PU520: Principles of Epidemiology Flashcards
(37 cards)
UNIT 1 ASSIGNMENT SLIDES
What is epidemiology?
The study of the distribution and determinants of health-related states or events in human populations, and the application of epidemiologic studies to prevent and control health problems.
It is the investigative arm of public health! Very population-based and very investigative-based and relies heavily on investigation, data, and statistics.
What are the 6 characteristics of epidemiology?
Population focus
Distribution
Determinates
Outcomes
Quantification
Control of health problems
What does the characteristic of population focus mean?
Population refers to a collection of individuals that share one or more observable personal or observational characteristics from which data may be collected and evaluated.
Ex. Common social, economic, family (marriage and divorce), work and labor force, and geographic factors. These are specific populations the focus would be on.
What does epidemiology use to describe and analyze health-related states or events?
The scientific method
Study designs and statistical techniques for investigating an observable occurrence and acquiring new knowledge.
What are the purposes and uses of epidemiology? (5)
Identifying etiology and risk factors
Determining the extent of disease in a population
Studying natural history and prognosis
Evaluating existing and new preventative and therapeutic measures/modes of healthcare delivery
Providing foundation for developing public policy and regulatory decisions
What are some selected activities performed by an epidemiologist? (Free)
Identifying risk factors for disease, injury, and death
Describing the natural history of disease
Identifying individuals and populations at greatest risk for disease
Identifying where the public health problem is greatest
Monitoring diseases and other health-related events over time
Evaluating the efficacy and effectiveness of prevention and treatment programs
Providing information useful in health planning and decision making for establishing health programs with appropriate priorities
Assisting in carrying our public health programs
Being a resource person
Communicating public health information
What is the definition of epidemic?
The occurrence of cases of an illness, specific health-related behavior, or other health-related events within a community or region clearly in excess of normal expectancy.
This excess could be 7 cases if the normal expectancy is 2. There is no magic number.
What is a pandemic?
An epidemic that occurs worldwide, or over a wide area, crossing international boundaries, and usually affecting many people.
What does the characteristic distribution mean in epidemiology?
The occurrence of diseases and other health outcomes within a population.
Looking at how frequently something is happening within a given population. We then can compare to other populations and identify an uneven distribution.
What does the determinate characteristic of epidemiology mean?
It is a collective or individual risk factor (or set of factors) that is causally related to a health condition, outcome, or other defined characteristic. It is something that determines your health and well-being.
What pertains to contact with a disease-causing factor or to the amount of the factor that impinges upon a group of individuals?
Exposures
What are all the possible results that may stem from exposure to a causal factor?
Outcomes
This is often expressed as types and measures of morbidity (illness or injury due to specific disease or health outcome) and mortality (death from various causes).
What is the characteristic of quantification refer to in epidemiology?
It refers to counting the cases of illness or other health outcomes.
What denotes the use of statistics to describe the occurrence of health outcomes and measure their association with exposures?
The characteristic of quantification
Epidemiology is a quantitative discipline. If there is no hard data, it isn’t epidemiology.
The last idea of epidemiology is the control of health problems–what does this mean? (3)
- Health promotion
- Alleviation of adverse health outcomes
- Prevention
Why is epidemiology an interdisciplinary science?
It uses information from many fields.
Mathematics and biostatistics (for quantitative data)
History (for historical accounts of the disease and early epidemiologic methods)
Sociology (social determinates of disease)
Demography and geography (population structures and location of disease outbreaks)
Behavioral sciences (models of disease; design of health promotion programs)
Law (examining evidence to establish causality; legal bases for health policy)
Why is epidemiology an observational science?
Because it capitalizes on naturally occurring situations in order to study the occurrence of disease.
For example, epidemiologists might examine and compare the frequency of lung cancer and other lung diseases among smokers and non-smokers.
Why have epidemiologists implemented descriptive epidemiology?
It refers to epidemiology studies that are concerned with characterizing the amount and distribution of health and disease within a population.
Health outcomes are classified according to the variables of person, place, and time.
What type of epidemiology examines the casual (etiologic) hypotheses regarding the association between exposures and health conditions?
Analytic epidemiology
The field of analytic epidemiology proposes and evaluates causal models for etiologic associations and studies them empirically.
What is a type of experiment that is naturally occurring circumstances in which subsets of the population have different levels of exposure to a hypothesized causal factor in a situation resembling an actual experiment?
A natural experiment. The presence of people in a particular group is typically nonrandom.
An example of a natural experiment is the work of John Snow, discussed later in this chapter. Many past and ongoing natural experiments are relevant to environmental epidemiology. When new public health–related laws and regulations are introduced, their implementation becomes similar to natural experiments that could be explored in epidemiologic research.
For example, epidemiologists could study whether motor vehicle laws that limit texting while driving reduce the frequency of automobile crashes. Other examples of natural experiments that have evolved from laws are the addition of fluoride to the public water supply in order to prevent tooth decay and the requirement that children wear safety helmets while riding bicycles.
What accounted for disease outbreaks before Hippocrates’ time?
Supernatural explanations.
In about 400 BCE, Hippocrates suggested that environmental factors such as water quality and the air were implicated in the causation of diseases. He authored the historically important book On Airs, Waters, and Places.
Who was Paracelsus (1493–1541)?
Paracelsus was one of the founders of the field of toxicology, a discipline that is used to examine the toxic effects of chemicals found in environmental venues such as the work-place.
Who was John Graunt (1620–1674)?
His work recorded descriptive characteristics of birth and death data, including seasonal variations, infant mortality, and excess male over female mortality.
Graunt is said to be the first to employ quantitative methods to describe population vital statistics by organizing mortality data in a mortality table. Because of his contributions to vital statistics, Graunt has been called the Columbus of statistics.
Who was Ramazzini (1633–1714)?
Bernardino Ramazzini is regarded as the founder of the field of occupational medicine.
The father of occupational medicine is also considered to be a pioneer in the field of ergonomics, by pointing out the hazards associated with postures assumed in various occupations.
His book highlighted the risks posed by hazardous chemicals, dusts, and metals used in the workplace.