lecture 16 Flashcards

1
Q

what are the three measures of occurrence

A
  • prevalence
  • incidence proportion
  • incidence rate
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2
Q

what is prevalence

A

the proportion of a population who HAVE the disease at a point in time

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3
Q

why do we want to know the prevalence of a disease

A
  • info on the burden of disease
  • resource allocation
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4
Q

how do you calculate prevalence

A

number of people with the disease at a given point in time / total number of people in the population at that point in time

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5
Q

how do you report prevalence

A
  • the measure of occurrence
  • exposure or outcome
  • population
  • time point
  • value
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6
Q

what are the limitations to prevalence

A
  • difficult to assess the development of disease
  • is influence by the duration of the disease
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7
Q

if nothing else happens but the disease has a longer duration then what will happen to prevalence

A

the disease will be more prevalent

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8
Q

what is incidence

A

the occurrence of new cases of an outcome in a population during a specific period of follow up

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9
Q

what is incidence proportion

A

the proportion of an outcome free population that develops the outcome of interest in a specified time period

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10
Q

what is the calculation of incidence proportion

A

number of people who develop the disease in specified period / number of people at risk of developing the disease the disease at the start of the period

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11
Q

why might people not be considered ‘at risk’ at the start of a study

A
  • they already have the condition
  • the condition is something that they can not develop
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12
Q

how do you report incidence proportion

A
  • measure of occurrence
  • outcome
  • population
  • time period
  • value
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13
Q

example of reporting prevalence on asthma

A

the prevalence of asthma in POPH192 class on August 16th 2023 was 10%

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14
Q

example of reporting incidence proportion on low back pain in nurses

A

the incidence proportion of low back pain in nurses in 12 months was 35%

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15
Q

what are the limitations of incidence proportion

A
  • assumes a ‘closed’ population (does not account for people coming or going)
  • highly dependent on the time period (longer time period = higher incidence proportion
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16
Q

what is the incidence rate

A

the rate at which new cases of the outcome of interest occur in a population

17
Q

how to calculate incidence rate

A

number of people who develop the disease in a specific period / number of person-years at risk of developing the disease

18
Q

why might someone stop being at ‘risk’

A
  • they become a case
  • they are lost to follow up
  • follow up time ends
19
Q

how do you report incidence rate

A
  • measure of occurrence
  • outcome
  • population
  • value
20
Q

example of reporting incidence rate on glandular fever

A

the incidence rate of glandular fever in the class was 50 per 100 person - years

21
Q

what are the limitations of incidence rate

A
  • person time not available
  • complex to calculate
22
Q

what is prevalence influenced by

A

both incidence and duration of the disease

23
Q

what is age standardisation

A

removes the affect of the population having different age structures