week 2: chapter 11 Flashcards

1
Q

What term refers to “the study of the occurrence and distribution of health-related states or events in specified populations”?
a. Nosology
b. Epidemiology
c. Susceptibility
d. Biologic plausibility

A

b. epidemiology

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2
Q

Who is believed to be the first person to notice and record the relationship between the environment and health
a. Labonte
b. Nightingale
c. Epp
d. Hippocrates

A

d. hippocrates

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3
Q

A nurse is working with the school-aged population during the prepathogenesis period. What primary prevention activity would promote the health of this population?
a. Case finding children who may have been exposed to a teacher with hepatitis A
b. Teaching handwashing and respiratory hygiene
c. Providing antimicrobials for newly diagnosed contacts
d. Advocating for testing of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) at a schoolbased clinic

A

b. Teaching handwashing and respiratory hygiene

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4
Q

A nurse is working with a student nurse and explains that 12% of deaths were from colorectal cancer in 2010. What word is used to describe this type of statistical information?
a. Crude mortality
b. Relative risk
c. Prevalence
d. Proportional mortality

A

d. proportional mortality

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5
Q

What statistic is used to answer the question, “How likely is it that I will die from this
disease?”
a. Case-fatality rate
b. Specific mortality rate
c. Relative risk
d. Incidence

A

a. case-fatality rate

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6
Q

A public health nurse (PHN) is explaining to a nursing student how to use health statistics to understand population health. The PHN is comparing the incidence of childhood asthma in a population exposed to a certain air pollutant with the incidence in a population not exposed to that pollutant to determine relative risk. The PHN asks the student to select the statistic, which supports that the risk for asthma is greater in the exposed population. What is the correct answer?
a. <1.0
b. 0.05
c. 1.0
d. >1.0

A

d. >1.0

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7
Q

A public health nurse (PHN) is explaining to a nursing student how to use health statistics to understand population health. The PHN asks the nursing student to develop some questions for a survey about smoking behaviour. Which question would be best at eliciting information on period prevalence?
a. “Do you currently smoke?”
b. “Have you smoked within the last six months?”
c. “Have you ever smoked?”
d. “At what age did you start smoking?”

A

b. “Have you smoked within the last six months?”

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8
Q

A public health nurse (PHN) is explaining to a nursing student how to use health statistics to understand population health. The nursing student wants to administer a survey about smoking behaviours to students in various grade levels within the school district to identify the best grade to initiate health education. A follow-up survey will be administered to assess the effectiveness of the educational program. What type of research design would be best at providing the epidemiological information needed in this scenario?
a. Cross-sectional study
b. Cohort design
c. Randomized control trial
d. Case-control methodology

A

a. Cross-sectional study

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9
Q

A public health nurse (PHN) is explaining to a nursing student how to use health statistics to understand population health. The PHN asks the nursing student how participant privacy will be managed in the study. What strategy presented by the student would be best at meeting this ethical concern?
a. Data will be used in a confidential manner b. The survey will be anonymous
c. The participants will sign a consent form
d. Ethics approval will be sought

A

b. The survey will be anonymous

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10
Q

a nurse in a large urban centre is working to provide prophylactic agents to exposed
vulnerable hosts. What action is the best example of this goal?
a. Providing varicella-zoster immune globin (VZIG) to appropriate children after a classmate is diagnosed with chickenpox
b. Administering human papilloma virus (HPV) vaccine to girls in grade 6
c. Routinely immunizing 1-year-old children for measles, mumps, and rubella
d. Tuberculosis (TB) testing exposed students at a high school after a student is diagnosed with TB

A

a. Providing varicella-zoster immune globin (VZIG) to appropriate children after a classmate is diagnosed with chickenpox

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11
Q

The public health nurses (PHNs) are busy responding to seasonal influenza in a community of approximately 75 000 people. An assisted living facility has an increased number of influenza cases among the residents. A nurse is doing an inservice with the nursing staff at the facility about the transmission of the influenza virus. Which is an example of direct transmission?
a. Inhaling a droplet from a sneeze
b. Shaking a contaminated hand
c. Drinking tainted water
d. Touching a contaminated doorknob

