Workshop 3 Flashcards

1
Q

Define risk

A

The probability that an event will occur in a group

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2
Q

Define probability

A

an estimate of the chance of an event occurring divided by the total number of chances available. E.g. a player owns 1 of 4 tickets so probability of winning is ¼

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3
Q

Define relative risk

A

probability of an event occurring in one group divided by the probability of an event occurring for a second group e.g. placebo vs treatment group

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4
Q

Define odds

A

ratios of a player’s chances of losing against her chances of winning e.g. if a player owns 1 of 4 tickets odds would be 3:1

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5
Q

What are the three measures of risk?

A
  1. RR: probability of an outcome in an exposed group compared to the probability of an outcome in an unexposed group (smokers and non-smokers)
  2. OR: measure of association between exposure and outcome (smoking and cancer)
  3. AR: Individual risk of developing a disease over a time period
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6
Q

Write the equation for RR

A

probability of event in treatment group/ probability of event in control group
A/ (A+B) / C/ (C+D)

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7
Q

There are three different outcomes to the RR calculation. Explain them

A
  • RR=1: exposure is not associated with the outcome
  • RR>1: exposure is associated with increased outcome
  • RR<1: exposure is associated with decreased outcome
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8
Q

How is the OR calculated?

A

Odds ratio= odds of exposure in people with outcome/ odds of exposure in people without outcome
A/B / C/D = AD/ BC

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9
Q

What is the 95% confidence interval?

A

The range of values in which you can be 95% certain contains the true mean of the population.

  • CI shouldn’t include 1 to be statistically significant
  • the larger the CI the lower the level of precision of the RR/OR
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10
Q

When is RR used and when is OR used?

A

OR: rare, retrospective (case-control) studies
RR: common, prospective studies

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11
Q

What is absolute risk? How is it calculated?

A

The probability or chance of an event occurring. Calculated by dividing the number of events in the group by the number of people in the group

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12
Q

How is ARR calculated?

A

AR unexposed- AR exposed

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13
Q

How is RRR calculated?

A

(AR unexposed – AR exposed)/ AR exposed

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14
Q

Which of ARR and RRR is used for individual patients and why?

A

ARR because RRR would overestimate the individual risk

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