Incidence and Prevalence Flashcards

1
Q

What is prevalence?

A

A measure of how common a disease is.

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2
Q

What 2 ways can prevalence be expressed?

A
  1. Percentage

2. Number per n people

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3
Q

What are the 3 types of prevalence?

A
  1. Point prevalence
  2. Period prevalence
  3. Lifetime prevalence
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4
Q

What is point prevalence?

A

The proportion of individuals with the condition at a specified point in time.

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5
Q

What is period prevalence?

A

The proportion of individuals with the condition at any time during a specified time interval.

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6
Q

What is lifetime prevalence?

A

The proportion of individuals with the condition at any point in their lives.

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7
Q

Prevalence calculations must always be accompanied by a written explanation. How would a point prevalence of 4/200 students with bunions be explained?

A

The point prevalence of bunions in these students is 2% (or 2 per 100).

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8
Q

What is incidence?

A

The rate at which new events occur in a population, over a defined period of time.

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9
Q

What 2 ways can incidence be expressed?

A
  1. Per n people per time period

2. Per n person-years

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10
Q

What is person-years?

A

A measurement combining (multiplying) the number of people observed and the number of years they were observed for.

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11
Q

What are 4 factors affecting prevalence? (Epidemiologists bathtub!)

A
  1. Death rate
  2. Recovery rate
  3. Incidence rate
  4. Migration rate
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12
Q

In terms of sample data, what is the point estimate?

A

The point estimate is the best guess based on sample data.

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13
Q

What is the sampling error?

A

The differences between the sample point estimates and the truth.

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14
Q

What is the standard error?

A

A numerical value that represents the sampling error.

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15
Q

What is a confidence interval?

A

The confidence interval (CI) is a range of values that’s likely to include a population value with a certain degree of confidence.

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16
Q

What is the formula for calculating Confidence Intervals?

A

Lower bound = point estimate - (1.96 x S.E.)

Upper bound = point estimate + (1.96 x S.E.)