A

b. Shaking a contaminated hand

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12
Q

The public health nurses (PHNs) are busy responding to seasonal influenza in a community of approximately 75 000 people. An assisted living facility has an increased number of influenza cases among the residents.The PHNs are trying to protect the residents from the flu. What is an example of a primary prevention initiative?
a. Increasing assessments of the ill to identify complications early
b. Screening individuals for signs of influenza
c. Instructing individuals to sneeze into one’s arm
d. Administering Tamiflu to ill residents

A

c. instructing individuals to sneeze into one’s arm

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13
Q

The public health nurses (PHNs) are busy responding to seasonal influenza in a community of approximately 75 000 people. An assisted living facility has an increased number of influenza cases among the residents. Family members of the residents have been following FluWatch on the Public Health Agency of Canada web page. What type of reporting is FluWatch?
a. Statistics Canada information
b. Surveillance data
c. Health Reports
d. Reportable disease

A

b. Surveillance data

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14
Q

What statement best describes a cohort study?
a. It focuses on a group of people exposed to a particular health problem or potential stressor over time
b. The researcher manipulates some of the variables in order to ascertain the effect of the manipulation
c. The individuals in the group with the disease are matched with individuals who are similar in some characteristics (e.g., age, gender) but who have not manifested the disease in question
d. Selected variables within a specific population are studied to look for evidence of association and causality

A

a. It focuses on a group of people exposed to a particular health problem or potential stressor over time

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15
Q

What is an example of tertiary prevention of a communicable disease?
a. Observing clients taking tuberculosis medication
b. Demonstrating vaccine efficacy rates
c. Encouraging frequent handwashing during flu season
d. Immunizing students during a meningitis outbreak

A

a. Observing clients taking tuberculosis medication

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16
Q

What agency in Canada is currenlty responsible for gathering surveillance data on
reportable diseases?
a. Health Canada
b. Statistics Canada
c. Canadian Institutes of Health Information (CIHI)
d. Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC)

A

d. Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC)

17
Q

A nurse is concerned about a recent outbreak of measles in a group of migrant workers. How would the nurse explain the concept of incidence to a new staff member?
a. The rate at which new cases occur in a population during a specified period
b. A measurement of disease frequency
c. Occurs frequently and with predicted regularity
d. The proportion of a population that is affected by the disease at a specific time

A

a. The rate at which new cases occur in a population during a specified period

18
Q

Which epidemiological model best allows a nurse to visualize the relationships between various
determinants of health?
a. Causation criteria
b. Epidemiological triangle
c. Web of causation
d. Venn diagram

A

c. Web of causation

19
Q

What is the purpose of epidemiology?
a. The study of the occurrence and distribution of health-related states in specified populations
b. To provide statistics to direct health care funding to the appropriate cause
c. To predict and control challenges to population health
d. An area of medicine that deals with the study of the causes of disease in populations

A

c. To predict and control challenges to population health

20
Q

A nurse wants to know the current rate of human papilloma virus (HPV) infection in women aged 25 years as indicated by abnormal Pap smears. Which type of research design would be best to answer this question?
a. Manipulation methodology
b. Cross-sectional
c. Prospective cohort
d. Randomized controlled

A

b. Cross-sectional

21
Q

What type of research design was used in the Framingham Heart Study?
a. Case series
b. Cohort
c. Cross-sectional
d. Case-control

A

b. Cohort

22
Q

What term is used to answer the question “how bad is it?” and to describe the effect of a
given disease?
a. Survival rate
b. Incidence rate
c. Prevalence rate
d. Mortality rate

A

a.Survival rate

23
Q

Which of the statements below is true of the epidemiologic model
a. The classic epidemiologic model contains four elements: The agent, host, environment, and vector
b. The vector is the contagious or non-contagious force that can begin or prolong a health problem
c. The host is the human being in which the disease occurs
d. The agent is a factor that moves between the host and environment

A

c. The host is the human being in which the disease occurs

24
Q

Which of the following is included in the most commonly cited criteria for causation?
a. Specificity
b. Sensitivity
c. Qualitative replication
d. Strength of screening

A

a. Specificity

25
Q

Which of the following terms is used to compare the number of deaths from a specific cause
within the entire population?
a. Specific mortality rate
b. Infant death date
c. Crude mortality rate
d. Relative death rate

A

c. Crude mortality rate