Test Answers on epidemiology test 2 – Flashcards

Unlock all answers in this set

Unlock answers
question
Analytic epidemiology
answer
involves finding and quantifying associations, testing hypotheses, and identifying causes of health-realted states or events
question
most epidemiological studies are ______, relying on naturally occurring situations. few are ______
answer
observational; true experiments
question
Observational design
answer
no control over the exposure factor unable to assign subjects randomly to study conditions
question
experimental design
answer
control who is exposed to a factor of interest assign subjects randomly to study groups
question
basic analytic research question
answer
is there an association between _______(variable of interest) and _______(health related state/event) in ___________(population)? is there an association between fried food consumption and heart disease in texans?
question
operationalizing variables
answer
how variables are defined for the study fried food consumption: number of times consumed fried food in past week Tobacco use: lifetime use, current use-yes,no,#per day Social support: number of friends, perception on scale of 1-5 Injury: number, severity
question
data sources: primary
answer
data collected for a specific study; researcher can determine how variables are operationalized
question
data sources: secondary
answer
data collected for other studies or purposes researcher cannot determine how variables are operationalized
question
study samples: convenience (non-representative) sample
answer
online polls conducted by media outlets that allows anyone to respond; lower generalizability (External validity)
question
study samples: population representative sample
answer
samples used in public health surveillance surveys such as BRFSS Higher generalizability
question
cross-sectional study designs: characteristics
answer
measurements all taken at one point in time- a snapshot unit of analysis is an individual (Each observation is one person)
question
cross-sectional study designs: best uses
answer
when little is known about the association between exposure and outcome; to generate a hypothesis for future studies
question
cross-sectional study designs: advantages and limitations
answer
advantages: several associations between variables can be studied at same time; low cost and time requirements, especially if using "Secondary" data limitations: cannot typically determine if exposure preceded the outcome; hard to study exposures or outcomes of low frequency
question
ecological study design
answer
analysis based on grouped data units of analysis are populations or groups of people, not individuals e.g. nations, states, census tracts, counties
question
ecological study designs- types of group level variables
answer
summary of individual-level variable property of the group
question
summary of individual-level variable
answer
e.g., median household income, % with high school diploma, % obese, prevalence or incidence rates
question
property of the group variable
answer
neighborhood grocery stores, seat belt legislation, neighborhood poverty, neighborhood cohesion
question
ecological study advantages and disadvantages
answer
advantages: 1) may provide information about context of health 2) allows for investigation of factors that affect entire groups 3) can be performed when individual level measurements are not available 4) allows for investigation of causal processes occurring at the group level Disadvantages: 1) associations seen at the group level may not apply at the individual level
question
ecological fallacy
answer
an erroneous inference that may occur because an association observed between variables on an aggregate level does not necessarily represent sdfnsdjfsdaf
question
variable
answer
characteristic that varies from one observation to the next, and can be measures or categorized
question
observations can refer to ________ or _______
answer
individuals or groups
question
case-control study; two groups used from study population; unit of observation/analysis?
answer
identify possible causes of disease by finding out how those who have disease differ from those who don't two groups: one with disease (cases) and one without disease (controls) basic premise: compare those with disease to those without disease on exposures, analyze differences to help infer causes unit of analysis=individuals
question
sources of cases: goal?
answer
to ensure all true cases have equal probability of being in study and no false cases enter Ideally identify and enroll all incident cases in specified population in specified period of time---when all cases in population identified little question about representativeness Cases can be selected from various sources: disease registers, cases identified in other study, hospital records
question
population based controls
answer
choosing controls from same population
question
sources of controls
answer
population-based controls patients from same hospital as cases relatives or associates of cases
question
interpretation of an odds ratio- OR=1.0, OR=2.0, OR1
answer
OR=1.0-indicates no association between exposure and outcome (not statistically significant) OR>1.0- suggests positive association between exposure and disease OR=2.0- suggests odds of exposure are 2 times higher among diseased than among non diseases OR<1- indicates that exposure might be a protective factor
question
primary strength of case-control studies
answer
allow study of rare diseases/outcomes- participants with the outcomes are purposefully selected into the study sample
question
error
answer
a false or mistaken result of a measurement or study
question
random error
answer
portion due to chance can result from: measurement error (imprecision), sampling variability Larger sample size reduces chance of random error
question
systematic error (bias)
answer
consistently wrong in a particular direction; AKA bias Drawing all samples from women's college; if scale is not calibrated More problematic than random error May be present without investigator being aware Sources may be difficult to identify Influence may be difficult to assess
question
opportunities for error
answer
...
