Environmental Health Ch 2

¡Supera tus tareas y exámenes ahora con Quizwiz!

confounding

distortion of a measure to the effect of an exposure on an outcome due to the association of the exposure w/ other factors that influence the occurence of the outcome ex. thinking construction workers get lung cancer due to dust but in reality its because they smoke more

selection bias

distortions that result from procedures used to select subjects and form factors that influence participation in the study ex. healthy worker effect

epidemiologic triangle: environment

domain in which disease causing agents may exist, survive, or originate

hill's criteria of causality : biological gradient

dose-response curve

strengths of environmental epidemiology

engages the real world unique persepctive on disease/health basis for action despite ignorance of mechanism

why are researched often prohibited from using experimental methods? what do they do instead?

ethical issues such as potential dangers to subjects observational science that takes advantage of naturally occurring situations in order to study the occurrence of disease

case fatality rate (CFR)

measure of the lethality of a disease (number of deaths due to disease X / number of cases of disease X ) * 100 during a time period

3 major requirements for the successful epi investigation of environ exposures

1. direct and accurate estimates of the expsoure experienced by indiivdual members 2. direct and accurate determination of the disease status of individuals 3. appropriate statistical summarization and analysis of the individual data pertaining to disease and ezposure

epidemiology is important to the study of envrionmental health problems b/c ____, ___, ____, ____

1. many exposures and health effects associated w/ the eviron occur at the pop level 2. epi methods of natural experiments and observational techniques are appropriate 3. study designs used in epi research can be applied directly to the study of environ health issues 4. epi aids in the development of hypotheses and the study of causal relationships

epidemiologic triangle

3 major factors: host, agent, environment

incidence rate

=(number of new cases/total population at risk over a time period ) x multiplier (like 100,000)

hill's criteria of causality : consistency

a consisntent association is one that has been observed repeatedly by different persons, in different places, circumstances, and times

hill's criteria of causality : specificity

a given disease results from a given exposure and not from other types of exposures one-to-one causation is unusual b/c many diseases have more than one causal factor

disease clustering

a closely grouped series of events or cases of a disease or other health-related phenomena with well defined distribution patterns in relation to time or place or both; term is usually used to describe aggregation of relatively uncommon events or diseases like leukemia may suggest common exposure to environmetal hazard

ecologic study

a study in which the units of analysis are populations or groups of ppl rather than individuals; many uncontrolled factors

point prevalence

a type of prevalence all cases of or deaths from a disease or health condition that exist at a particular point in time relative to a specific population from which the cases are derived =number of persons ill / total number in the group at a point in time

2 primary functions of descriptive epi

assess variations in the occurrence of disease in populations aid in the development of etiologic hypotheses

hill's criteria of causality : plausibility

association must be bioloigcally plausible from the standpoint of contemporary biological knowledge

why is the incidence rate considered a rate?

b/c of the specification of the time period during which the new cases occur

recall bias

cases may remember an exposure more clearly than controls

polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs)

classified as dioxin-like chemicals, these substances comprise an extensive class of organochlorines; thru biological processes can become increasingly concentrated in foodstuffs, are potential carcinogens, & can impact reproductive system

cohort studies

classifies subjects according to their exposure to a factor of interest and then observes them over time to document the occurrence of new cases (incidence) of disease; type of longitudinal design; prospective or retrospective; uses Relative risk

epidemiology aids the envrionmental health field thru ____, ___, ____, ____

concern with populations use of observational data methodology for study designs descriptive and analytic studies

characteristics of environmental epidemiology

deals with nondisease effects involves numerous variables tends to be community specific

time variables

decade, year, month, week, day

examples of person variables

demographic characteristics such as sex, age, and race/ethnicity

place variables

denote geographic locations including a specific country or countries, and places where localized patterns of disease may occur

descriptive epidemiology

depiction of the occurrence of disease in populations according to classification by person, place, and time variables ; fundamental approach by epidemiologists; aim to delineate the patterns and manner in which disease occurs in a pop

hill's criteria of causality

evaluation of causal association based on nine causal criteria: strength consistency specificity temporality biological gradient plausibility coherence

analytic epi

examines causal (etiologic) hypotheses regarding the association b/w exposures and health conditions propose and evaluate causal models that employ both outcome variables and exposure variables

healthy worker effect

example of selection bias employed people chosen as research subjects in studies of occupational health b/c healthier people likely to be employed reduced measure of effect for an exposure that increases morbiidity and mortality

hippocrates

expounded on the role of environmental factors such as water quality and the air in causing diseases didnt delineate specific known agents involved in the causality of health problems

epidemiologic triangle: agent

factor such as a microorganism, chemical substance, or form of radiation, whose presence of relative absence is essential for theoccurrence of disease

sir percival pott

first individual to describe an environmental cause of cancer, suggest a way to prevent the disease, led indirectly to the synthesis of the first known pure carcinogen and the isolate of the first carcinogenic chemical to be obtained from a natural product chimney sweeps had a high incidence of scrotal cancer(he hypothesized b/c of soot) ; occupational hygiene measure- recommended chimney sweeps bathe once a week foundation of cancer prevention

