cross-sectional studies Flashcards

1
Q

cross-sectional

A

observational studies that capture health/disease and exposure statuses at the same time

  • aka: prevalence study
  • called cross-sectional because information gathered represents what is occurring at a point in time or time-frame a-cross a large population, acquired without regard to exposure or disease/outcome status
  • a snap-shot in time of all elements
  • entire population or a subset is selected for study
  • focuses simultaneously on disease and population characteristics, including exposures, health status, health-care utilization, or etc.
  • -> seeks associations (not causation)
  • -> generates and tests hypotheses
  • -> by repetition in different time periods, can be used to measure change/trends (not in same patients)
  • many are large-scale national surveys or databases capturing different aspects of the ‘population’ (including samples representing the US population)
  • captures all information collectively at once (exposures and outcomes)
  • useful for estimating elements of ‘prevalence’
  • other observational format (cohort or case-control) can be born out of cross-sectional studies)
  • have multiple stage probability of selection; e.g. randomly select large metro areas –> randomly select zip codes in that area –> randomly select doctor’s office, etc.
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2
Q

2 cross-sectional approaches

A
  1. collect data on each member of the population

2. take a sample of the population and draw inferences to the remainder (generalizable)

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3
Q

2 common approaches to collection of study data/information

A
  1. questionnaires/surveys (new or existing) (directly from patients or from records)
  2. physical assessments
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4
Q

NCHS

A

National Center for Health Statistics; a division of the CDC

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5
Q

strengths of cross-sectional

A
  • quick and easier for the researcher when using data already collected (already collected and deidentified- exempt IRB approval)
  • less expensive than any form of prospective study
  • can be analyzed like a case-control or cohort study (regarding group allocation)
  • useful for estimating prevalence rates
  • useful for answering research questions about a myriad of exposures and diseases using same data
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6
Q

weaknesses of of cross-sectional studies

A
  • prevalent cases may represent survivors (representing those that have data in the system)
  • difficult to study diseases of low frequency
  • unable to generate incidence rates
  • problems in determining temporal relationship of presumed cause and effect (because exposure and disease histories are taken at same time)
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7
Q

NHANES

A

National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey

  • assesses the health and nutritional status of adults and children (combines interviews and physical exams- medical, dental, etc)
  • survey sample is selected to represent the US population of all ages (oversampling persons greater than 60 years, african americans and hispanics
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8
Q

NHIS

A

National Health Interview Survey

  • source of information on health of civilian, non-institutionalized population
  • data collected through personal household interview
  • consists of a set of core questions that remain largely unchanged and a set of supplements used to respond to public health data needs as they arise
  • can add new questions every year to address new changes in society
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9
Q

NAMCS

A

National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey

  • national survey designed to meet the need for objective, reliable information about the provision and use of ambulatory medical care services in the US
  • based on a sample of visits to non-federal, non-institutional (office-based) physicians primarily engaged in direct patient care
  • physician offie, urgent care, and hospital ERs as long as patients don’t stay
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10
Q

NHCS

A

National Hospital Care Survey

  • national survey designed to describe national patterns of healthcare delivery in non-federal (non VA) hospital-based settings
  • -> discharges from inpatient departments and institutions, and visits to EDs, outpatient departments and ambulatory surgery centers

-integrates 3 previous cross-sectional surveys: National Hospital Discharge Survey (NHDS), National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMC), and Drug-Abuse Warning Network (DAWN)

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11
Q

BRFSS

A

Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System

  • state-based system of telephone health surveys that collects information on health risk behaviors, preventative health practices, and health care access primarily related to chronic disease and injury
  • monthly data collection
  • youth BRFSS conducted by questionnaires in schools
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