Causation Flashcards
What are some of the environmental factors that effect the epidemiolgical triad?
Proximity to other holdings
Geographic
Physical
Husbandry
Contact network
What are some examples of agent factors?
- Dose
- Toxicity
- Duration of exposure
- Route of exposure
What is the sufficient cause model?
Disesaes have multiple sufficient causes
each cause has multiple components
removal of any one component case from a sufficient cause will prevent disease
there is shared components between the sufficient causes
When does disease ‘occur’?
It occurs when, within a defined environment, a susceptible host encounters an agent of disease
What are some examples of ‘agent factors’ of infectious disease?
- Virulence
- Pathogenicity
- Infectious dose
- Transmission rate
- life cycle
- route of infection
According to the sufficient cause model what would removal of one component do?
Prevent disease from occuring
What is the Bradford Hills Criteria for causation?
- Strength of association
- Consistency
- Specificity
- Temporality
- Biological gradient
- Plausibility
- Coherence
- Experiment
- Analogy
What is a neccesary cause in terms of rothmans model?
a factor or condition that must be present in order for the disease to occur
What is a component cause in terms of rothmans model?
A component cause is a cause that factors or contributes to the disease but is not sufficient on its own to cause the disease
What is the Bradford-Hill Criteria for plausability?
- The proposed causal mechanism should be biologically plausible
- The causal mechanism must not contradict what is known about the natural history and biology of the disease
- Must be prepared to reinterpret existing understanding of the disease
- cause/effect interpretations of an association should fit with the known facts and observations
What are kochs postulates to be considered a cause for a disease?
- The microorganism must be found in abundance in all organisms
suffering from the disease, but should not be found in healthy
organisms. - The microorganism must be isolated from a diseased organism and
grown in pure culture - The cultured microorganism should cause disease when introduced
into a healthy organism. - The microorganism must be reisolated from the inoculated, diseased
experimental host and identified as being identical to the original
specific causative agent.
What are some agent factors that effect infectious diseases?
- Virulence (severity of the disease)
- Pathogenicity (the ability of the agent to cause disease in a particular host)
- Transmission rate (the average number of new cases attributable to one case during the infectious period
- Life cycle, e.g vectors etc.
- Route of infection
What happens if you remove any of the component causes from the sufficient cause?
It prevents disease