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Epidemiology
- EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Crisbert I. Cualteros, M.D.
- http://crisbertcualteros.page.tl
- DEFINITION
- Study of the distribution and determinants of health and disease among populations and the application of such study to the prevention and control of health problems.
- Determination of the nature, extent and determinants of disease or health problems
- among populations
- COMPONENTS OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Descriptive Epidemiology
- study of the distribution of disease
- variables commonly examined are descriptive of person, place and time
- Analytic Epidemiology
- use of epidemiologic methods to explain disease occurrence or elucidate causal mechanisms
- CHARACTERISTICS / FEATURES OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
- It is a quantitative science.
- It is an applied science.
- Its methods are generally observational.
- Its focus is the group or community of persons.
- Its methods are systematic and orderly.
- DESCRIPTIVE EPIDEMIOLOGY
- I. Definition
- study the amount and distribution of disease within a population
- II . Uses
- evaluate trends in health and make comparisons
- health planning
- identify problems to be studied by analytical methods = hypothesis
- DESCRIPTIVE EPIDEMIOLOGY
- III. Community Reaction to Disease
- Absence of disease
- No cases on current record
- Disease absent from the beginning or has been eradicated
- Sporadic
- Occurrence of few and unrelated cases
- Endemic
- Constant occurrence of disease
- Epidemic
- Occurrence of a number of cases of disease in excess of the normal expectancy
- DESCRIPTIVE EPIDEMIOLOGY
- IV. Descriptive Variables
- A. Person
- 1. Age
- Different diseases show different age patterns
- Disease Characteristic Pattern of Magnitude
- Confers long lasting immunity decreasing with age
- Degenerative diseases or increasing with age
- w/ long latency
- Reflects low resistance high at extreme ages
- of young and old
- Reflects high exposure high in middle age groups
- during middle age
- VARIABLES OF PERSON
- 2. Sex
- Difference in sexual constitutional, e.g. hormonal balance
- Greater exposure of males due to habits,
- recreation, occupation, lifestyle
- Greater health consciousness of females:
- Early consultation, diagnosis and treatment
- Better compliance with treatment
- More cases recorded – artifactual reason
- VARIABLES OF PERSON
- 3. Civil Status
- Differences in lifestyle that are causally related to particular diseases
- Self-selection
- Concordance between marital partners
- Greater family support among the married
- 4. Socio-economic class – affects state of nutrition,
- level of health awareness or knowledge, etc
- 5. Genetics
- DESCRIPTIVE VARIABLES
- B. Place
- 1. Variables Of Place
- geographic divisions
- physical environment
- climate, altitude, soil, vegetation, fauna
- biological environment: infectious disease agents, animal reservoirs, vectors
- socio-cultural-political-economic environment
- related to level of development
- VARIABLES OF PLACE
- population characteristics
- density
- urban vs. rural
- mobility
- herd immunity
- PLACE
- 2. Etiology of Disease Variations
- Real Causes - reflect true increase in risk
- deteriorating or improving environment
- quality, availability and distribution of medical care
- Artifactual Causes
- reliability of diagnosis
- completeness of reporting and recording of diseases, births and deaths
- DESCRIPTIVE VARIABLES
- C. Time
- Temporal variations – changes / fluctuations in disease frequency with the passage of time
- 1. Types of Temporal Variations:
- Secular Trends
- Cyclic Fluctuations
- Short-term Irregular – e.g. Epidemics / outbreaks
- TEMPORAL VARIATIONS
- Secular Trend Cyclic Fluctuations
- Measure of frequency Mortality rates Incidence Rates
- Nature of change Increase or Almost regular rises
- decrease
- Period of observation 10 years or hours, days, weeks,
- longer months, years (≤5)
- Type of Disease Chronic Acute
- TIME
- 2. Reasons for Changes in Mortality Rates
- Artifactual or non-etiologic
- Error in the numerator
- guess diagnosis / misdiagnosis
- inaccurate counting
- change in the International Classification of Diseases
- Error in the denominator
- over or underestimate of the population
- TIME
- Change in Case Fatality Rate, w/o change in Incidence Rate
- change in availability or utilization of health care services
- change in treatment modalities
- change in risk to superimposed infections
