CHAPTER 04- Epidemiology and Population Health Flashcards
The FNP is charged with being educated on the health of communities. These questions will help you study epidemiology and public health.
Epidemiology is the area of health care that deals with:
- The physiological causes of disease and treatments to cure illness.
- The incidence, distribution, and efforts to control diseases and other factors relating to health.
- The incidence, prevalence, and attack rates of infectious diseases in a population.
- The holistic approach to disease prevention and social determinants of disease.
2. The incidence, distribution, and efforts to control diseases and other factors relating to health.
Epidemiology is the foundation of public health and is a data-driven science within health care.
An example of a population that would be the BEST CHOICE to be studied related to a specific disease prevalence would be:
- A random sample of men and women arriving in an international airport.
- A group of adult dog owners (over 21 years old) who are members of a national dog organization.
- A sample of teenagers aged 15–18 years old attending public high schools in southwestern Connecticut.
- A convenience sample of families who shop at a local mall.
3. A sample of teenagers aged 15–18 years old attending public high schools in southwestern Connecticut.
This choice identifies a specific group of individuals and age-group within a specific geographical area, which will add strength to this study of disease prevalence.
Aims to reduce health inequities among population groups is part of the definition of:
- Tertiary prevention.
- Secondary prevention.
- Epidemiologic case control research.
- Population health.
4. Population health.
A variety of definitions for population health are used. However, in general this refers to health outcomes within a group of individuals or the entire human population.
The three forms of observational research associated most often with epidemiologic research include:
- Randomized controlled trials, phenomenology, and case studies.
- Randomized controlled trials, cohorts, and true experiments.
- Cohort, cross-sectional, and case studies.
- Cohort, nested cases, and quasi-experimental.
3. Cohort, cross-sectional, and case studies.
The three forms of observational research associated most often with epidemiologic research include: cohort, cross-sectional, and case studies. Epidemiological observational studies do not include any form of intervention.
An example of an epidemic would be the:
- Ebola outbreak in West Africa in 2014.
- Spanish influenza of 1918.
- Human Immunodeficiency Virus in this century.
- Smallpox in northeast America in 1633–34.
1. Ebola outbreak in West Africa in 2014.
An epidemic occurs when there are more cases of a disease than usually occurs in a specific population area.
An epidemic becomes a pandemic problem when:
- More than 100 people get ill.
- An infectious disease moves from one state to another state.
- It lasts more than 6 months.
- It becomes a global problem.
4. It becomes a global problem.
Although definitions of pandemic vary, it typically includes a disease/illness that is traveling in wide geographic locations.
Hepatitis B is endemic in which of the following areas or countries?
- Scandinavia
- China and Albania
- Canada
- Southwestern United States
2. China and Albania
Hepatitis B has high prevalence rates defined as greater than 8% HbsAg in a country’s population. This list is available from the Centers for Disease Control and World Health Organization.
Maternal mortality rates are calculated by:
- Counting deaths in women due to pregnancy or childbirth, divided by number of live births in the same time period.
- Counting maternal deaths in the first 5 years of life of a child, divided by the number of live births in the hypothetical cohort of newborns.
- Counting the number of live births in one year, divided by deaths in women due to pregnancy or child birth in a subset of months in that year.
- Counting the number of deaths of women in one year, divided by the number of deaths in women related to pregnancy or childbirth.
1. Counting deaths in women due to pregnancy or childbirth, divided by number of live births in the same time period.
The definition of maternal mortality rates is counting the deaths in women due to pregnancy or childbirth, divided by the number of live births in the same time period.
Morbidity refers to:
- The death rates in a population from a specific disease.
- Either the incidence rate, or the prevalence of a disease or medical condition.
- The absolute number of deaths from a disease in a specific population.
- Either the attack rates or deaths from a disease in a specific population.
2. Either the incidence rate, or the prevalence of a disease or medical condition.
Morbidity refers to the incidence or prevalence of illness/disease in a population.
(Number of New Cases) / (Person-Time at Risk) is a calculation formula for:
- Prevalence rates.
- Incidence rates.
- Mortality rates.
- Morbidity rates.
2. Incidence rates.
Incidence rates are a proportion of individuals who develop a disease/illness/condition during a specific time period.
Globally, approximately 239,000 women had ovarian cancer in 2012. This statement reflects:
- A prevalence.
- An incidence.
- A disparity.
- Mortality.
1. A prevalence.
Prevalence rates describe a proportion of individuals in a population at one point in time, or within a specific time frame, who have a particular disease/illness/condition.
Choose the correct term for the following statement. The ________ of developing invasive breast cancer in the next 10 years is 2.31%, or 1 in 43.
- Incidence
- Prevalence
- Probability
- Rate
3. Probability
The incidence proportion, risk, or probability of developing a disease within a specific time period is a form of morbidity frequency statistics. The absolute risk of developing a disease or illness can be expressed as a percentage.
A perfect test is one for which the result is always positive if you have the disease and always negative if you don’t have the disease. This statement refers to:
- Health promotion.
- Metric testing.
- Health screenings.
- Risk stratification.
3. Health screenings.
A health screening is meant to detect individuals who are at high risk of, or have, a disease/illness by history, physical examination, or other testing procedures.
The time from the moment of exposure to an infectious agent until signs and symptoms of the disease appear is the definition for which of the following?
- Attack rate period
- Incubation period
- The natural history of a disease
- The pre-diagnostic span
2. Incubation period
By definition, the time from the moment of exposure to an infectious agent until signs and symptoms of the disease appear is the incubation period.
An example of a good case-control study would be:
- A group of people who became ill with gastrointestinal symptoms after eating strawberries compared to a group of people who became ill with gastrointestinal symptoms who did not eat strawberries.
- A subset of teens who get screened for HPV and are found to be infected with HPV compared to teens who do not get screened for HPV.
- A population of adults with diabetes mellitus type II compared to a population of adults without diabetes mellitus type II.
- Children who have asthma who were breast fed as infants versus children with asthma who have pet allergies.
1. A group of people who became ill with gastrointestinal symptoms after eating strawberries compared to a group of people who became ill with gastrointestinal symptoms who did not eat strawberries.
A case-control study is an observational study that determines how much exposure to a risk factor of interest has occurred in patients who have a disease or illness (cases) compared to those who do not (controls).