Epidemiology of death and population based palliative care Flashcards
1
Q
Incidence
A
- Number of new cases / total population at risk
- over specified time interval
2
Q
Prevalence
A
- Number of cases / total population at a given time
- proportion of individuals in a population who have the disease at specific instant.
- estimate of probability that an individual will be ill at a point in time
3
Q
Mortality data sources (Global Burden of Disease)
A
- Death registration systems
- Epidemiological assessments (deduction of fatality rates)
- Cause of death models
4
Q
Factors affecting Life Expectancy
A
- social determinants of health
- resources
- low infant mortality
- occupation
- politics /government
- cultural
- lifestyle
5
Q
Leading Causes of Death Globally
A
- Ischemic heart disease
- Stroke
- Lower respiratory infection
- COPD
- Diarrheal disease
- HIV/AIDS
- Lung cancer
- Diabetes
- Road accident
- Prematurity
6
Q
Projections for future leading causes of death globally
A
- LOW income countries
- Stroke
- LRTI
- IHD
- HIV/AIDS
- UPPER MIDDLE income countries
- Stroke
- IHD
- COPD
- Lung cancers
- diabetes
- HIGH income countries
- IHD
- Stroke
- Alzheimer’s
- lung cancer
- LRTIs
- COPD
- Colon cancer
7
Q
Place of death data reporting
A
- high income countries only
- hospital care not an option in many low income settings
- high income 50% hospital death
- people indicate preference for home death
8
Q
Methodological limitations to data collection globally
A
- defining population difficult
- subjectivity of pain and symptom measurement
- accuracy of data
- mulitdimensional symptom experience difficult to compare across cultures
9
Q
Trajectories at end of life
A
- Sudden death
- Organ failure (up and down)
- Terminal illness (relatively high functional level with steep decline)
- Frailty (low functional level with slow decline over time)
10
Q
NNT
A
- Number needed to treat
- # patients that would need to be given treatment for one of them to achieve desired outcome
11
Q
NNH
A
- number needed to harm
- number of people who received intervention would lead to just one person being harmed
- absolute risk of bad outcomes