- TIME
- Change in Incidence Rate, w/o change in Case Fatality Rate
- Artifactual or non-etiologic
- Real or etiologic
- change in disease agent
- change in herd resistance
- change in the environment
- TIME
- 3. Types of Cyclic Fluctuations
- Cyclic Intrinsic Fluctuation
- change/s in the host
- change in herd resistance
- accumulation of susceptibles
- Cyclic Extrinsic Fluctuation (seasonal variation)
- change in the environment
- change in the disease agent
- Analytic Epidemiology
- Definition
- study the determinants of disease or reasons for low and high frequency in specific groups
- employs Epidemiologic Methods :
- Definition of the problem
- Appraisal of existing facts
- Formulation of hypothesis
- Testing of hypothesis
- Conclusion and practical application
- ANALYTIC EPIDEMIOLOGY
- II. Principal Uses
- Community diagnosis
- Investigation of epidemics
- Determination of disease etiology
- Evaluation of community intervention and programs
- COMMUNITY DIAGNOSIS
- Definition of the Problem
- Determining the extent and magnitude of the problem using statistical indices
- Comparison of the statistical indices with those of other places and other diseases
- computation of economic burden of disease: cost of losses due to disability, death, treatment and prevention
- COMMUNITY DIAGNOSIS
- II. Appraisal of Existing Facts
- Determining the:
- state of knowledge of disease or health problem etiology
- distribution of the disease/ problem in terms of person, place and time
- factors associated with the disease/ problem
- COMMUNITY DIAGNOSIS
- III. Formulation of Hypothesis
- Explanations for the existence and magnitude of the disease / problem
- IV. Testing of Hypothesis
- V. Conclusion and Practical Solutions to the
- Problem
- EPIDEMICS
- Definition
- the occurrence of any number of cases of a disease clearly in excess of the normal expectancy or what usually prevails
- EPIDEMICS
- II. Causes of Epidemics
- flare up of an old or existing disease
- increased virulence of existing strain
- introduction of a new strain of the existing agent
- increased capacity to multiply
- decreased resistance of the population
- dilution of herd resistance with a susceptible population
- changes in the environment favoring disease transmission, e.g. calamities destroying health facilities, factors favoring survival and multiplication of vectors, changes in climate, temperature, etc.
- Causes of Epidemics
- new disease
- introduction of a disease not previously present in the community
- disease previously affecting lower animals affecting man for the first time
- recognition for the first time of previously occurring disease known by another name
- EPIDEMICS
- III. Classification of Epidemics according to:
- 1. Onset (of epidemic)
- explosive , abrupt, sudden – majority of cases occurring within one incubation period
- staggering , insidious, gradual
- 2. Exposure (of cases)
- mass or simultaneous – exposure occurred about the same time
- progressive – cases were exposed one after the other from a primary case
- CLASSIFICATION OF EPIDEMICS
- 3. Transmission
- common vehicle – single or multiple exposure
- propagated
- contact-transmitted: person to person
- vector-transmitted
- CLASSIFICATION OF EPIDEMICS
- 4. Epidemic Curve
- classical – short ascending, long descending limbs; water-borne
- inverted – long ascending, short descending limbs; vector-borne
- Epidemic Curve
- bell-shaped – ascending and descending limbs about equal, peak is rounded; contact-transmitted
- point - ascending and descending limbs about equal, peak is pointed; food poisoning
- EPIDEMICS
- IV. Termination of Epidemics
- eradication / killing of disease agents at the source or reservoirs
- interruption or closure of transmission
- exhaustion of susceptibles
- EPIDEMICS
- V. Steps in the Investigation of Epidemics
- 1. Definition of the problem
- verify the diagnosis
- establish existence of an epidemic
- 2. Appraisal of existing facts
- characterize the distribution of cases by person, place and time
- INVESTIGATION OF EPIDEMICS
- 3. Formulation of hypothesis
- as to source of infection, mode of transmission, factors that may have given rise to the epidemic
- 4. Testing of hypothesis
- conduct an epidemiological investigation (case control)
- 5. Conclusion and recommendations for control
- and prevention
- DETERMINATION OF DISEASE ETIOLOGY
- I. Types of Epidemiologic Studies
- A. Descriptive Studies
- 1. Uses
- determination of distribution of disease according to person, place and time
- delineation of syndrome as a disease entity
