THEME 2b Epidemiology Flashcards

1
Q

define epidemiology

A

study of how often diseases occur in different groups of people and why

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2
Q

What are the 3 components of epidemiology?

A
  1. Distribution
  2. frequency
  3. deteminants (derived from data 1. and 2., neccesary to test an epidemiologic hypothesis
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3
Q

What is this the process of :
A suspicion exists that a particular factor may be influencing the occurrence of a disease. (Your suspicion may arise from clinical practice, observation, research etc).
Formulation of a specific hypothesis.
Hypothesis is tested in epidemiological studies with a comparison group.
Collect and analyse data to determine whether a statistical association exists.
Assess validity of any observed association by excluding alternative explanations such as chance, bias and confounding.
Does statistical association suggest a causal relationship? (Consider the magnitude of the association / other studies / consistency of findings against other studies / biological credibility)

A

epidemiology

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4
Q

How can you measure disease?

A

1) Indices
2) Standardisation
3) Quantifying disease
4) Indirectly: evaluation of effectiveness

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5
Q

What is the “gold standard” of measure? (8)

A
Valid
Reliable
Objective
Simple
Reproducible
Quantifiable
Sensitive
Acceptable
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6
Q

What is the difference between studys that are 1) descriptive and 2) analytical

A

1]. DESCRIPTIVE

Observational
Case-reports
Case-series
Cross-sectional

2]. ANALYTIC

Observational: case-control, cross-sectional
Experimental: clinical trials

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7
Q

What better meta-analysis or systematic reviews?

A

meta-analysis

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8
Q

List these in order of which is generally better:

1) systemic reviews
2) cohort studies
3) randomized controlled trails
4) case control studies
5) animal and lab research
6) case reports/series

A

1) systemic reviews
2) randomized controlled trails
3) cohort studies
4) case control studies
5) case reports/series
6) animal and lab research

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9
Q

What is case control sutdies generally better than animal and laboratory research? (4)

A
  1. stonger methodology
  2. less bias
  3. controls for comparison
  4. fewer studies
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10
Q

What are case-studies/series used for?

A

Highlighting interesting or novel cases / treatment
Recognition of new disease/outcome
Formulation of new hypotheses

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11
Q

What are the disadvantages of case-studies/ case-series?

A

Cannot demonstrate valid statistical association

Lack of appropriate comparison group can obscure a relationship or suggest an association where none exists

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12
Q

what is a case-report?

A

A report on a single patient or a series of patients with an outcome of interest.
No control group is required.
e.g. patient revived after no pulpse found with severe hyperthermia

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13
Q

What is a cross sectional survey?

A

Observation of a defined population at a single point in time (or time interval).
Exposure and outcome are determined simultaneously.

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14
Q

What is a cross sectional survey used for?

A

Measure prevalence of a disease

Look at potential risk factors or cause

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15
Q

What are the weaknesses of a cross sectional survey

A

May establish association, NOT causality.
Confounders may be unequally distributed
Group sizes may be unequal
Recall bias

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16
Q

describe the 2 cohorts/groups in a cohort sutdie:

A

Involves identification of two groups (cohorts) of patients, one which received the exposure of interest, and one which did not and following these cohorts forward to assess the outcome of interest.

17
Q

What is a cohort studie used for?

A

Measures the incidence of disease
Looking at causes of disease
Determining prognosis
Establishing timing and directionality of events

18
Q

What are the disadvantages of a cohort studies?

A

Controls may be difficult to identify
Exposure may be linked to hidden confounder
Blinding is difficult
For rare diseases, large sample size is often necessary or a long follow up.

19
Q

What sort of patients are used in case-control studies?

A

A study which involves identifying patients who have the outcome of interest (cases) and patients without the same outcome (controls), and looking back in time to see if they had the exposure of interest

20
Q

What are case-control studies used for?

A

Looking at potential causes of disease (suitable for rare diseases)

21
Q

What are the disadvantages of case-control studies?

A

Confounders
Selection of controls may be difficult
Recall and selection bias
Difficult to establish time relationships between exposure to the risk factor and development of the disease.

22
Q

what is the difference between a case-control study and a cohort study?

A

case control study involve looking at a number of individauls who already have the disease, cohort study looks at helahty individuals and sees if they will develop the disease (issues if a very rare disease)

23
Q

What are randomised contorlled trails used for?

A

Used for:

- Evaluating the effectiveness of an intervention.

24
Q

what are the disadvantages of randomised controlled trials?

A

High costs
Ethical issues
Participant
compliance

25
Q

What doe randomised control trails involve?

2) What is randomisation used?

A

Exposure status is assigned by the researcher, preferably by random allocation.
2) Randomisation is the best way of reducing selection bias between 2 groups of participants.

26
Q

what is a systemic review?

A

The evidence from a number of studies can be gathered together in one report which pools and analyses all available data to assess the strength of the evidence.

27
Q

Why should systemic reviews be conducted?

A

Systematic reviews can end confusion / highlight where there is not enough evidence / yield new insights by combining findings from different studies.

28
Q

What is a well known systemic review in dentistry?

A

the cochran reviews