question
Types of bias: selection bias, information bias, confounding
answer
selection: systematic error related to the study sample information: systematic error resulting from inaccuracy in measurement confounding- sometimes considered type of bias
question
selection bias
answer
selection of cases and control for a study that is based in some way on the exposure results in a relationship between exposure and outcome among participants to differ from what exists in the population
question
neyman's bias
answer
form of selection bias in case-control studies due to higher survival among prevalent cases
question
information bias: observation bias (recall bias and interviwer bias)
answer
observation: differential accuracy in data collection between study groups. recall- in case-control studies, occurs when subjects remember past exposure differently depending on their outcome status. interviewer- interviewer probes cases differently than controls
question
information bias: misclassification
answer
either exposure or outcome status is inaccurately assigned
question
confounding; how to address
answer
occurs when an extrinsic factor is associated with a disease outcome, and independent of that association, is also linked with the exposure can be addressed with stratification
question
cohort study
answer
Analytic epidemiological study in which subsets of a defined population can be identified who are, have been, or in the future may be exposed or not exposed, or exposed in different degrees to a factor or factors hypothesized to influence the occurrence of a given disease or other outcome
question
main feature of cohort study
answer
observation of large numbers over a long period, with comparison of incidence rates in groups that differ in exposure levels
question
cohort
answer
population group that is followed over a period of time
question
what type of study compares those with and without an outcome in terms of exposures?
answer
case control study
question
which type of study design compares exposed and unexposed groups in terms of outcomes?
answer
cohort study
question
risk ratio
answer
measure of association used in cohort studies; AKA relative risk, abbreviated RR Probability of the health-related state or event among those exposed relative to the probability of the health-related state or event among the unexposed
question
interpretation of risk ratio
answer
RR>1=positive association between exposure and disease RR<1= exposure may be a protective factor RR=1 = no association between exposure and outcome Those who were exposed to ____ were RR times as likely to develop _____ than those who were not exposed to ____
question
prospective cohort study
answer
exposure is measured before outcome occurs
question
retrospective cohort study
answer
both the exposures and outcomes have already occurred by the time the study begins. uses historical data to determine exposure level at a baseline in the past
question
what is the measure of association used in a cohort study?
answer
relative risk or risk ratio RR
question
What is measure of association used in a case-control study?
answer
odds ratio
question
interpreting risk ratio
answer
those who were exposed to {exposure} were RR times as likely to develop {outcome] than those who were not exposed to [exposure]
question
itnerpreting odds ratio
answer
those with [outcome] were OR times as likely to have been exposed to [exposure] than those without [outcome]
question
key characteristics of cohort studies
answer
use individual data (Eg patients) classification based on exposure status can be restrospective or prospective able to evaluate multiple outcomes
question
selection bias in cohort studies: differential loss to follow up
answer
loss to follow-up associated with exposure and disease status (eg more exposed who developed outcome were lost than unexposed who develop outcome)
question
selection bias in cohort studies: healthy worker effect
answer
all exposed are employed; unexposed from general population, some are not employed
question
information bias in cohort studies: differential misclassification
answer
in study of sexual activity and cervical cancer, women who are sexually active (Exposed) are more likely to seek medical attention and receive diagnosis of cancer than women who are not sexually active (non exposed)
question
advantages of cohort studies
answer
1. provide direct estimate of risk 2. are useful for rare exposures 3. can study more than one outcome 4. temporal relationships more clear
question
disadvantages of cohort studies
answer
1. longer, larger, and more expensive vs case-control 2. prone to certain types of bias (attrition, misclassification) 3. not useful for rare diseases
question
Observational vs experimental studies
answer
in observational, researcher observes exposures that occur outside researcher's control In experiment (AKA intervention) studies, the researcher determines who is exposed
question
Why do intervention/experimental studies have a special significance?
