what does analytic epidemiology examine?
the relationship between hypothesized causes and health outcomes
-why/how or cause and effect
- describes the DETERMINANTS of health-related states and events
-quantifies the association between exposures and outcomes to ID casual relationships
what are risk factors?
what are example of risk factors? (7)
Bradford Hill Criteria for Causation
define: risk
calculation of absolute risk
Absolute Risk = Number of people who get the disease during a designated period/
Population of interest at the start
of the designated time period
T/F: Absolute risk and incidence proportion are the same thing
true
Incidence proportion is the terminology used to describe _____
populations
Risk is the terminology used to describe ______
individuals
what is attributable risk?
***aka risk difference
what are risk ratios used to compare?
used to compare the occurrence of disease in one group with the occurrence of disease in another group
what are two common methods used to compare occurrences of diseases in groups?
what is relative risk?
Interpretation of the Relative Risk Statistic: RR= 1
Interpretation of the Relative Risk Statistic: RR >1
Interpretation of the Relative Risk Statistic: RR <1
Interpretation of the Odds Ratio: OR=1
Interpretation of the Odds Ratio: OR >1
Interpretation of the Odds Ratio: OR <1
what is the level of evidence determined by?
The hierarchy (or pyramid) of evidence ranks study designs: the designs on the top (2)
The designs on the top (meta-analyses, randomized controlled trials) provide the strongest or highest levels of evidence
The hierarchy (or pyramid) of evidence ranks study designs: the designs at the bottom (2)
The designs at the bottom (case reports, cross sectional studies) produce the weakest level of evidence
Study Designs in Epidemiology: systematic reviews (2)
Study Designs in Epidemiology: Experimental studies