Term
___ epidemiological studies have controlled assignment. ____ studies have uncontrolled assignment. This being said, which study is considered active and which is passive? |
|
Definition
experimental (active), observational (passive) |
|
|
Term
What is the main difference between experimental and observational studies? |
|
Definition
experimental, the experimenter has direct control over who gets what condition. the difference is NOT random assignment. |
|
|
Term
the ____ group in an experiment receives no treatment, whereas the ___ groups recieve different treatments from each other (drug a and drug b) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
example of an observational study |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
3 types of study designs on the test |
|
Definition
prospective, unmatched case-control, and matched case-control |
|
|
Term
what study design will involve absolute risk/incidence rate in every calculation? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which of bradford hill's criteria is most important? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
can you calculate relative odds? |
|
Definition
yes, but it's not done because we do relative risk instead because it uses incidence and prevalence |
|
|
Term
difference between coherence and biological plausibility |
|
Definition
coherence is logical, biological plausibility is well grounded in science |
|
|
Term
how are effects measured in an experimental study? |
|
Definition
comparing the experimental and comparison or control groups |
|
|
Term
how do you avoid bias in an experimental study? |
|
Definition
members of the experimental and control groups should be similar in as many ways as possible |
|
|
Term
a ___ is an experiment in which the unit of allocation to receive a preventative intervention regimen is an entire community or political subdivision. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the administration of a test regimen to humans to evaluate its safety and efficacy. usually refers to a rigorously designed and executed experiment involving test and control treatments and randomization. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
3 main types of clinical trials |
|
Definition
prevention trial, intervention trial (secondary prevention), and therapeutic trial (tertiary prevention) |
|
|
Term
in a ____ clinical trial, the agent or procedure is given to relieve symptoms or improve survivorship in diseased individuals. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
___ clinical trials could be designed to reduce/eliminate long-term impairment and disability, minimize suffering, or promote adjustments to irremediable conditions |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
in ___ clinical trials, the researcher intervenes with a disease for people at increased risk (obese people and heart disease). classic example? |
|
Definition
intervention - MRFIT (multiple risk factor intervention trial) |
|
|
Term
in ___ clinical trials, the effectiveness of a prevention procedure (exercise to prevent heart disease) are determined. These generally involve health eating habits, physical fitness, and quality of life. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
in ___ studies, nature is allowed to take its course |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
in ___ studies, changes or differences in one characteristic are studied in relation to changes or differences in others, without the intervening of the investigator. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
2 other names for observational studies |
|
Definition
non-experimental or quasi-experimental |
|
|
Term
4 types of observational studies |
|
Definition
case-control, cross-sectional, historical prospective, prospective (logitudinal) |
|
|
Term
___ studies can be considered a "slice in time" because they involve POINT PREVALENCE. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
in ___ studies, we begin with a DISEASED person and look back to see waht caused it. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
in ___ studies, we begin with EXPOSED people and look FORWARD to see how it's affected them. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
survey studies are usually ___ studies |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
cross sectional studies are AKA |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
in a cross-sectional study, can the temporal sequence of cause and effect be determined? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
a group of women are interviewed to determined their use of video display terminals and whether they had a miscarriage. this is a ___ study (observational) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
3 advantages to cross sectional studies |
|
Definition
inexpensive and simple to do, no subjects are exposed to the causal agent, can be the baselline for future prospective studies |
|
|
Term
5 limitations to cross sectional studies |
|
Definition
establishes association but not causation, impossible to ensure that variables are equally distributed among groups, often depends upon recall of the patients, Neyman Bias, may have an uneven sample size |
|
|
Term
the ___ bias happens when early deaths and those in which evidence of exposure has disappeared are missed. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
case control studies begin in the ___ and look toward the ____ |
|
