Measures of Association Flashcards

1
Q

What are the two types of main studies in epidemiology?

A

Cohort and case-control study.

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2
Q

Describe a cohort study.

A

A cohort study is comprised of persons with a common characteristic and typically has an exposed and unexposed cohort. A cohort is defined as any designated group of individuals who are followed or traced over a period of time.

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3
Q

What is the purpose of a cohort study?

A

Purpose of cohort is to measure occurrence of one or more specific diseases during the period of follow-up usually with the aim of comparing disease rates for two or more cohorts.

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4
Q

What is an experiment?

A

Experiment is a study in which incidence rate or risk of disease in two or more cohorts is compared after assigning the exposure to the people who comprise the cohorts.

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5
Q

What is a clinical trial?

A

A clinical trial is an experiment that aims to evaluate incidence rates of disease complications in cohorts after assigning an intervention. Usually, this is done via an RCT. An RCT produces comparability between cohorts with respect to factors that might affect the rate of the disease complications.

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6
Q

What is a field trial?

A

PPTs are not patients. The study is the primary prevention of a disease.

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7
Q

What is a community intervention trial?

A

Exposure group is assigned to groups of people rather than single person.

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8
Q

What is a standard requirement of a population at risk?

A

Everyone must be free of disease being measured at outset.

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9
Q

What is the difference between a closed and an open cohort?

A

Open cohort will always take on new members.

Closed has fixed membership and will get smaller with time.

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10
Q

What is induction time?

A

Time is takes for causal mechanism to be completed.

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11
Q

What is a retrospective cohort study?

A

Identified from recorded information before beginning of study.

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12
Q

What is a special-exposure cohort study?

A

Cohort studies that focus on people who share a particular exposure are called special-exposure cohort studies.

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13
Q

What is a common exposure study?

A

Common exposure/general-population cohorts typically focus on exposure that a substantial proportion of the population have experience

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14
Q

Describe a case-control study.

A

Two groups differing in outcomes are identified and compared on the basis of some supposed causal attribute.

To help determine if exposure associated with an outcome.

Control group is sampled from entire population that gives rise to the cases.

Calculate odds ratio.

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15
Q

Define epidemiology.

A

Study of distribution and determinants (things that cause health outcomes) of health related states of events in specified populations and the application of this study for the control of health outcomes.

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16
Q

What are the three Ds?

A

Disease
Determinants
Distribution

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17
Q

Describe the three Ds.

A

Disease:
All possible results that may stem from exposure to a causal factor or intervention. Any health-related outcome (death, disease, disability, BH).

Determinants:
Any factor that brings about a change in health condition or other defining characteristic.

Distribution:
Refers to how disease of health states are found in a population.

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18
Q

What is descriptive/surveillance data?

A

Monitor how much disease occurs in a population and compare measures across populations.

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19
Q

Describe incidence.

A

New occurrences. Way of monitoring disease.

New cases during observation period/population at risk is CUMULATIVE INCIDENCE aka incidence proportion.

New cases/person-years is INCIDENCE RATE. Range 0 to infinity.

20
Q

Describe prevalence.

A

All existing cases of a disease.

People with disease at a point in time/total # of people in population at that time.

Between 0-1.

Is a proportion. Time must be specified.

21
Q

What is the difference between efficacy and effectiveness?

A

Efficacy is asking whether or not something works.

Effectiveness is the extent to which a treatment works in the real world.

22
Q

Describe nominal data.

A

Neither order nor magnitude are important. Data categorized.

Ex: eye colour

23
Q

Describe ordinal data.

A

Order is important, magnitude is not. Categorized. Intervals may not be equal.

Ex: Pain scale

24
Q

Describe discrete data.

A

Interval data is a type of discrete data. Order and magnitude are important. Intervals are equal. No true 0. Only whole numbers.

25
Q

Describe continuous data.

A

Can take on any value. Both order and magnitude are important.

26
Q

What is a count?

A

Number of event of persons with disease.

27
Q

What is a proportion?

A

Number of people with a disease/number of persons with and without disease.

28
Q

What are odds?

A

Probability/1-probability.

The odds that someone has the disease against odds that someone does not is the ratio.

29
Q

Give an example of going from odds to proportion and back.

A
•	Proportion and odds
o	20/100 = 0.20 is prop
o	Odds = 0.2/1-0.2 = 0.2/0.8=0.25
	1/0.2-1 is 4 so 1:4 odds
o	0.25/1+0.25 =0.20 (odds back to prop)
30
Q

Describe the relationships between odds and probabilities.

A

Probabilities between 0 and 0.5 = odds less than 1.

Probability of 0.5 = odds of 1.0.

Probability increase from 0.5 to 1.0, odds increase from 1.0 to infinity.

31
Q

Describe incidence proportion.

A

AKA cumulative incidence.

New disease/total number at risk. Time is specific. 0-1 range.

32
Q

Describe incidence rate.

A

New cases/total person time.
Time is baked into calculation.
0-infinity range.

Current risk better measured with this.

33
Q

Why measure prevalence?

A

Assess burden of disease.
Assess resource needs.
Estimate infectious population.
Allocate resources.

34
Q

What are the relative measures of association?

A

4 of them:

Prevalence ratio.
Risk ratio (incidence proportion).
Incidence rate ratio.
Odds ratio.

35
Q

Describe prevalence ratio.

A

Compare prevalence in one group to another.

36
Q

Describe risk ratio.

A

Compare cumulative incidence AKA incidence proportion in one group to another.

37
Q

Describe incidence rate ratio?

A

Compare incidence rate in one group to another.

38
Q

Describe odds ratio.

A

Compare odds ratio of exposed to odds ratio of unexposed.

39
Q

What is the difference between a positive association and a negative association?

A

Positive: exposure may cause disease.

Negative: exposure may be preventative.

40
Q

What are absolute measures of assocaition?

A

3 of them:

Prevalence difference
Risk difference
Incidence rate difference

41
Q

What is prevalence difference?

A

Difference in prevalence between exposed and unexposed within a population.

42
Q

What is risk difference.

A

Difference in cumulative incidence AKA incidence proportion between exposed and unexposed within a population.

43
Q

What is incidence rate difference?

A

Difference between incidence rate of exposed versus unexposed within a population.

44
Q

What is an absolute measure?

A

Measures how much an exposure counts for burden of disease between exposed and unexposed people within a population.
How much population level disease is prevented or added in presence of an exposure.

45
Q

What is a relative measure?

A

Measures how much as exposure counts for burden of disease between groups of exposed people (between populations).

Used to compare disease in one group to another.