Association, Causal Inference & Causality Flashcards

1
Q

Cause Definition

A

Precursor event, condition or characteristics required for the occurrence of the disease or outcome

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2
Q

3 Types of Associations

A
  1. Artifactual (False) Associations
  2. Non-causal Associations
  3. Causal Associations
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3
Q

Artifactual Associations

A

Can arise from Bias and/or Confounding

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4
Q

Non-causal Associations

A

Can occur in 2 different ways

  • Disease may cause the exposure
  • The disease and the exposure are both associated with a third factor (confounding)
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5
Q

Causal Associations

A

The exposure causes the outcome

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6
Q

Types of Causal Relationships

A
  • Sufficient Cause
  • Necessary Cause
  • Component Cause (Risk Factors)
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7
Q

Sufficient Cause

A
  • Condition or event will inevitably produce disease
  • A cause that if it is present, the disease will always occur.

E.g. Some genetic abnormalities

  • Can still have multiple, required components that collectively act to induce disease
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8
Q

Necessary Cause

A

A cause that precedes a disease.

The cause has to occur in order for the disease to happen.

However you can be exposed to the cause without getting the disease.

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9
Q

Component Cause (Risk Factor)

A

Something that, if present, increases the likelihood of a particular disease.

Can be multiple factors building on top of one another.

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10
Q

Synergism

A

Two or more components that have to be present at the same time for the disease to occur.

The effect of both together is greater than the sum of the individuals

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11
Q

Parallelism

A

2 or more factors that are not present at the same time. Once one or the other is there, the effect would be greater.

Either/Or

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12
Q

Multiple Causation

A

Multiple component-causes working together to collectively become sufficient causes.

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13
Q

Hill’s Criteria (Guidelines)

A
  • Strength
  • Consistency
  • Temporality
  • Biologic Gradient
  • Plausibility
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14
Q

Causal Inference Process

A
  • An interpretive, application process

- The higher the number of criteria met, when evaluating an association, the more likely it may be causal.

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15
Q

Strength

A
  • Refers to the size of the measure of association

- The greater the association, the more likely it might be a cause.

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16
Q

Consistency (Reproducibility)

A

Repeated observations of an association in different populations under different circumstances in different studies.

NOT JUST ONCE.

Can still obscure the truth

17
Q

Temporality

A

Reflects that the cause precede the effect/outcome in time.

Looks at the time between exposure and outcome

18
Q

Biologic Gradient

A

Presence of a gradient of risk associated with the degree of exposure

19
Q

Plausibility

A

Presence of a biological feasibility to the association, which can be understood and explained