Lecture 5: Population Screening Flashcards
What is population screening?
Evaluation offered to all individuals within a target group, usually defined by age and sex.
What is the goal of population screening?
Looking for signs of or diagnosing a disease BEFORE symptoms develop in order to decrease mortality.
What differentiates a diagnostic eval from a screening eval?
Diagnostic is to confirm the presence or absence of disease when symptoms are PRESENT.
What must a screening test do to be considered effective?
Improve mortality.
What is lead-time bias?
The time period between detection of a disease and its clinical presentation.
AKA
You detect it later than the real onset, so the survival time seems longer.
What is length-time bias?
Overestimation of survival duration due to the relative excess of cases detected that are slowly progressing.
What is misclassification bias?
Systematic error when a participant, value, or attribute is classified into the wrong category, altering the outcomes of the study.
What determines if we should screen for a disease or not?
- Is the condition a pertinent health problem?
- Is the epidemiology of the condition understood?
- Is the test simple, safe, reliable, and valid?
- Is the test acceptable to the population and health providers?
- Do we have a protocol in place for an abnormal screening test?
- Do we have improved outcomes from screening?
- Do we have a financial benefit from screening?
Can insurance companies deny coverage based on positive genetic testing?
- Health: NO
- Life: YES