November 1 (Infectious Disease Epidemiology) Flashcards
1
Q
What are study designs for infectious disease?
A
- observational studies and RCTs
- cohort study: inception cohort are people who are at a certain stage of illness (strengths are you can find incidence, temporality, you can measure risk factors you are interested in and other covariates. challenges are people can drop out, expensive.)
- case control study: starting with people who have the disease or don’t and looking if they had the risk (challenges are are your controls being selected from the source population)
2
Q
What are serosurveys?
A
- cross sectional study
- can be used as a counting exercise (use antibodies to see how many people are exposed) or estimate risk
- measure IV and DV at the same time
- relatively inexpensive, can be done rapidly, for virology it’s the method of choice for seroepidemiology
- lack of temporal association
3
Q
What are outbreak investigations?
A
- two components: descriptive and analytic component
- descriptive: define outbreak in terms of person, place, or time
- if there is a particular question, may do a cohort/case-control study (analytic component)
4
Q
How is vaccine efficacy measured?
A
- direct and indirect effects
- indirect effects: by you being vaccinated, does it indirectly protect others around you who weren’t vaccinated?
- OR is 0.2 for a vaccine then the protectiveness would be 80%
5
Q
What were the results of herd immunity study in rural colonies with randomly assigned hep A or influenza vaccines?
A
- people who did not get the vaccine but living with the kids who did get vaccines had a 60% protective effect
- 60% efficacy effect for getting the flu shot as well (for people living in general communities and in these communities)
6
Q
What is the test negative design for influenza?
A
- people come to the doctor with flu-like syndrome and get swabbed
- if you are positive for flu, you are a case and if you are negative, you are a control
- then look at how many were vaccinated for the flu
- potential biases (you have to be seeking healthcare)
7
Q
What is infectious disease modelling?
A
-involves building mathematical models usually based on assumptions to predict spread, risk, or efficacy of intervention