EPI 504 final
the formula to estimate prevalence odds ratio from a 2x2 table is
(axd)/(bxc)
when there is not misclassification in a study, the values for sensitivity and specificity would be
1 or 100%
the odds of an event can be calculated as
P/(1-P)
describe the healthy worker effect
a certain kind of selection bias that may occur in cohort studies of occupational exposures. the effect occurs when the general population is used as a comparison group, because the general population may not necessarily be as healthy as those who have an occupation
which of the following criteria are used to assess confounding
a priori criteria and data-based criteria
if the crude effect estimate is significantly different from the stratum-specific estimates based on a third variable, but the stratum-specific estimates are similar to each other, which estimate will you report?
adjusted
the numerator in the equation of calculate cumulative incidence includes
all new cases of disease during the period of the study
what is the ecologic fallacy
assuming that individual members of a group exhibit characteristics of the group at large
what type of error cannot be rectified during the analysis phase of the study
bias
what type of error cannot be rectified during the analysis phase of the study?
bias
T/F confidence limits are fixed and do not vary from sample to sample
False
T/F etiologic fraction of a disease in a population is the measure of the population of disease incidence in the exposed that is attributable to the exposure
False
select the appropriate study design. students from a college were surveyed about their sun exposure behaviors. the survey obtained information about their knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors about sun exposure, sun protection, and skin cancer. Information was also collected on their history of sun burns, personal and family history of skin cancer; along with several demographic variables.
cross-sectional
selective survival is a main reason for selection bias in which type of study design
cross-sectional
Name the study design. The investigator observes both the exposure and health outcome simultaneously, so that neither variable may be uniquely identified as occurring first.
cross-sectional study
prevalence odds ratio is a measure of effect used in
cross-sectional study
which study design is useful to describe patterns of disease occurrence
cross-sectional study
the probability that subjects in a study will develop a disease for the first time within a given period of time
cumulative incidence
the branch of epidemiology that allows one to examine the distribution of basic person, place, and time-related aspects of a disease is called
descriptive epidemiology
a process to determine or confirm the presence or absence of a disease based on signs and symptoms
diagnosis
an odds ratio for a matched case control study compares
discordant pairs
which of the following is not a bias
effect modification and interaction
what is the main purpose of selecting controls in a case control study?
estimate the distribution of exposure in the underlying source population
which of the following is not recognized as a step in effect estimation in a case-control study?
estimate the odds of outcome among exposed
which of the following is a synonym of the term "exposure"
factor, predictor, and cause
T/F Randomization makes all characteristics similar between the comparison groups, including exposure status
false
T/F a case-cohort study design is less prone to measurement error compared to cohort study design
false
T/F both risk and rate measures have units
false
T/F comparing ratios effect estimates helps to determine if the interaction is on an additive scale
false
T/F ecologic studies are large studies done in several countries at the same time using data collected from every individual in the country as their unit of analysis
false
T/F incidence is the measure of transition from a diseased state to disease-free state
false
T/F it is not possible to have both additive and multiplicative interaction at the same time
false
T/F measures of impact help us to assess the individual risk perspective on exposure-disease relationships
false
T/F selection bias occurs when individuals have similar probabilities of being included in the study sample according to exposure and/or outcome status, relative to the source population
false
T/F sensitivity, while measuring for information bias, is the probability that a subject who is truly unexposed (or non-diseased) will be correctly classified as unexposed (or non-diseased) in the study
false
T/F study designs that are backward or non-directional have a smaller potential for selection bias than forward designs
false
T/F the incidence rate (or incidence density) is the number of old and new cases divided by the person-time, usually the number of person-years, at risk
false
T/F the null values (representing no association between an exposure and a health outcome) for ratio and difference measures are 0 and 1.
false
T/F there will be a differential misclassification when the rate of misclassification is the same between different study groups
false
T/F time, place, and population are not required components when estimating a rate
false
T/F true population parameter is a random variable
false
T/F true risk ratio of a study is 2.5 and the observed risk ratio is 4.5. the bias here is towards the null.
