Session 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What are some of the features of a census?

A
  • It refers to universal sources of information.
  • The population sits between birth and death registration.
  • A census refers to both households and people.
  • It has a universal coverage and it occurs at regular intervals - every 10 years in the UK.
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2
Q

What can a census tell us?

A
  • Population size
  • Population structure e.g. service needs
  • Population characteristics such as unemployment, overcrowding, lone pensioners, single parents etc.
  • It allows the government to plan services.
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3
Q

What is population size and structure measured by?

A
  • Births
  • Deaths
  • Migration
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4
Q

How do you calculate the crude birth rate?

A

The number of live births per 1,000 population.

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5
Q

What is the general fertility rate?

A

The number of live births per 1,000 females aged 15-44 years.

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6
Q

What is the total period fertility rate?

A

The average number of children that would be born to a hypothetic woman in her life.

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7
Q

What are some of the links between Crude Birth Rates (CBR), General Fertility Rates (GFR) and Total Period Fertility Rates (TPFR)?

A
  • Low CBR is due to low GFR.
  • High CBR is due to high GFR and a high proportion of 15-44 year olds in London.
  • GFR is affected by Age Specific Fertility Rates (ASFR).
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8
Q

What are the determinates of fertility?

A

Fecundity = the physical ability to reproduce.
High sterilisation and hysterectomies will mean low fecundity.
Fertility = the realisation of this potential as births.

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9
Q

What are some factors that can effect fertility rates?

A

High sexual activity = high fertility.
High economic climate = high fertility.

High contraception = low fertility.
High abortion rate = low fertility.

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10
Q

What do crude birth rates tells us?

A

The impact of births on the size of the population.

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11
Q

What do general fertility rates tell us?

A

They compare the fertility of fertile female populations.

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12
Q

What do total period fertility rates tell us?

A

They compare the fertility of fertile females without being influenced by age group structure.

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13
Q

How do we calculate Crude Death Rate?

A

This is the number of deaths per 1,000 population.

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14
Q

How do we calculate age specific death rates?

A

This is the number of deaths per 1,000 in an age group.

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15
Q

How do we calculate the Standardised Mortality Ratio?

A

This compares the ‘observed’ number of deaths with the number of expected deaths if age-sex distribution of populations were identical.

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16
Q

What are some of the reasons for collecting mortality data?

A
  • Classifying the causes of death
  • Analysing patterns in mortality rates
  • Identifying health problems
  • Informing service needs.
17
Q

What are some of the variable effecting population estimates and projections?

A
  • Immigration (big issue at the moment!)
  • Births
  • Deaths
18
Q

What are Population Estimates?

A

This is applying what is known about births, deaths and migration to the present.

19
Q

What are population projections?

A

These are estimates about future populations. There are additional assumptions about births, deaths and migration in the future.

20
Q

Why do population estimates and projections depend on?

A
  • Migration

- Fertility Rates - remember that fertility is difficult to predict because it is determined by social behaviour.

21
Q

How is healthcare information used to identify health and healthcare needs?

A

There are a few key questions that need to be answered, e.g.
- How common?
- How serious?
- How expensive?
Morbidity data is key to discovering health care needs.
NHS expenditure should map into the healthcare needs of the country.

22
Q

How do you calculate a trend?

A

A trend involves a comparison of rates which require;

  • A Numerator (TOP)
  • A demoninator (BOTTOM)
23
Q

Name some numerator and denominator errors.

A

Numerator errors;

  • Death certification
  • Disease diagnosis
  • Classification or coding errors

Denominator errors;

  • Population used
  • Population definition
  • Population count or estimate.
24
Q

When you interpret healthcare data what are some of the things you should consider?

A

Chance (random variation)
Artefactual (systematic) errors - such as numerator errors and denominator errors.
Real phenomenon - ‘natural’ epidemiological causes and medical care affects.
If there is a dramatic chance consider mistakes before you think of it as a real phenomenon.

25
Q

What are some contentious issues with the use of health information?

A
  • Ethical issues
  • Methodological issues; completeness/duplication, accuracy, variations of diagnosis and disease, etc
  • Confidentiality
  • Recording linkages
26
Q

What is the definition of a census?

A

‘The simultaneous recording of demographic data by the government at a particular time pertaining to all the persons who live in a particular territory’.