Definition
begin in the present and look toward the past |
|
|
Term
a ____ study involves diseased and non-diseased poeple, NOT exposed and unexposed |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
5 advantages of a case-control study |
|
Definition
can be done quickly, usually cheap, smaller number of subjects, no attrition problems, minimal ethical issues |
|
|
Term
2 disadvantages to case-control studies |
|
Definition
difficult to determine causation, cannot determine incidence |
|
|
Term
5 times when you use a prospective study |
|
Definition
when you can associate the disease with a specific exposure, when the exposure is rare but the incidence of the disease among the exposed is high, when the time between the exposure and the disease is short, when appropriate funds are available, and when the investigated has a long life expectancy |
|
|
Term
2 types of prospective studies |
|
Definition
people initially identified with know diseases and a cohort of unknown diseases are followed forward in time :: a cohort where diseased status is initially unknown is followed in time |
|
|
Term
a prospective study involves what 3 calculations? |
|
Definition
incidence, prevalence, and relative risk |
|
|
Term
in a ___ study, the investigator usually selects their sample from a defined population, which consists of exposed and unexposed people. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
in a ___ study, the sample is followed over time and data is collected at a minimum of 2 points (beginning and end) to compute incidence rates between selected exposures and outcomes |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
6 advantages to doing a prospective study |
|
Definition
management of confounding varaibles through random selection, study is not limited by past constraints, allows directionality (a precedes b), helps assess causation, no recall necessary, calcualtion of incidence and prevalence |
|
|
Term
3 disadvantages of a prospective study |
|
Definition
expensive and time consuming, ethical problems, attrition problems |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
a ____ study is a cohort study that is done by reconstructing data about subjects at a given time in the past. |
|
Definition
historical prospective study |
|
|
Term
a ___ study uses pre-existing records to evaluate the health of a population, in terms of a particular disease of interest at the present time. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
a study of people exposed to the atomic bomb in Hiroshima is an example of what kind of study/ |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
trying to find results that the public wants to hear |
|
|
Term
a ____ study is the only direct measure of risk |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which is a more accurate estimation of risk? Relative risk or Odds ratio? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which is a better measure of risk? Prospective (direct) or case-control (indirect)? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the proportion of a disease attributable to a particular exposure |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the proportion of the absolute risk in the exposed group that is attribuatble to the exposure |
|
Definition
proportion of attributable risk |
|
|
Term
What does the proportion of attributable risk tell us? |
|
Definition
if PAR = 12% for smoking and cancer, then there should be a total reduction of 12% in the incidence of cancer in this population if smoking were eliminated |
|
|
Term
what calculation answers these questions: is there an association between exposure and disease? if so, how strong is that association? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what does a relative risk factor <1 tell us? =1? >1? |
|
Definition
<1 - protective factor (negative association - you SHOULD engage in this behavior because it is beneficial to your health :: =1 - null hypothesis, equal risk :: >1 - risk (positive association) - you SHOULD NOT engage in this behavior because it is harmful to your health. |
|
|
Term
what does a relative risk of 1.61 mean? |
|
Definition
there is a 61% increase of risk over the null hypothesis. |
|
|
Term
when is Odds Ratio a good approximation of relative risk? |
|
Definition
the cases studied are representative of all people with the disease in the population from which the cases were drawn with regard to the history of exposure :: when the controls studied are representative of all people without the disease in the population from which the cases were drawn wtih regard to the history of exposure :: when the disease being studied is infreqeunt |
|
|
Term
what studies use odds ratios? |
|
Definition
case-control, historical prospective, cross-sectional |
|
|
Term
2 types of causal judgement |
|
Definition
overall and one study at a time |
|
|
Term
3 epidemiological processes used to aid in determining causation |
|
Definition
clinical observations, analysis of data, multiple studies with different designs and investigators |
|
|
Term
a ___ is a variable that can cause or prevent the desired outcome |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
