation of Contact Regions Between Hands and Objects During Human Multi-Digit Grasping

    Published on: April 21, 2023

    Related Experiment Videos

    Last Updated: Jun 12, 2026

    Contact-Free Co-Culture Model for the Study of Innate Immune Cell Activation During Respiratory Virus Infection
    07:36

    Contact-Free Co-Culture Model for the Study of Innate Immune Cell Activation During Respiratory Virus Infection

    Published on: February 28, 2021

    Contact Hypersensitivity as a Murine Model of Allergic Contact Dermatitis
    08:25

    Contact Hypersensitivity as a Murine Model of Allergic Contact Dermatitis

    Published on: September 26, 2022

    Estimation of Contact Regions Between Hands and Objects During Human Multi-Digit Grasping
    09:41

    Estimation of Contact Regions Between Hands and Objects During Human Multi-Digit Grasping

    Published on: April 21, 2023