Measures of Morbidity Flashcards

1
Q

Incidence

A

o ¨Number of new cases of disease that occur in a population at risk over time

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2
Q

Cumulative Incidence

A
  • ¨When a group of people are all observed over some time period
  • ¨Technically not a rate and better talked about as a risk or incidence proportion
  • (# of new cases/pop. at risk)* constant per specified time period
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3
Q

Person-time Incidence Rate

A
  • ¨Used when a group of people are observed over different amounts of time
  • ¨This is a true rate and talks to the speed of developing disease
  • (# of new cases/person-time at risk) * constant
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4
Q

Prevalence

A

o (# of new and old cases/ pop. at risk)

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5
Q

Point Prevalence

A

• ¨The proportion of the population that is affected by the disease at a point in time (aka ‘snapshot’)

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6
Q

Limitations of Incidence and Prevalence

A
o	¨Numerator
        -Is it complete?
        -Is it accurate?
o	¨Denominator
        -How do you define who is at risk?
        -Is it complete?
        -Is it accurate?
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7
Q

Crude

A
  • single number, good for capturing the bigger picture
  • general pop.
  • average rate
  • does NOT account for differences in certain factors
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8
Q

Specific

A
  • ways in which we subset/stratify our population groups (age and sex and etc… specific rates)
  • both numerator and denominator specific for the factor being studied
  • might now know which characteristics you are looking for
  • So MANY specific rates– too congested, if numerators get small—small rate if denominator is huge, imprecise, unstable estimate, less random variation (larger numerator—more stable)
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9
Q

Adjustment

A

• Everything is consolidated into a SINGLE number, statistical tool to distinguish and compensate for difference (remove effect of a particular factor) in groups that will be compared

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10
Q

Attack Rate/Ratio

A

o ¨Used to describe outbreaks
o ¨Tells us the proportion of persons exposed who fall sick
o ¨Usually the time dimension is implied as the duration of the outbreak
o (# of new cases/ # of people exposed)

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11
Q

Mortality Rate

A

o ¨A measure of the incidence of death

o (# of deaths/ [# of persons in population—generally use a midyear estimate)* constant per specified time period

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12
Q

Cause-specific Mortality Rate

A

o ¨A measure of the rate of death from a certain cause
o (# of deaths due to specific cause / [# of persons in the pop. –use mid-year estimate])* constant per specified time period

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13
Q

Case-specific Mortality Rate

A

o ¨Tells us the risk of death among diagnosed cases
o ¨An indicator of the severity of disease
o (# of deaths from disease / # of people with disease) * constant per specified time period

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14
Q

Proportionate Mortality

A

o ¨Measure of the relative importance of a specific cause of death in relation to all deaths
o ¨NOT a risk or rate
o ¨Can be misleading
o (# of deaths due to a specific cause / # of total deaths)
-denominator is NOT people who are at risk
-value is dependent on the number of deaths
o if other cause-specific deaths increase—proportion changes and your cause of death does NOT play into that CHANGE in proportion

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