false
T/F vaccination is an example of tertiary prevention
false
T/F we can estimate incidence in a cross-sectional study
false
T/F we can safely assume that those who volunteer to participate in a study correctly represent the characteristics in a source population
false
T/F when there is proof of effect modification in your study data, you should report adjusted effect estimates
false
T/F you have been informed that 90% of the breast cancer patients are married at the time of diagnosis. this information is sufficient to make a causal association that being married increases the risk for breast cancer
false
an epidemiological study started by examining exposure to a specific drug in teenagers and followed them to study mental health outcomes after 5 years. what is the directionality of the study?
forward
select the appropriate study design. a study examined a new drug for treating hypertension. patients with hypertension were randomly assigned either to receive the new drug or the conventional therapy. blood pressure was monitored at regular intervals for one year in both treatment groups.
randomized clinical trial
what measure of association are you assessing in this statement: the rate of dying within 5 years among workers who were exposed to a radiation accident compared to the unexposed is increased by 70 deaths per 1000 person-years
rate difference
which measure of association provides information on excess risk?
rate difference
an important bias in a case-control study
recall bias
risk ratio and rate ratio provide ____ measure of association
relative
an estimate to assess if your measurements repeatedly and consistently yield the same results under similar conditions
reliability
select the appropriate study design. a study investigated the association between occupational exposure to compound x and skin cancer in a large chemical factory. exposure data was abstracted using employee records and each worker's contact with compound x was determined. not all workers were exposed to compound x. exposure groups were established based on a worker's history of contact with compound x. cases of skin cancer that occurred during the study period were determined using data from the states cancer registry. lung cancer incidence was examined by the worker's exposure status
retrospective cohort study
what measure of association are you assessing in this statement: the risk of developing breast cancer within 10 years among women exposed to hormone replacement therapy is 3 times greater than the risk among the unexposed
risk ratio
which of the following relative measures of association cannot be calculated from cross section study data
risk ratio and rate ratio
which two measures of association would you commonly use to understand a causal association between an exposure and outcome?
risk ratio, rate ratio
precision reflects _______
sampling variability
a systematic difference in the enrollment of participants in a study that leads to an incorrect result or inference---what is this phenomenon called?
selection bias
what is a systematic difference during the time of subject selection in a study that leads to an incorrect result or inference
selection bias
systematic error can occur at which stage of a study
selection, data collection, and data analysis (all of the above)
an estimate of proportion of people with the disease of interest who test positive
sensitivity
the underlying parameters that must be considered when assessing information bias include
sensitivity and specificity
an epidemiologist starts a cohort study by selecting a defined population for study before any of the subjects become exposed, rather than starting by selecting exposed and unexposed subjects. how does this subject selection procedure benefit the epidemiologist?
several exposures can be studied simultaneously
we can measure precision using ____ or _____ around the measured effect estimates.
standard errors, confidence levels
all measurement issues should be addressed prior to data collection process to ensure
standard methodology, cost, time efficiency
if there is an effect modification due to a third/extraneous variable between Exposure and disease, you report
stratum specific estimate
T/F cohort studies begin with exposure and follow participants forward in time to assess disease outcome
true
T/F confidence intervals allow for statistical significance testing
true
T/F cumulative incidence, when measured for a short or brief period as in an outbreak, is referred to as "attack rate"
true
T/F differential probing of one group compared to the other based on prior knowledge can lead to interviewer bias
true
T/F early detection of existing disease to reduce severity and complication is known as secondary prevention
true
T/F ecologic studies allow us to understand a correlation between two factors
true
T/F external validity is most often determined based on expert subjective judgment
true
T/F flaw in measurement methods can lead to information bias
true
T/F follow-up period is the time during which a subject in the study is followed with regard to developing the outcome of interest
true
T/F friends can be a source of control in a case-control design
true
T/F having incident or new cases in a case-control study helps to avoid biases introduced due to death
true
T/F heterogeneity means that the effect estimates are very different in each of the study strata
true
T/F hypothesis testing can be specified in terms of the difference between the two population proportions (RD) being equal to 0 (null), and either different from 0 (2-sided alternative) or greater than 0 (1-sided alternative)
true
T/F if the crude and adjusted estimates are the same, you can proceed to report crude estimate in your study findings
true
T/F in a retrospective study, the health outcome has occurred before the study is initiated
true
T/F in ecologic studies, the units of analysis are populations or groups of people rather than individual people
true
T/F internal validity can be achieved by avoiding selection, measurement, and analytic biases and errors.
