Descriptive, cross sectional and ecological studies. Flashcards
What is the ‘Epidemiological transition’?
Replacement of infectious diseases with chronic diseases over time.
Descriptive studies can define patterns in terms of ___, _____ and ___.
Time, person, place.
What can you not do with a case report?
Make any causal inference.
What occurs after a case series?
Investigation into medical history and circumstances to find clues for a potential cause and a potential causal hypothesis.
Once a potential hypothesis has been generated from a case series what must you do?
Analytically test the potential hypothesis.
Case series and reports are often published. What do these publications contain?
Information on how to treat them.
What is the other name for ecological studies?
Correlation studies.
What level do ecological studies work at?
Aggregate level.
Ecological studies can occur geographically and over what sort of interval?
Time interval.
What is ecological fallacy?
When group associations do not lead to individual level associations. (Also known as ecological bias and aggregation bias).
When are ecological studies useful?
When the variable of interest occurs at the population level.
Name three things that can be investigated in an ecological study.
- Food availability.
- Socioeconomic status and health.
- Effect of tax intervention on policy.
When are ecological studies not ideal.
When variability in a population is large.
Name four disadvantages of an ecological study.
- Ecological fallacy.
- Secondary data from different sources may not be comparable.
- Disease occurrence could proceed exposure.
- Collinerality.
What is collinerality?
Some sociodeomographic and environmental variable are more highly populated at the group level rather than the individual level.
Name five advantages of an ecological study.
- Relatively inexpensive.
- No follow up.
- High risk demographics targeted,
- Some environmental factors can be hard to measure at the individual level.
- Creates hypothesis about disease aetiology.