- establishment of the natural history of disease
- classification of disease
- manifestational: pathologic and symptomatic
- experiential: based on similarity of experience
- Descriptive Studies
- 2. Types
- Case report
- unit of study: single person with a disease
- limitation: based on experience of a single person
- provides first clues in the identification of a disease or adverse effects of exposure
- TYPES OF DESCRIPTIVE STUDIES
- Case series
- unit of study: group of persons with a similar disease
- Uses:
- formulation of criteria for diagnosis
- formulation of indications for treatment
- identification of prognostic factors
- determination of survival rates
- CASE SERIES
- Limitation
- limited generalizability because of unrepresentativeness of subjects and absence of comparison group
- TYPES OF DESCRIPTIVE STUDIES
- Prevalence/Cross-sectional/ Surveys
- measures prevalence of disease or an event
- information about exposure and outcome are obtained simultaneously in a well-defined population
- PREVALENCE/CROSS-SECTIONAL/ SURVEYS
- Uses
- determination of prevalence of risk factors
- determination of frequency of prevalent
- cases
- determination of health status and health
- needs
- formulation of hypothesis
- PREVALENCE/CROSS-SECTIONAL/ SURVEYS
- Advantages
- quick and easy to perform
- Disadvantages
- temporality cannot be ascertained
- selects for longer-lasting and indolent cases
- TYPES OF DESCRIPTIVE STUDIES
- Ecological Studies
- crude way of exploring relationship between environment or occupation and disease
- unit of study: populations or groups of people rather than individuals
- hypothesis generating rather than hypothesis testing
- ECOLOGICAL STUDIES
- Advantage
- simple to conduct
- Disdavantage
- individual link between exposure and effect cannot be made (ecologic fallacy)
- Types of Epidemiologic Studies
- B. Analytic Studies
- Use
- to determine whether a factor is causally associated with disease
- to test epidemiologic hypotheses
- 2. Categories
- observational/ non-experimental
- observes natural course of events
- case control study, cohort study, cross-sectional study
- CATEGORIES OF ANALYTIC STUDIES
- Experimental/ Interventional
- exposure to the factor or treatment under study controlled by investigator
- randomized clinical trial (rct), community trial, laboratory trial
- ANALYTIC STUDIES
- 3. Types
- Case-control Studies
- cases (with disease) and controls (no disease) are selected from a chosen population
- both are questioned or records are reviewed about presence or absence of a suspected cause/risk factor in the past
- CASE-CONTROL STUDIES
- 1. Uses
- to test risk factors
- preferred if disease is rare
- preferred if several factors are associated with disease of interest
- CASE-CONTROL STUDIES
- 2. Requirements for valid results
- Cases must be representative of all those with disease and clearly defined.
- Controls must be representative of all those without the disease and come from same community or source as the cases .
- CASE-CONTROL STUDIES
- 3. Analysis
- Odd’s Ratio (OR)
- proportion of those with history of exposure to the factor among the cases (a/a+c) is compared to those with history of exposure (b/b+d) to the factor among the controls
- OR = ad/bc
- ANALYSIS OF CASE CONTROL STUDIES
- Outcome (Disease)
- + -
- + a b
- Exposure
- (Factor)
- - c d
- a+c b+d
- * statistical association between factor and outcome
- exists if (a/a+c) ≠ (b/b+d)
- * association is probably causal , if OR > 1
- CASE-CONTROL STUDIES
- 4. Advantages
- more economical
- smaller sample size required
- suitable for rare diseases
- suitable for diseases associated with multiple exposures
- CASE-CONTROL STUDIES
- 5. Disadvantages
- more susceptible to bias of recall
- estimate of risk is indirect
- controls more difficult to assemble
- temporal relationship between factor and outcome cannot be ascertained
- TYPES OF ANALYTIC STUDIES
- Cohort Studies
- groups of subjects are chosen on the basis of having been exposed to a factor or not
- groups are followed up to identify those who develop the disease or outcome
- COHORT STUDIES
- Uses
- to test prognostic factors
- to directly measure risk of development of disease or outcome
- provide more definitive information about disease etiology
- preferred for study of rare exposures
- COHORT STUDIES
- 2. Requirement for valid results
- Similarity of comparison groups
- 3. Types
- concurrent
- Subjects are free of disease or outcome of interest at the time of initiation of the study.
