Introduction to Epidemiology & Public Health Flashcards
What is epidemiology?
Study of the distribution and determinants of diseases in human populations
What is public health?
The science and art of prolonging life, preventing disease and promoting health by the organised efforts of society.
What is the difference between epidemiology and clinical medicine?
Clinical medicine is concerned with people who already have the disease and the study of the prognosis and how it can be treated.
Epidemiology seeks to understand the antecedents of disease and identify its causes, so making possible its prevention.
What is an epidemiological ‘rate’ in the most general sense?
The ratio of number of cases of disease to the size of the catchment population
What is the difference between incidence and prevalence rates?
Incidence rates measure the occurence of new cases of disease, whereas prevalence rates relate to existing cases of disease.
Which one of the following is a true rate, prevelance or incidence?
Incidence, as it specified a period of time over which the new cases of disease occur. In contrast, prevalence is not a true ‘rate’ as it does not.
What are the 5 stages of clinical medicine?
- Presentation
- Investigation
- Diagnosis
- Treatment
- Review
What are the public health equivalents of the 5 stages of clinical medicine?
- Presentation - measuring burden of disease
- Investigation - comparing rates of disease between population
- Diagnosis - drawing conclusions about causes of disease
- Treatment - implementing policies for prevention/treatment
- Review - evaluation of preventive and therapeutic health services
What is another term for ‘population at risk’?
The catchment population
What are mortality rates?
Fatal cases (death) per 1000
What is the difference between morbidity and mortality?
Morbidity is a measure of sickness or disease within a geographic area while Mortality is a measure of deaths within a population or geographic area.
What is the “iceberg of disease” analogy?
That only a portion of those with a condition are known to clinical services, the majority remainder lying ‘below the surface’ aren’t.
What types of diseases does the “iceberg of disease” refer to?
Diabetes, hypertension, CHD
What are the two important public health implications from the disease iceberg?
- Infectious disease - communicable diseases maybe susceptible to minorities in a population eg. rubella in pregnancy
- Any disease - small risk distributed through a wide population, small elevations of risk factors may be associated with only a small risk of complications but much more common so contribue to morbidity
Communicable diseases can be commonly categorised as endemic and epidemic, what do these both mean?
- Endemic - when they persist for long periods within a community
- Epidemic - when the occurrence of disease episodes increases substantially for a limited period of time