TX sharpshooter effect

in a random distributions of cases of cancer over a geographic are, some cases will appear to occur very close together just on basis of random variation. ex. painting targets around bullet holes after shooting

case series study

info about patients who share a disease in common is gathered over time; weakest for making causal assertions; can be useful for developing hypotheses for further study ; info is preliminary and a starting point

intervention study

intentional chance in some aspect of the status of the subject

long latency period

limit to ability to derive causal inferences

low incidence and prevalence

limit to ability to derive causal inferences dependent on less powerful research designs such as descriptive and case control studies

difficulties in exposure assessment

limit to ability to derive causal inferences levels of expsoure (esp low level) often uncertain sometimes several expsosures are mixed

john snow

linked a cholera outbreak in london to contaminated water from the thames river; natural experiment methodology; 1855: Nuisances Removal and DIsease Prevention Amendments Bill- reform of pbh legislation to control release into the atmosphere of fumes from operations such as gas works, silk boiling works, and bone boiling factories; Snow contended that these odors were not a disease hazard in the community b/c people with high exposures who worked in these factories didn't have ill health effects, so at a lower exposure the community shouldn't either

randomized contrlled trials

manipulation of an exposure variable and random assignment of subjects to either a treatment group or a control group tests the efficacy of new medications, medical regimens, and vaccines

quasi experiments

manipulation of an exposure variable, but subjects are not randomly allocated to the study conditions (ex. treating one city with fluoridated water and the other with plain)

advantage of using mortality as an end point

may be relevant to agents that have a subtle effect over a long period of time

odds ratio (OR)

measure of association b/w exposure and out come used in case control studies; uses 2X2 table; OR=(a/c)/(b/d)=(ad)/(bc) ; >1 suggests positive association

natural experiments

naturally occuring circumstances in which subsets of the pop have different lvls of exposure to a supposed causal factor, in a situation resembling an actual experiment where human subejcts would be randomly allocated to groups ex. john snow's work

nonspecific effects

nonspecific outcome- associated w/ several different environemntal expsoures majority of the diseases thought to be related to environmental expsures are influenced by many factors complicated

epidemiologic triangle: host

person or other living animal that affords subsistence or lodgment to an infectious agent under natural conditions

weaknesses of environmental epidemiology

sample size is insufficient important variables "uncontrolled" exposure estimation invalid

Descriptive studies provide info for__, ___, ___

setting priorities identifying hazards formulating hypotheses for new occupational risk

hill's criteria of causality: strngth

strong associations give support to causal relationship b/w factor and disease but should not be too ready to dismiss causal associations when the strngth of the association is small

unique characteristic of epi

studies the entire population and therefore sometimes called population medicine

environemental epidemiolgy

study of diseases and health conditions that are linked to environmental factors; exposures usually may be considered involuntary (exposure factors lie outside the individual's immediate control) ; focus on health effects linked to degredation of the air we breath, the water we drink, and the food we eat

epidemiology

study of the distribution and determinants of health and diseases, morbidity, injuries, disability, and mortality in populations

case control studies

subjects who participate in the study are defined on the basis of presence of absence of an outcome of interest; exposure to factor determined retrospectively; uses odds ratio

bias

systematic deviation of results or inferences from the truth

hill's criteria of causality : coherence

the cause and effect interpretation of our data should not seriously conflict with generally known facts of the natural history and biologu of the diseaes

standardized mortality ratio (SMR)

the ratio of the # of deaths observed in the study group to the # that would be expected if the study pop had the same specific rates as the standard population (often multiplied by 100) ; denoted by a percentage ; about 100% means the SMR in the study pop is higher than the comparison pop

relative risk (RR)

the ratio of the incidence rate of a disease in an exposed group to the incidence rate of the disease in a non exposed group; RR = (A/A+B)/(C/C+D); >1 statistically significant /positive association <1 protective largely affected by disease misclassification

latency

the timer interval b/w initial expsure to a disease causing agent and the appearance of a disease or its manifestations in the host

population at risk

those members of the pop who are capable of developing the disease or condition being studied

cross secctional studies

type of prevalence study in which the distribution of disease and exposure are determined; one time assessment of the prevalence of disease; may be used to formulate hypotheses that can be followed up in analytic studies

hill's criteria of causality : temporality

we must observe the cause before the effect


Conjuntos de estudio relacionados

Medical Surge II HESI prep EAQ questions

View Set

Foundations in Business - Exam 2

View Set

APUSH Cowart Test Hints Chapters 30- 31 (including parts of 29) (complete)

View Set

Marketing Exam 1 Study Guide (Chapters 1-4)

View Set

Chapter 23 Nurse Leader and Manager

View Set