- Investigator follows-up the groups or cohorts from exposure to appearance of disease or outcome.
- TYPES OF COHORT STUDIES
- . Non-concurrent
- Subjects who are free of the disease or outcome of interest at some point in the past are identified in terms of their exposure level.
- Disease or outcome status is determined through existing records.
- At the time the study is conducted, the specified follow-up period has elapsed.
- COHORT STUDIES
- 4. Analysis
- Relative Risk or Risk Ratio(RR)
- proportion of subjects with the disease or outcome among the exposed (a/a+b) is compared to proportion of subjects with the disease or outcome among the unexposed (c/c+d)
- RR = a/a+b ÷ c/c+d
- ANALYSIS OF COHORT STUDIES
- Outcome (Disease)
- + -
- + a b
- Exposure
- (Factor)
- - c d
- a+c b+d
- * statistical association between factor and outcome
- exists if (a/a+b) ≠ (c/c+d)
- * association is probably causal , if RR > 1
- ANALYSIS OF COHORT STUDIES
- Attributable Risk (AR)
- estimate of the amount of risk that is attributable to the risk factor
- AR = a/(a+b) - c/(c+d)
- COHORT STUDIES
- 5. Advantages
- provides direct estimate of risk
- temporality can be ascertained (for concurrent
- studies)
- less biases of recall and observation
- allows for determination of population-based rates
- controls easier to assemble
- variations in exposure can be followed-up
- unsuspected effects of the exposure may be observed
- COHORT STUDIES
- 6. Disadvantages
- more expensive
- follow-up period may be long
- high attrition rate
- large sample size required
- change in exposure rates over long periods of time
- COMPARISON OF CHARACTERISTICS OF CASE CONTROL AND COHORT STUDIES
- Case Control Cohort
- Starting population diseased group exposed group
- Control Group non-diseased unexposed
- Information Sought frequency of disease rate
- exposure to
- risk factor
- Principal bias knowledge of knowledge of
- disease influences exposure influences
- report of exposure diagnosis
- COMPARISON OF CHARACTERISTICS OF CASE CONTROL AND COHORT STUDIES
- Case Control Cohort
- Time to Complete short usually long
- Study
- Measure of Odd’s Ratio Relative Risk
- Association
- TYPES OF ANALYTIC STUDIES
- Experimental Studies
- Requirement for validity: complete comparability of comparison groups
- 1. Types
- Clinical Trial - Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT)
- investigator randomly places the subjects to one of the intervention groups
- ex. drug or surgical trials
- used if strong evidence for association already exists
- TYPES OF EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES
- Field or community trials
- subjects are people in the general population
- who are disease-free but are presumed to be
- at risk
- ex. trials of preventive measures, e.g.
- immunization
- FIELD OR COMMUNITY TRIALS
- Requirements
- high incidence of disease under study
- availability of facilities for observation
- accessibility of subjects
- availability of resources for precise diagnosis
- and follow-up
- EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES
- 2. Analysis
- comparison of disease or outcome rate in
- experimental (P 1 ) = (a/a+c) and control
- groups (P 2 ) = (b/b+d)
- ANALYSIS OF EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES
- Therapeutic / Preventive
- Measure + -
- + a b
- Disease/
- Outcome - c d
- a+c b+d
- ANALYSIS OF EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES
- Protective Value = P 2 – P 1
- P 2
- EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES
- 3. Advantage
- Provide the strongest evidence for testing hypothesis
- 4. Limitation
- ethical issues, especially for clinical trials
- Determination of Disease Etiology
- II. Assessment of Results
- 1. determine if statistical association between factor and outcome occurs
- 2. if association exists, determine if due to:
- chance
- perform significance testing
- extraneous or confounding variables
- matching
- specification or restriction
- standardization of rates
- stratified analysis
- Assessment of Results
- if association exists, determine if due to:
- causal relationship
- criteria:
- 1. measures of strength of association – OR, RR, Protective Value
- 2. temporality – exposure occurred prior to outcome
- 3. dose-response relationship
- CRITERIA FOR CAUSAL ASSOCIATION
- 4. specificity – factor associated with only 1 or
- limited number of diseases
- 5. consistency of association – distribution of factor and disease is similar in different
- sub-groups
- 6. biologic plausibility – consistency with existing knowledge