Week 1 - Risk & Screening Flashcards

1
Q

What is the aim of Epidemiology?

A

Basics:

  • Study of Diseases

Components:

  1. Understand - diseaes/health in population/community
  2. Describe - health status/trends
  3. Explain - etiology/causes/transmission
  4. Predict - treatments/interventions
  5. Control - prolong health/prevent/eradicate
  6. Develop - policy/protocol/procedures
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2
Q

What is a Count or Frequency?

A
  • a number, a numerator, cases
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3
Q

What is the difference between Ratio, Proportion, and Rate?

A

Ratio

  • a value obtained by dividing one number by another
    • Can have more than two terms, and denominator not necessarily refer to the whole.

Proportion

  • a type of ratio (numerator part of denominator)
  • Two variables or factors, one has a constant or consistent relationship with the other.
    • Direct, Inverse, Logarithmic, etc.
    • Denominator refers to ‘of total or ‘of the whole’

Rate

  • a type of ratio
  • has a numerator and denominator
  • 3 key elements:
    • Frequency
    • Population
    • Time
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4
Q

Population at Risk

A
  • not every person ‘at risk’ of particular condition
    • Occupational injury, environmental illness
      • exposure dependent
    • Prostate cancer, uterine cancer
      • gender dependent
    • Tonsillitis, appendicitis
      • sx dependent
  • Careful: denominator = Incidence Rates
    • often just the average populations are used
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5
Q

Incidence vs. Prevalence

A

Incidence

  • # of NEW cases
    • how many marbles you just tossed in

Prevalence

  • # of TOTAL cases
    • how many marbles total in the bowl
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6
Q

How are Crude Rates calculated?

A

Basics:

  • Frequency (# of cases) divided by Population

Example:

  • death rate = 35.6 per 1,000 persons (Community A)
  • death rate = 28.9 per 1,000 persons (Community B)

Age-Adjusted Rates:

  • theoretical (artificial, synthetic, smoothed) denominator
  • ‘level the playing field’
  • compare ‘apples to apples’
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7
Q

What is Screening?

A

Basics:

  • Presumptive identification of previously unrecognized condition

How this occurs:

  • Conducted via procedures, exams, tests
    • Preliminary in design
    • Confirmation of diagnosis required
  • additional tests, exams, evaluations

Note:

  • “Don’t go looking if you don’t know what to do when you find it”
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8
Q

When is Screening Useful?

A
  1. Simple
    • test is easy to administer & learn
  2. Rapid
    • procedure itself, results = available (immediate = ideal)
  3. Inexpensive
    • lower cost = more likely program to be beneficial
  4. Safe
    • primum non nocere (first, do no harm)
  5. Acceptable
    • to the target group
      • ex: testicular cancer (palpation) was not effective but mammography (imaging) is effective
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9
Q

What are the 3 items to consider to deem Screening Appropriate?

A
  1. Social
    • important condition (community & individual)
    • diagnostic, interventions, treatments available
    • cost/benefit ration
    • public acceptance
  2. Scientific
    • natural disease history
    • case definition
    • treatment policies, protocols
    • effectiveness or efficacy of prevention/treatment
    • high prevalence rate
  3. Ethical
    • suitable, effective, impact, appropriate
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10
Q

How are Reliability and Precision related?

A

Basics:

  • ability to give consistent results on repeated usages
    • irrelevant if result correct, incorrect, positive, negative

Dependent upon:

  • variability of condition
  • variability of measurement tool/method
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11
Q

Sources of Unreliability and Invalidity

A
  1. Measurement bias
    • constant errors due to measurement device or method
      • objective: scale/blood pressure cuff
      • subjective: clinical fxn, pysch status
  2. Halo/Horns Effect
    • directional patterns in evaluations or questionnaires
      • all aspects seen in positive or negative light
  3. Social desirability
    • questionnaires, open-ended, self-assessments
      • answers reflect “ought to be” or what “would lik”
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12
Q

What are the 4 Measures of Validity?

A
  1. Sensitivity
    • correctly identify as diseased those actually with disease
    • denominator = condition present
  2. Specificity
    • correctly identify as non-diseased those actually without the disease
    • denominator = condition absent
  3. Predictive Value (+)
    • proportion true + of those screening as +
    • denominator = test positive
      • Probability that pos test result = a true pos
  4. Predictive Value (-)
    • proportion true - of those screening as –
    • denominator = test negative
      • Probability that neg test result = a true neg
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