Term
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Definition
a factor that promotes disease - can be multiple disease agents per disease. ex: obesity can be related to genetics and lifestyle. |
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Term
any organisms or substance where an infectious agent lives and multiplies |
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Definition
reservoir -- human, animal, environment |
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Term
how an infectious agent is spread |
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Definition
mode of transmission -- resp droplets |
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Term
the time during which an infectious agent may be transmitted |
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Definition
period of communicability -- can be on an individual basis (while fever lasts) or a population basis (fall/winter best time to get flu) |
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Term
2 methods of disease transmission |
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Definition
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Term
how are pathogens transmitted directly? |
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Definition
touching, kissing, bites, coughing , sex |
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Term
how are pathogens transmitted indirectly? |
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Definition
fomites, contaminated food or water, vectors (insects) |
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Term
type of indirect transmission whereby pathogens are transmitted via fomites |
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Definition
vehicle-borne transmission |
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Term
type of indirect transmission whereby pathogens are transmitted via contaminated food |
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Definition
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Term
type of indirect transmission whereby pathogens are transmitted via an intermediate organism such as the mosquito or bird |
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Definition
vector-borne transmission |
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Term
10 steps to investigating an outbreak |
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Definition
verify the diagnosis and know the inclusion criteria, verify the distribution (how does the incidence rate compare to the endemic state?), define the distribution (# of cases), examine the distribution of cases in terms of person place and time, consider variables, develop a hypothesis based on existing knowledge and biological plausibility, investigate and analyze, recommend prevention and control measures, report the investigation, prevent future outbreaks |
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Term
primary causes of foodborne outbreaks |
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Definition
improper holding temps, poor employee hygiene, inadequate cooking, contaminated equipment, food from unsafe sources |
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Term
what 3 places usually have the highest number of reported cases of foodborne illness |
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Definition
delis, cafeterias, and restaurants |
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Term
the first known case of a disease |
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Definition
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Term
the individual who introduces the disease into a family or group under study, not necessarily the first diagnosed case in a family or group |
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Definition
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Term
the subjects who got the disaes from the index or co-primary cases |
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Definition
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Term
primary attack rate = __% upon diagnosis of the index case |
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Definition
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Term
the rate of infection among exposed persons after exposure to the index case... describes the spread of disease within a group excluding the index case and co-primary cases |
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Definition
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Term
why does the attack rate model end? |
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Definition
because people either get immunity to the disease or die and can't spread it to other |
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Term
after a subject's body is invaded by a pathogen, how long is it before they become ill? |
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Definition
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Term
the most successful disease intervention is done when? |
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Definition
during the incubation period |
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Term
another word for incubation? |
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Definition
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Term
length of ___ is a good marker for diagnosis |
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Definition
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Term
___ epidemics extend over several incubation periods. ex? |
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Definition
propagated or progressive -- swine flu |
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Term
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Definition
investigating a foodborne outbreak at every possible instance of contamination |
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Term
the resistance of a group of hosts to invasion of an infectious disease based on the immunity of a high proportion of individual group members |
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Definition
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Term
demography is the study of populations with reference to: |
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Definition
population size, gender, growth, age, distribution, vital stats, mortality, fertility, and migration |
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Term
what 3 subsets of demography have the biggest influence on population distribution |
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Definition
mortality, fertility, migration |
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Term
__ and __ are the most basic characteristics of a population distribution |
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Definition
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Term
women in undeveloped countries outlive men by __ years, where as in developed countries, they outlive men by ___ years |
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Definition
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Term
what does a sex ratio over 100 tell us? |
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Definition
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Term
Less developed countries have more males/females than more developed |
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Definition
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Term
the average number of years a person is expected to live. this tends to be an under or over estimate? |
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Definition
life expectancy -- underestimate |
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Term
can life expectancy be calculated at any age? |
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Definition
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Term
____ refers to the average age a newborn baby is most likely to live if current mortality trends persist |
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Definition
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Term
if you live to be __, you can expect to live longer according to mortality trends |
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Definition
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Term
what country has the longest life expectancy? |
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Definition
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Term
___ is the average number of additional years a person of age X is likely to live if current mortality trends persist |
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Definition
life expectancy at a given age -- can help you determine potential years of life lost -- calculated based on a lifespan of 65 years |
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Term
why isn't life expectancy at a given age useful for people over 65? |
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Definition
it's based on a lifespan of 65 years |
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Term
primary vs. secondary data |
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Definition
primary - data you collect yourself, secondary - data you get from an outside source |
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Term
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Definition
voluntary response (hard to get representative sample of pop), response bias (people answer how they think you want them to), inadequate incentives for participants, low response rate, time consuming, inadequate supervision |
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Term
problems with data from hospitals |
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Definition
hospital admissions are selective, hospital records are usually not designed for research, diagnosis could be incorrect, population at risk may be defined incorrectly |
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Term
2 biggest problems with morbidity reports |
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Definition
under-numeratio and misreporting |
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Term
10 kind of cases that require an autopsy |
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Definition
fire deaths, homicides, suicides without clear evidence of intent, drivers in single-car accidents, pilots, occupational death, unwitnessed accidents, cases where civil litigation may arise, and sudden infant deaths |
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Term
how often is the census taken? |
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Definition
every 10 years over a 3 year period |
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Term
a monthly survey of about 50,000 households conducted by the Census Bureau |
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Definition
Current Population Survey (CPS) |
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Term
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Definition
birth, death, marriage, divorce, separation |
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Term
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Definition