answer
Have ability to assign exposure status; reduces potential for bias and confounding
question
Experimental study
answer
A study in which the investigator intentionally alters one or more factors and controls the other study conditions in order to analyze the effects of so doing. A study in which conditions are under the direct control of the investigator.
question
primary purpose of experimental studies
answer
Test the efficacy of prevention and therapeutic interventions
question
What is the "gold standard" for establishing cause-effect relationships?
answer
Experimental studies
question
Experimental studies are reserved for relatively _______ questions, due to time, expense, and ethical considerations
answer
mature
question
Clinical studies
answer
evaluate the efficacy and safety of a new drug or new medical procedure
question
Prophylactic trials
answer
test preventive measures
question
Therapeutic trials
answer
evaluate new treatment methods
question
Main types of experimental studies
answer
1. randomized controlled trials (RCT)- intervention is applied to individuals (patients, students, workers) 2. community trials- intervention is applied to groups (Schools, worksites, communities)
question
Quasi-experimental studies
answer
Intervention not randomly assigned (often the case with community studies) No control/comparison group- a within group design- outcome in single group is compared before and after assigned intervention
question
Natural experiments
answer
exposure/change occurs outside researcher's control no random assignment
question
randomized control trial- unit of analysis?
answer
individual
question
A randomized controlled trial in a clinical setting is referred to as a _______ trial
answer
clinical trial
question
Randomized controlled trial
answer
1. researcher takes a larger group of people and uses random assignment to divide them into two smaller groups 2. group 1 gets real medicine 3. group 2 gets placebo 4. subjects are blinded as to their group membership
question
Randomized community trial
answer
Intervention designed for the purpose of educational and behavioral changes at population or group level- unit of analysis is the group
question
group randomization for a randomized community trial; examples of groups; potential for what kind of bias and why?
answer
Groups or naturally forming clusters are randomly assigned the intervention. Groups may be: medical practices, schools, hospitals, communities. Potential for selection bias- individuals or patients within a cluster are likely to be more similar to each other compared to those in other clusters
question
random assignment- makes intervention and control groups look as _____ as possible; _____ is only factor that determines group assignment; neither ______ nor ______ know in advance which prevention program or therapy will be assigned
answer
Similar; Chance; Patient not physician
question
Advantages/disadvantages of randomized controlled clinical trials
answer
Advantages- eliminates conscious bias due to physician or patient selection; averages out unconscious bias due to unknown factors; groups are "alike on average" Disadvantages- ethical issues; can interfere with doctor-patient relationship
question
Blinding: single blind, double blind, triple blind
answer
Single- subjects; placebo controlled study; subjects are blinded but investigatos are aware of who is receiving treatment Double- investigators; neither subjects not investigators know who is receiving treatment Triple- analyses- treatment and research approaches kept a secret from subjects and investigators and analyses completed in a manner that is removed from the investigators
question
Why blind patients:
answer
Patients try to get well/please physicians; minimize potential bias from a placebo effect.
question
problems with blinding
answer
For non-drug studies such as those involving behavior changes or surgery, it may be impossible or unethical to blind. It may also be problematic to blind in drug studies where a treatment has characteristic side effects.
question
Participants of randomized experimental studies- inclusion criteria, if the outcome is rare, exclusion criteria
answer
inclusion- broad vs specific- related to extent of generalization to population of interest. Is outcome rare? Then recruit from populations at high risk. Exclusion- exclude those with difficulty in complying. Helps control error.
question
Experimental studies- advantages
answer
Able to experimentally manipulate exposure. Able to make strong causal inferences.
question
Experimental studies disadvantages
answer
Limited in application- not suitable for many research questions and interventions. Generalizability to larger populations may be difficult/limited
question
Ethics in experimental research: respect for persons, beneficence, justice
answer
Informed consent; confidentiality; compensation Benefit to participant over scientific curiosity; risks must be acceptable in relation to potential benefits for participant. Justice- equitable distribution of benefits and burdens. Minimal targeting of vulnerable population who are incapable of making informed decisions.
Get an explanation on any task
Get unstuck with the help of our AI assistant in seconds
New