Semester 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What is the 95% confidence interval?

A

The range of valves you can be 95% sure the the mean of the population lies within

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2
Q

When is the 95% confidence interval larger?

A

when more variety in population values and smaller samples

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3
Q

why is 95% confidence level used?

A

to estimate precision of observed values and determine statistical significance of a difference between two differnt observations

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4
Q

Describe how data should be set up in a case control study analysis

A
  • top row is expose ppl bottom row is of unexposed ppl
  • first column is the cases (number of outcomes) of exposed and unexposed
  • 2nd column is of number of controls (no outcome)
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5
Q

How is odds ratio calculated?

A

odds of outcome in exposed ppl / odds of outcome in unexposed

Can also be calculated by: a X d/ c X b or (a/b)/(c/d)

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6
Q

how is error factor calculated?

A

1) 1/a+ 1/b+ 1/c +1/d = ans
2) square of ans, X 2= ans2
3) e^ans2= error factor

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7
Q

How are confidence limits calculated from error factor and odds ratio?

A

OR/ error factor is lower limit

OR X error factor is upper limit

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8
Q

What is the null hypothesis?

A

that there is no significant difference between the two variables and so the odds ratio is one

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9
Q

1 lies within the confidence interval, is the null hypothesis accepted or rejected?

A

null hypothesis is accepted as no significant difference

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10
Q

Can you ever fully reject a null hypothesis?

A

no as there is always a possibility it occurred by chance, but 5% chance is acceptable for significance of differences

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11
Q

Is odds ratio relative or absolute risk?

A

relative risk- it is only comparing risk as compared to the a different population, not compared to the whole population

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12
Q

How is incidence rate calculated?

A

of new events/ (# of persons x # of years)

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13
Q

What is tendency?

A

the true value (observation is out best estimate of the tendency)

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14
Q

Why are case control studies good?

A
  • theyre quick
  • theyre cheap
  • theyre good for rare diseases as you can select based on outcome
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15
Q

What issues are there with case control studies?

A
  • selection bias (need to select control from similar population to the cases)
  • information bias (make sure you do the same to both groups)
  • confounding
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16
Q

how can confounding be reduced in case control studies?

A

match cases with similar people who dont have disease (controls)
adjust for it in analysis by standardisation

17
Q

What are disadvantages of cohort studies?

A
  • big scale
  • expensive
  • take long time
  • survivor bias (high number of losses to follow up, healthy ppl tend to drop out)
  • not good for rare outcomes
  • unknown confounders cannot be accounted for
18
Q

What ratios can be used to describe relative risk?

A
  • risk ratio (prevelance proportions at particular time (100 per thousand))
  • rate ratio (incidence rates after a particular time (50 per 1,000 person years))
  • odds ratio (odds between groups at end of time period (#dead: #alive)
19
Q

What measurements of relative risk can be applied to case control and cohort studies?

A

cohort: risk ratio, indcience rate ratio, odds ratio

case- control: odds ratio

20
Q

How would you describe the relative risk if the odds ratio for getting cancer if you smoke vs if you dont smoke is 3?

A

you are 3 times as likely to get cancer if you smoke than if you didnt