true
T/F it is important that unexposed subjects are as healthy as the exposed subjects to avoid selection bias in occupational studies
true
T/F matching helps gain precision in a study
true
T/F misclassification bias occurs when the effect measure for the correctly classified data is meaningfully different from the estimated effect actually observed in the misclassified data
true
T/F odds ratio can be calculated in both case-control and cohort studies
true
T/F one person-year is equivalent to two subjects, each followed for 1/2 year
true
T/F precision is the inverse of random error
true
T/F proportion is a ratio in which the numerator is included in the denominator
true
T/F randomization curtails to a large extent the freedom of study participants to select themselves into different exposure arms of a clinical study
true
T/F randomization helps to account for unmeasured factors
true
T/F rehabilitation for stroke is a type of prevention
true
T/F selection bias occurs in cross-sectional studies when exposed cases can survive longer than unexposed cases or vice versa
true
T/F selection probabilities are hard to estimate
true
T/F statistical inference is the process of drawing conclusions about populations based on sample data
true
T/F the absolute effect provides needed information to make policy decisions on the burden of public health problems due to a given exposure
true
T/F the first step in a case-control study is to identify cases, or diseased persons, to be studied
true
T/F the values for risk (cumulative incidence), when measured as % can range from 0% to 100%
true
T/F true risk ratio of a study is 0.5 and the observed risk ratio is 0.9. the bias here is towards the null
true
T/F we should try to select controls from the same population from which cases are selected
true
a methodology flaw in an epidemiologic study that arises due to systematic error in the study design
validity
an ability of a test to correctly identify persons with or without a disease is called
validity
bias influences the ___ of a study
validity
the degree to which a measurement measures what is it supposed to measure
validity
if you have 2 screening tests for the same condition, one with high sensitivity and another with high specificity, which will you use first?
high sensitivity
what type of allocation procedure assigns subjects into one of the exposure groups being compared so that each subject has the same probability of being in one group as in any other?
randomization
how can we correct selection bias
1. at the time of study design 2. quantitatively using selection probabilities during post-study design phase
what can lead to a misclassified disease status
1. complex diagnostic procedure 2. inadequate access to technology to determine the disease (or testing) 3. laboratory error (all of the above)
list two ethical considerations for conducting a disease screening in a community
1. consent 2. availability for all
list two conditions under which one can approximate odds ratio to risk ratio
1. if population size is small 2. all cases are included
what are the two main differences between experimental and observational epidemiological study designs?
1. in experimental designs, the researcher has control. In observational, the researcher is only an observer. 2. in experimental designs, the researcher can control participants' exposure and can randomly place participants into different exposure groups. in observational designs, the participant controls the exposure status.
