HSC 404: Quiz 11
Lead time bias
Difference in the time between the data of diagnosis with screening and the date of diagnosis without screening which if counted in the survival time of patients will give a misleading picture of the benefits of treatment
b
Screening fir disease involves which type of prevention? A. Primary B. Secondary C. Tertiary
Overdiagnosis bias
Screening identifies an illness that wouldn't have shown clinical signs before death from other causes
A
Selective screening involves applying the screening test to which of the following? A. High risk groups B. Low risks groups C. Selection criteria do not involve the risk level of the individual
Length bias
Slow progressing cases of disease with a better prognosis are more likely to be identified than faster progressing cases of disease with a poorer prognosis. Thus cases diagnosed through screening tend to have a better prognosis than the average of all cases
Selection bias
The screening test looks better than it actually is, because younger, healthier people are more likely to get the test
B
Which of the following best defines specificity? A. Proportion of people with the disease who have a positive test B. Proportion of people without the disease who have a negative test C. Proportion of people with a positive test who have the disease D. Proportion of people with a negative test who do not have the disease
B
Which of the following is not true? A. A screening measure may be reliable and invalid B. A screening measure may be unrealistic but valid C. A screening measure may be unreliable but invalid D. A screening measure may be reliable and valud
C
Which of the following measures is conditioned in having a positive test? A. Sensitivity B. Specificity C. Predictive value positive D. Predictive value negative
predictive
ability of a measure to predict some attribute/characteristic in the future
reliability
ability of measuring instrument to give consistent results on repeated trials
validity
ability of measuring instruments to give a true measurement
epidemiologic surveillance
aims at the protection of community health through case detection and intervention
selective screening
applied to subsets of the population at high risk for disease or certain conditions as the result of family history, age, or previous exposures. more economical and likely to yield more true cases
case-control studies
case - fatal cases of the disease; control - nonfatal cases; exposure - screening programs
ecologic time trends
compare geographic regions with screening programs ot those without
measurement bias
constant errors that are introduced by the faculty measuring device (miscalibrated blood pressure manometer)
repeated measurement
degree of consistence among repeated measurements of the same individual on more than one occasion
construct
degree to which the measurement agrees with the theoretical concept being investigated
halo effect
influence upon an observation of the observer's perception of the characteristics f the individual observed (health care provider;s tendency to rate a patient's sexual behavior used in a particular manner)
concurrent
estimate the validity of a measure by correlating it with an alternative measure of the same phenomenon taken at the same point in time
internal consistency reliability
evaluates the degree of agreement or homogeneity within a questionnaire measure of an attitude, personal characteristics, or psychological attribute
content
extent to which the measurement incorporates the domain of the phenomenon under study
recalibrate screening instrument
for those test utilize technology it may be possible to reduce the amount of imprecision through refinement of the methodology
survey
gain knowledge regarding the distribution and determinants of diseases in selected populations. not considered screening. no benefit to population.
social
health problem should be important for the individual and community. diagnostic follow-up and intervention should be available to all who require them. should be favorable cost-benefit ratio. public acceptance must be high
nomenclature
highly specific set of terms for describing and recording clinical or pathologic diagnoses to classify ill persons into groups
social desirability effect
introduced when a respondent of findings on a previous occasion manner that corresponds to the prevailing socially acceptable norms instead of giving the true answer (boys exaggerating sexual partners)
retrained screeners
if the test requires human assessment, then improving the precision of measurement through additional training sessions will reduce the amount of misclassification
utilize a different test
in some situations there may be more than one way to measure the outcome of interest. if one assay performs poorly, it may be possible to replace it with a better assay
selection bias
individuals who are more motivated enough to participate in screening programs may have a different probability of disease than individuals who refuse participation
scientific
natural history of the condition should be adequately understood. identification should occur during prepathogenesis with sufficient lead time. sound case definition in addition to a policy regarding whom to treat as patients. knowledge base exists for efficacy of prevention and occurrence of side effects. prevalence of the disease or condition is high
issues in classification
nomenclature and classification of disease are central to the reliability measurement of the outcome variable in epidemiologic research
mass health examinations
purpose is to gain new knowledge regarding the distribution and determinants of diseases in carefully selected populations.
lead time bias
perception that the screen-detected case has a longer survival simply because the disease was identified earlier in the natural history of the disease
screening
presumptive identification of unrecognized disease or detects by the application of tests, examinations, or other procedures that can be applied rapidly. Diagnostic confirmation is required, benefit with more thorough clinical examination and additional tests
ethical
provider initiates the service and should have evidence that the program can alter the natural history of the condition in a significant proportion of those screened. suitable, acceptable tests for screening and diagnosis of the condition as well as acceptable, effective methods of prevention are available
interjudge reliability
reliability assessments derived from agreement among trained experts
mass screening
screening of total population groups on a large scale, regardless of any prior information as to whether the individuals are members of a high risk subset of the population
classification
statistical compilation of groups of cases of disease by arranging disease entities into categories that share similar features
bias
systematic deviation of results/inferences from truth
improve specificity
the cut point should be moved farther in the range typically associated with the disease (high end of normal)
improve sensitivity
the cut point used to classify individuals as diseased should be move farther in the range of nondiseased (normal).
length bias
tumors that are detected by a screening program tend to be slower growing and have an inherently better prognosis than tumors that are more rapidly growing and are detected as a result of clinical manifestation
multiphasic screening
use of two or more screening tests together among large groups of people (information on risk factor status). pre-employment physical = passing the examination may be necessary condition for employment in the organization
case finding
utilization of screening tests for detection of condition unrelated to the patient's chief complaint
criterion referenced
validity that is found by correlating a measure with an external criterion of the entity being assessed
prevalence of disease
when prevalence decreases the predictive value positive falls and predictive value negative rises