Chapter 6: Study Designs: Ecologic, Cross Sectional, Case Control Flashcards
Ecologic comparison studies?
sometimes called cross sectional ecologic studies. an assessment of the correlation between exposure rates and disease rates among different groups or pop. over the same time period
Ecologic trend?
also called time series. examination of correlation of changes in exposure w/ changes in disease over time w/in the same community, country, etc.
Ecologic fallacy?
an erroneous inference that may occur b/c an association observed between variables on an aggregate level does not necessarily represent or reflect what actually exists
Cross-sectional study?
also called a prevalence study. exposure and disease measures are obtained at the level of the individual.
-a type of observational study that analyzes data from a pop. or a representative subset, at a point in time
Ex: studying development psych. taking people of different ages and investing their behaviors all at once
Ex: prevalence of tobacco consumption (pg. 666)
What are the types of cross sectional studies?
- Probability samples
- Non probability samples
What are types of probability samples?
every element has in the pop. has a nonzero probability of being included in the sample
- Simple random sample
- Systemic sample
- Stratified sample
What are types of non probability samples?
based on a sampling plan w/o that feature
- Quota sample
- Judgmental sample
Simple random samples?
a type of sample where each person in the pop. has an equal probability of being selected. Requires all potential subjects to be counted before sampling
Systematic sample?
the procedure of selecting according to some systematic rule. like all people’s name begin w/ the same letter or they’re born on the same day, etc.
Sampling unit?
that element or set of elements considered for selection in some stage of sampling. In epidemiologic research, it’s usually a specific person picked
Stratified sampling approach?
the pop. is divided into mutually exclusive and exhaustive strata; sampling is performed in each stratum or distinct subgroup
Case control study?
a type of analytic study of people w/ a disease of interest and those w/o the disease as a comparison group.
What is matching?
the process of making cases and controls equivalent w/ respect to factors other than the exposure or factor that is being investigated
Individual matching?
the use of matched pairs
Ex: to match each case w/ 1 or more controls who are the same age/gender
Frequency matching?
group matching. equal distributions of demographic variables like age/gender are maintained among the cases and controls
What is overmatching?
the case and controls are too closely matched or matched on too many variables. this can obscure casual associations between exposures and disease outcomes and should be avoided
Odds ratio?
the ratio of 2 odds. a statistic that quantifies the strength of the association between 2 events A and B
-(A/C) / (B/D) or (A/D) /(B/C)
- yes yes/no no / yes no no yes
-To interpret, subtract 1 from the OR and multiply by 100
-Ex: (139953)/(55058)=4.15;
Interpret?: 4.15-1*100=315%
concordant pairs?
both members of the pair have either been exposed or or not exposed to the study
discordant pairs?
a situation which 1 member of a pair has been exposed and the other was not
Ex: Figure 6-21 (pg. 711)
What is in an experimental research/study design?
used to test the effect of new treatments, tools, and programs to see if they prevent or cure disease
- manipulate study factors
- randomizes study subjects
- Ex: field trials, randomized control trials (RCTs), and community interventions
What is a quasi experimental research?
used to asses real world effectiveness
-manipulates study factor w/o randomization of study subjects
What is observational research?
used to watch the natural exposure-disease relationship
- no manipulation of study factors nor randomization of study subjects
- Ex: case controls, ecologic, case report, cohort study, etc.
What are ecological studies?
meant to understand the relationship between outcome and exposure at a pop. level
In ______ studies, the investigator introduces or withholds an exposure in order to determine its effects and randomizes participants. In _____ studies, subjects are studied under natural circumstances; participants are not assigned to exposure.
Experimental, observational
Select all the factors which help epidemiologists to determine the most appropriate study design for evaluation a particular association.
- The hypothesis being tested
- The state of knowledge on the topic
- Ethics and feasibility
2x2 table?
Used to find odds ratio, relative risk, etc.
- Disease always on top and exposure is on the side
- look at sample questions