a misclassification of disease status may occur due to
1. incorrect diagnosis 2. subject self-report 3. data coding errors (all of the above)
which of the following statements is true about systematic error
1. it can occur from a methodologic flaw in the study design 2. it can occur due to imperfect data collection procedure 3. it can occur by using wrong data analysis methods (all of the above)
what is an important consideration for a good case-definition
1. laboratory confirmation 2. standard diagnostic criteria 3. objective and measurable (all of the above)
List three advantages of a hybrid design
1. less prone to selection bias 2. can be cost effective (nested case control) 3. multiple diseases can be studied from within the same cohort (case-cohort)
for a confounder (or control variable) to meet a priori criteria, which of the following rules must be met
1. must be a risk factor for the disease 2. must be associated with the exposure in the source population 3. cannot be an intervening variable between exposure and disease (all of the above)
2 types of controls
1. population based- selected from same community as cases 2. hospital based
confidence intervals
1. provide the measure of precision of a point estimate 2. are measures of random error in the data 3. provide upper and lower limit numbers between which the point estimate exists (all of the above)
Rank the hierarchy of the five study designs with 1 being the highest strength and 5 being the lowest
1. randomized trials 2. cohort studies 3. case-control studies 4. cross-sectional studies 5. incomplete design
list 3 conditions under which we can approximate odds ratio to risk ratio
1. rare disease/ disease frequency is low 2. number of unexposed to exposed ratio in the controls is the same as in the source population 3. if all cases in the case selection process are included
which of the following statements is true regarding selection bias in cohort studies?
1. selection bias can occur with a. high overall response rate 2. selection bias can occur with very little loss to follow up 3. selection bias may not occur despite small response rate or high loss to follow up (all of the above)
if there is evidence of confounding, which of the following method can be used to report an adjusted effect estimate
1. simple or weighted average 2. mantel-haenszel 3. precision based
statistical test used to examine dose-response
1. test for linear trend 2. mantel-haenszel chi square test for linear trend
to measure cumulative incidence, we need
1. to follow the entire population for a specified time 2. to address and minimize attrition (loss to follow up) 3. that subjects should be disease free at the time of study enrollment 4. to be aware of the population dynamics (all of the above)
which of the following cutoff kappa values measuring inter-rater reliability indicates a poor agreement that is beyond chance?
<0.40
what is the statistical test for interaction
Breslow-Day
which of the following 95% confidence intervals around the odds ratio is more precise?
OR= 2.14 (95% CI= 2.08-2.56)
T/F case-control studies are preferred over cohort studies because they are inexpensive and quick
true
which of the following results is statistically significant
RR=0.45 (95% CI= 0.01-0.67)
4 different types of study designs in which there is potential for selection bias to occur
case control, cohort, clinical trials, cross sectional
select the appropriate study design. a study investigated the association between multivitamin use and anemia in older adults. a total of 1000 patients with anemia in participating hospitals were interviewed about their history of multivitamin use. another group of 1000 patients, who were also receiving care in the same hospitals as cases with anemia, but not anemic, were also interviewed about their history of multivitamin use.
case-control
exposure odds ratio is a measure of effect used in
case-control study
name the study design. investigator first selects subjects on the basis of whether or not they have the health outcome of interest, and then looks back in time to obtain information about their previous exposures.
case-control study
what type of study design would have a selection bias when there is differential withdrawal of participants out from the study based on their exposure status
clinical trial
name the study design. the investigator starts by determining the exposure status for subjects, selected from some population of interest, and follows these subjects over time to determine whether or not they develop the health outcome.
cohort study
risk odds ratio is a measure of effect used in
cohort study
which of the following is the best measure to draw conclusions or inferences about a study
confidence interval
If you are offered three measures of a study results (p-value, point estimate, or confidence interval) which one would you choose to draw conclusions about the study?
confidence interval: provide greater information than p-values
what type of bias occurs when a different factor, other than your main exposure, causes spurious associations in your study findings?
confounding
what type of bis occurs when a different factor, other than your main exposure, causes spurious associations in your study findings
confounding
which of the following is assessed by comparing unadjusted and adjusted effect estimates
confounding
a new diagnosis of breast cancer among participants of the women's health initiative cohort during a 5-year follow-up period (incidence v prevalence)
incidence
for a given duration of disease, the prevalence will ______ as the incidence increases
increase
what is the term used to assess variation in agreement of findings between multiple observers
inter-observer
which one of the following can be assessed using a statistical test
interaction
A disease is call endemic if it
is habitually present in a population or region
expresses the extent to which the observed agreement exceeds that which would be expected by chance alone relative to the most that the observers could hope to improve their agreement.
