Epi Class 6 Flashcards

1
Q

experimental study

A

assigns participants to intervention and control groups in order to examine whether an intervention causes an intended outcome.

  • Because the researcher assigns participants to receive a particular exposure, the exact timing, dose, duration, and frequency of the exposure are known.
  • Considered to be the “gold standard” in epidemiology FOR CAUSALITY
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2
Q

Types of experimental study

A

– Clinical trials: evaluate treatment for ill people

– Field trials: evaluate interventions for disease prevention (like vaccine trials)

– Community trials: evaluate community-wide interventions (like fluoridation of public water supplies)

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3
Q

randomized controlled trial (RCT

A
  • Some participants are randomly assigned to an active intervention group
  • The remaining participants are assigned to a control group
  • All participants from both groups are followed forward in time to see who has a favorable outcome and who does not
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4
Q

superiority trials

A

Aim to demonstrate that a new intervention is “better” than some type of control

• Because the term “better” can be defined in so many ways, the researcher must carefully define what constitutes a favorable outcome for the experiment

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5
Q

equivalence trials

A

is the new intervention as good as the comparison one?

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6
Q

non-inferiority trials

A

is the new intervention no worse than the comparison one?

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7
Q

Equipoise

A

experimental research should be conducted only when there is genuine uncertainty about which treatment will work better

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8
Q

Distributive justice

A

the source population must be an appropriate and non-exploitative one

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9
Q

Beneficence and nonmaleficence

A
Beneficence = do good
Nonmaleficence = do not harm

researchers must balance the likely benefits and risks of the study

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10
Q

Respect for persons

A

– Participants must volunteer for a study of their own volition (autonomy) without being unduly influenced by the prospect of being compensated for their participation

– Participants must be able to understand what it means to be a research subject, including the possibility of being assigned to a control group instead of the new intervention

– Potential participants must be given enough information to give their own informed consent

– Researchers must protect the safety and privacy of participants

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11
Q

Efficacy

A

The proportion of individuals in the control group who experience an unfavorable outcome who could have been expected to have a favorable outcome had they been in the active group instead

(the term efficacy is used for a highly-monitored, in-a-perfect-world study. Effectiveness is used for a real-world, not-perfect study)

  • A high efficacy is an indicator that an intervention is successful.
  • Efficacy (effectiveness) is very similar to AR%
  • “__% of the people in the control group could have prevented their bad outcome if they had been in the intervention group instead”
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12
Q

Number needed to treat (NNT)

A

the expected number of people who would have to receive a treatment to prevent an unfavorable outcome in one person (or, alternately stated, to achieve a favorable outcome in one person)

  • A small NNT indicates a more effective intervention.
  • If a drug is intended to prevent stroke and has an NNT of 5, then 5 people have to take the drug for one year (or some other specified time period) to prevent one of the 5 from having a stroke.
  • If a drug has an NNT of 102, it means that 102 people have to take the drug to prevent one of the 102 from having a stroke.
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13
Q

Ri

A

Rate in intervention group

a / (a + b)

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14
Q

Rc

A

Rate in control group

c/ (c + d)

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15
Q

Efficacy formula

A

(Rc - Ri) / Rc

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16
Q

NNT formula

A

1 / (Rc - Ri)

17
Q

Analytic Frameworks: Treatment-received approach

A

limit analysis to the participants who were fully compliant with their assigned intervention [efficacy = laboratory setting]

18
Q

Noncompliance

A

not all participants will follow the protocol

19
Q

Placebo effect

A

even a placebo will make many patients feel better

20
Q

Loss to follow-up

A

even if the same % of people in each treatment group are lost to follow-up, there may be bias (the treatment group may quit because they get healthier and the placebo group may quit because they get sicker)

21
Q

Analytic Frameworks: Treatment-assigned approach

A

intention-to-treat approach

includes all participants even if they were not fully compliant with their assigned intervention [effectiveness = real world setting]