Module 2: Association & Causation in Epidemiology Flashcards
Temporal relationship
Exposure to risk factor must have occurred before the disease has developed; considered as evidence of a causal relationship
Strength of association
The stronger/larger the association, as measured by the relative risk or odds ratio, the more likely it is that the relationship is causal
Dose-response relationship
As the amount or dose of the exposure/risk factor increases, the risk of the disease increases; considered as evidence of a causal relationship
Reversibility
If a factor causes a disease, the risk of the disease can be expected to decline when exposure is reduced or eliminated
Consistency
Replication of consistent findings across a wide array of study designs provide evidence of causality
Biologic plausibility
The risk factor/outcome relationship is logical and reasonable given current biological knowledge
Coherence
The extent to which a hypothesized causal association agrees with existing theory and knowledge
Causation
A cause of a disease is an event, condition, or characteristic that plays an essential role in producing an occurrence of disease
Counterfactual ideal
Observe the same person reliving the same experience twice –
once with risk factor
once without
Relative risk
Ratio comparing incidence among those with risk factor vs. incidence among those without risk factor
Prevalence ratio
Ratio comparing prevalence among those with risk factor vs. prevalence among those without risk factor
Odds ratio
Ratio comparing the odds of disease among those with risk factor vs. odds of disease among those without risk factor