NR 503 - Study Guide for Final Exam
NR 503 - Study Guide for Final Exam
1. Objectives of epidemiology.2-7
Step 1. Understanding the etiology or cause of a disease (risk factors)
Step 2. Finding out the extent that a disease or health problem affects a community or population.
Step 3. Deter...
1. Objectives of epidemiology.2-7
Step 1. Understanding the etiology or cause of a disease (risk factors)
Step 2. Finding out the extent that a disease or health problem affects a community or
population.
Step 3. Determine the natural history or prognosis
Step 4. Evaluate existing and newly developed preventative therapeutic measures and
modes of healthcare delivery
Step 5. Provide the foundation for developing public policy relating to environmental
problems, genetic issues, and other considerations regarding disease prevention and
health promotion.
2. Define, compare, calculate, and interpret Measures of Morbidity .41.58
a. Incidence rate.41.51
(# of NEW cases of a disease occurring in the population during a specified
period of time / # of persons who are at risk of developing the disease during
that period of time) x 1000 = Incidence rate per 1,000
: the NEW cases of a disease over a period of time.
b. Attack rate.46
- special form of cumulative incidence
- Used for diseases of short observation time period
- Not a true rate because the time dimension is often uncertain (food borne
outbreaks)
= (# of new cases among population during period / population at risk at
beginning of period) x 100 (expressed as %)
c. Prevalence.46
: the EXISTING cases of a disease over a period of time.
(# of cases of a disease present in the population at a specified time / # of
persons in the population at that specified time) x 1,000 = Prevalence per
1,000
3. Understand why incidence data are important for measuring risk.
• Measures risk (probability of developing disease)
• Useful for investigating determinants of disease (not survival)
• To investigate causes of disease
• Need to know population ‘at risk’ or ‘person-time’ at risk
4. Define, compare, calculate, and interpret Measures of Mortality
a. Cause-specific mortality rate.64.65
=(Total number of deaths due to x cause / total population at mid year) x
1,000
=(No.of deaths from leukemia in one year in children younger than 10 years of
age / No.of children in the population younger than 10 years of age at
midyear) x 1,000
b. Annual mortality rate .64
-annual death rate, or mortality rate from all causes.
(total # of deaths from all causes in 1 year / total population at mid year ) x
1,000
c. Case-fatality.65
--what percentage of people who have a certain disease die within a certain
time after their disease was diagnosed?
=(# of deaths due to a certain disease/total # suffering from that disease) x
100 %
-Measure of the severity of the disease
-As therapy improves, case-fatality would be expected to decline.
d. Proportionate mortality. This is Not a rate. 66
-the proportionate mortality from cardiovascular disease in the U.S. in 2010
(percent, %)
, NR 503 - Study Guide for Final Exam
-of all deaths in the US, what proportion was caused by cardiovascular
disease?
=( # of deaths from cardiovascular diseases in US in 2010 / total deaths in the
US in 2010) x 100
5. Assess the Validity.89 and Reliability105.110 of Diagnostic and Screening Tests
a. Define, compare and calculate measures of validity, including sensitivity and
specificity.
-Validity of test: its ability to distinguish between who has a disease and who
does not.
-Sensitivity of test is defined as the ability of the test to identify correctly
those who have the disease.
-Specificity of test is defined as the ability of the test to identify correctly
those who do not have the disease.
Have a Disease Do not have
Disease
Positive True Positive False Positive Positive
(TP) (FP) predictive
Have the disease Do not have the value
And test positive disease =
But test positive (TP/TP+FP)x10
a b 0
=(a/a+b)x100
Negative False Negative True Negative Negative
(FN) (TN) Predictive
Have the disease Do not have the value
But test negative disease =TN/TN+FN
c And test negative
d
Sensitivity Specificity
= TP /TP+FN =TN /TN+FP
b. Define and calculate positive predictive value.100.
-what is the probability that the patient has the disease?
-PPV is proportion of people who screened positive and actually have the
disease
(True positive/All positives)x100
c. Relationship between Positive predictive value (PPV) and disease
prevalence.101
: the higher the prevalence, the higher the predictive value. Therefore, a
screening program is most productive and efficient if it is directed to a high-
risk target population.
Sensitivity = 99%, Specificity = 95%
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