kappa statistic
What is berkson's bias
occurs when hospital or clinic-based case subjects and control subjects within a case control study are systematically different from each other. this is because the combination of exposure to risk and occurrence of disease increases the participant's likelihood of being admitted to the hospital. the hospital case patients have a systematically higher exposure rate than the controls, causing a bias odds ratio.
what measure of association/effect are you assessing in the following statement: the odds of smoking among mothers who delivered preterm infants are 6 times the odds of smoking among mothers who delivered normal term infants
odds ratio
what is John snow's contribution to epidemiology?
often referred to a the father of modern epidemiology. he tracked cases of cholera in London and was able to determine that drinking water was the source of the contagion, which helped create a foundation for descriptive epidemiology.
statistical testing is the process of drawing conclusions about
population from which a study sample is drawn
an estimate of the probability of truly having the disease, if the screening test result is positive
positive predictive value
random error is mainly associated with the ____ of a study
precision
number of children who have immunity to measles, either because they had the disease or because they received the vaccine (incidence v. prevalence)
prevalence
the proportion of women who reported taking prenatal vitamins during their latest pregnancy in the pregnancy risk assessment monitoring survey (incidence v prevalence)
prevalence
what is prevalence and what is the formula for the two main kinds of prevalence
prevalence is the percentage of the population that has the disease (existing cases) within a given period of time. Two main types: 1. point prevalence (P=C/n) 2. period prevalence (PP=(C+I)/N)
what measure of association are you assessing in the following statement: the prevalence of skin cancer among those exposed to tanning beds is 4 times the prevalence of skin cancer among those who never used tanning beds
prevalence ratio
cross-sectional study is also known as
prevalence study
the odds of an event can be calculated as P/(1-P) where P is the ____ of the event
probability
select the appropriate study design. a study recruited 5000 healthy individuals from town A that had an accidental environmental contamination. the study also enrolled 5000 healthy individuals from a neighboring town B which was otherwise like town A, except that it was not influenced by the environmental accident. Both towns were followed for 10 years to determine several chronic health outcomes among the two study groups (assume very small loss-to-follow up in both groups). an analysis was conducted after 10 years to examine the association between environmental contamination and cancer.
prospective cohort
this type of error indicated that your study results differs from the truth due to chance alone
random error
this type of error indicates that your study results differs from the truth due to chance alone
random error
what is the type of error that can influence the precision of the study
random error
what type of allocation procedure assigns subjects into one of the exposure groups being compared so that each subject has the same probability of being in one group as in any other
randomization
we know that the true relative risk of an association between a selected exposure and outcome is 4.0 in the population X. a study conducted to examine the same association, but in a small sample of participants form population X and with an imperfect study method, yielded a relative risk of 1.5. what type of error in risk estimates would you call this
systematic error or bias
what three factors constitute epidemiologic triad of disease?
the host, the agent, and the environment
what is a p-value
the probability of obtaining a test statistic as extreme as or more extreme than what was observed if the null hypothesis is true. This is assuming that the null hypothesis is true and that there are no sources of bias in the data collection or data analysis
internal validity helps to infer about
the source population
define the term epidemiology
the study of diseases--the ways they are distributed within populations and what influences how they are distributed within populations
which of the following statements is false about cross-sectional studies
they are directional analyses
which of the following is not true for a retrospective cohort study
they are useful to study rare diseases
which of the following is not true for a retrospective cohort study?
they are useful to study rare diseases
for a non-differential misclassification of exposure or outcome, the. bias is ___ (assume no random fluctuations or other errors in measurement of variables being controlled that are misclassified)
towards the null
T/F Person-time is the sum of the periods of time that all persons who are at risk (for the disease or death) contribute to the study
true
T/F a detection bias is when a physician gives more thorough exams to patients who are exposed or have symptoms related to exposure compared to patients who are unexposed
true
T/F a nested case-control study is more prone to measurement error than a cohort study
true
T/F a nested case-control study starts with a defined cohort
true
T/F an observational study is generally helpful to generate and test hypotheses
true
T/F case definitions may evolve over time as additional information is learned about the pathology of the disease
true