links several sources of data on the same person - birth certificate, marriage license, death certificate, etc |
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Term
the death certificate is required upon burial and is the responsibility of who? |
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Definition
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Term
the death certificate outlines 3 causes of death; |
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Definition
immidiate (CHF), intermediate (high blood pressure), and underlying (type II diabetes) |
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Term
the census bureau data are all primary/secondary sources |
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Definition
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Term
2 types of tax-financed public assistance programs |
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Definition
medicaid (for low-income and the disabled) and VA |
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Term
the national survey of family growth (NSFG) gives information on what? |
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Definition
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Term
National Center for Health Statistics sources of Info |
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Definition
National Health interview survey (NHIS), National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NAMCS), National Hospital Discharge Survey (NHDS), National Vital Statistics System (NVSS), National Master Facility Inventory (NMFS), |
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Term
____ is the principal source of info on the health of US residents, is completed at the beginning of each ___, and is based on a sample of ___ face-face interviews |
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Definition
NHIS (national health interview survey), decade, 40,000 |
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Term
How many different NHANES and what is the difference among them? What year were they published? |
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Definition
3 - focus on different problems in the time period in question .. first one was published in 1971, last one is 2005 |
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Term
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Definition
national ambulatory medical care survey - office physicians complete a 1 page survey about patients over a 1 week period about patient demographics, diagnosis, payment, etc. |
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Term
what survey focuses on the "walking wounded" |
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Definition
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Term
who is not included in the NHDS (national hospital discharge survey) |
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Definition
people who died in the hospital |
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Term
what is the purpose of NMFIS (national master facility inventory survey)? |
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Definition
avoid duplication of services or specialties in a given area |
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Term
the purpose of ___ is to detect changes in disease trends and to initiate appropriate control measures |
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Definition
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Term
surveillance includes what 5 practices |
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Definition
systematic collections and evaluations of morbidity and mortality reports, special reports from field investigations of epidemics and individual cases, isolation and identification of infectious agents, data concerning the availability and use of vaccines, toxins, insecticides, etc, info regarding immunity levels in the population |
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Term
the presumptive identification of an unrecognized disease or defect by the application of tests, examinations, or other procedures which can be applied rapidly to sort out apparently well persons from apparently diseased persons |
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Definition
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Term
a screening test is not a ____ |
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Definition
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Term
4 phases of the screening process |
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Definition
administer a short screening test, interview, biological medical physiological etc screening, administer a research questionnaire -- cost increases with each phase, and number of people decreases |
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Term
screening tests are designed to be... |
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Definition
applied to large groups, innocuous or non-intrusive, safe, brief and simple, inexpensive, carreid out by a trained person, acceptable to the person being screened, reliable, and valid |
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Term
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Definition
reliability - gives same result every time you take it... validity - measures what it's supposed to measure |
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Term
criteria for disease selection for screening |
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Definition
the condition should be an important health issue that is treatable, the disease should be diagnosable after screening, the prognosis should be improved if the disease is detected, there should be a recognizable symptomatic stage, there should be an accepted treatment for the disease, facilities for diagnosis and treatment should be available |
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Term
when should you NOT screen for a particular disease? |
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Definition
the disease is rare or untreatable, the diagnosis cannot be made with certainty, the screening and diagnosis are more harmful than no screening, the results of screning are not reliable, the test lacks high sensitivity and specificity, the screening and diagnosis costs more than the treatment |
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Term
how do you know whether to do column or row work when calculating false positives and negatives? |
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Definition
test will say, "based on true status" = column work ... "based on % of pos tests" = row work |
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Term
in screening, what are type I and type II erros? |
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Definition
Type I = false positive, Type II = false negative |
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Term
2 most important terms in a screening test and why? |
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Definition
sensitivity and specificity -- bc they're used to calculate validity |
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Term
upon repeat screening, you test the negatives again... when do you test the positives again? |
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Definition
if you're using a better test the second time |
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Term
how does moving the cut point for inclusion criteria up and down affect negatives and positives? |
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Definition
up = more FNs and TNs, less FPs and TPs ... down = more TPs and Fps, less Fns and TNs, |
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Term
how does moving the cut point for inclusion criteria up and down affect sensitivity and specificity? |
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Definition
up - increases Sp and decreases Se |
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Term
how does moving the cutoff up or down affect sensitivity and specificity? |
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Definition
up- sensitivity down, specificity up ... down- sensitivity up, specificity down |
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Term
variation in screening is a function of what 4 things? |
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Definition
number of observers, number of patients, number of observations, administer's knowledge of the test |
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Term
increased Sp has what effected on PPV and FP? |
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Definition
increase PPV, decreased FP |
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Term
when would you want to test for a disease, even if prevalence is very low? |
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Definition
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Term
lower prevalence has what effect on PPV, TPs, and FPs |
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Definition
decrease PPV, increase TP, increase FP |
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Term
What are two ways to decrease FPs? |
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Definition
increase prevalence and increase Sp |
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Term
what tests could be done to help identify the disease-causing agent in a case such as the methodist episcopal picnic? |
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Definition
white blood cell counts (increased), blood culture and stool culture to show bacteria, platelet count (decreased), ELISA test to show antigen, fluorescent antibody study |
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Term
what is a type III error in screening? |
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Definition
program implementation error |
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Term
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Definition
shows the distribution of the time and onset of disease |
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Term
to incriminate a certain food for causing a foodborne outbreak, what evidence is necessary? |
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Definition
high susceptibility to contamination, eaten by most of the sick, person who made it proven to be a typhoid carrier |
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Term
In the foodborne outbreak case study, the macaroni salad was identified as the most probable suspect. But not everyone who got sick ate it. Explanation? |
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Definition
people could have gotten it just by putting the mac salad on their plate but not eating it... or maybe something else was contaminated that was prepared by the same person |
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Term
best way to prevent a foodborne outbreak? |
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Definition
handwashing before preparing food. |
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Term
if validity is 70%, what does that mean? |
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Definition
the test will correctly identify TP and TNs 70% of the time |
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