____ literally means "to mix together" |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
___ can occur when adjustment is made for any factor that is caused in part by the exposure and also is correlated with the outcome |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
___ error is the portion of variation in a measurement due to chance (no association with any other known variables) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
____ error is the portion of variation in a measurement that originates from a recognizable source (ex: math errors) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
systematic error are due to sloppiness and could also be called type ___ errors |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what 3 conditions must be ruled out for a study to be considered valid |
|
Definition
chance, bias, and confounders |
|
|
Term
9 Bradford Hills Criteria |
|
Definition
strength of association, dose-response relationship (biological gradient), temporal relationship, specificity of association, consistency of association, biological plausibility, coherence, alternative explanations ruled out, analogy |
|
|
Term
which BH criteria? is there a credible biological mechanism to explain the development of the disease or increased risk for the disease? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which BH criteria? do the findings about the relationship between the exposure and the disease agree with known facts or existing knowledge/ |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which BH criteria? to what extent has the possibility of alternative explanations been adequately considered and excluded? |
|
Definition
alternative explanations ruled out |
|
|
Term
which BH criteria? when action is taken, does the disease still occur? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which BH criteria? examine the relative risks, odss ratios, and confidence intervals |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which BH criteria? as dose of exposure increases, does risk of disease increase? |
|
Definition
dose-response relationship |
|
|
Term
which BH criteria? dose exposure precede disease? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which BH criteria? is the exposure specific to the disease? |
|
Definition
specificity of association |
|
|
Term
which BH criteria? is there consistency in the findings reported in different studies, using different study designs, methods, or in different populations? |
|
Definition
consistency of association |
|
|
Term
by examining a single study at a time according to BH criteria, the reviewer ultimately comes up with 2 stacks of studies: |
|
Definition
those that support causality and those that dont |
|
|
Term
An RR and OR between __ and __ suggests a causal relationship |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
and OR or RR greater than __ means that an idea MIGHT be causal and further investigation should be done |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
31 of 35 studies suggest a causal relationship - consistency = 89% (31/35) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
specificity of association |
|
Definition
the idea that one cause should lead to one outcome, although this is not always true as with obesity and heart disease/stroke |
|
|
Term
steps in an unmatched case-control study |
|
Definition
select cases and controls, determine past exposure -- MUST be done in this order |
|
|
Term
in a matched case-control study, the controls are selected by matching each to a case based on ?? |
|
Definition
variables that are known to be related to disease risk |
|
|
Term
which study design is stronger? Matched or unmatched case-control |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
4 types of Matched case-control studies |
|
Definition
Concordant pairs: pairs in which both the cases and controls were exposed, pairs in which both the cases and controls were unexposed :: Discordant pairs: Pairs in which the case was exposed and the control was not, Pairs in which the control was exposed and the case was not |
|
|
Term
Are concordant or discordant pairs more important in matched case-control studies? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Odds ratio in a matched case-control study is based on ____ pairs only. |
|
Definition
discordant (b and c) -- a and d are ignored |
|
|
Term
RR is calculated directly in a ____ study. Because it can't be calculated directly in a ____ study, OR is calculated instaed. |
|
Definition
prospective, case-control |
|
|
Term
BH's ______: If more exposure leads to more disease, then the case for causality is strengthened. |
|
Definition
dose-response relationship |
|
|
Term
implication of BH's biological plausibility and specificity. |
|
Definition
plausibility and specificity strengthen the case for causality if it is proven, however lack of these do not weaken it ... for instance John Snow and Cholera (at the time, his hypothesis was not biologically plausible) |
|
|
Term
BH's criterion, _____ has to do wtih whether the phenomena makes logical sense, although it does not have to correspond with current theories, it should not conflict with them. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
___ is the weakest form of evidence in BH's criteria |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
BH's criterion, ______ is when anything well-known is used to explain something unknown |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
3 cognitive methods of causality |
|
Definition
biological plausibility, coherence, analogy |
|
|
Term
Implications of BH's criteria |
|
Definition
they do not all need to be met to establish causality, but the more the better |
|
|