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Chapter 1 Epidemiology Past and Present

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Title: Chapter 1 Epidemiology Past and Present


1
Chapter 1 Epidemiology Past and Present
  • Epidemiology from Greek words
  • epi, meaning on or upon,
  • demos, meaning people, and
  • logos, meaning the study of.

2
  • Epidemiology is the study of the distribution
    and determinants of health-related states or
    events in specified populations, and the
    application of this study to the control of
    health problems.
  • Study Epidemiology is a scientific discipline,
    sometimes called the basic science of public
    health. It has, at its foundation, sound methods
    of scientific inquiry.

3
Basic Definitions
  • Health a state of complete physical, mental, and
    social well-being and not merely the absence of
    disease (WHO, 1948).
  • Public Health Organized community effort to
    prevent disease and promote health

4
Basic Definitions
  • Illness what a person physiologically or
    psychologically experiences.
  • Disease a medically definable physiological or
    psychological dysfunction.
  • Sickness the state of dysfunction of the social
    role of a person with disease.

5
Basic Definitions
  • Morbidity events and factors associated with
    disease or disability.
  • Mortality related to death.

6
Basic Definitions
  • Endemic disease and injuries occurring at a
    consistent rate
  • Epidemic the occurrence of disease or injuries
    in clear excess of normalcy.
  • Pandemic a epidemic that affects several
    countries or continents

7
  • Distribution. Epidemiology is concerned with the
    frequency and pattern of health events in a
    population.
  • Frequency the number disease/injury events in a
    population and the rate or risk of disease in the
    population. Rates are critical for making valid
    comparisons across different populations.
  • Pattern the occurrence of health-related events
    by time, place, and personal characteristics.

8
  • Time includes annual occurrence, seasonal
    occurrence, and daily or even hourly occurrence
    during an epidemic.
  • Place includes geographic variation,
    urban-rural differences, and location of
    worksites or schools.
  • Personal characteristics include demographic
    factors such as age, race, sex, marital status,
    and socioeconomic status, as well as behaviors
    and environmental exposures.

9
Uses of Epidemiology
  • 1. Historical study of the rise and fall of
    injuries and disease in a community. Can also
    produce projections.
  • 2. Population or community health diagnosis or
    assessment (incidence, prevalence, etc.)
  • 3. Study the workings of health services (needs,
    resources, service analysis)
  • 4. Estimate the individuals chances or risks
    for injury and disease (age, race, behavior,
    etc.).

10
Uses of Epidemiology
  • Completing the clinical picture (e.g.,
    documentation of the numerous conditions that are
    associated with smoking).
  • 6. Identify syndromes (A group of symptoms
    that collectively indicate or characterize a
    disease, psychological disorder, or other
    abnormal condition).
  • 7. Search for causes - identifying factors
    which influence ones risk of disease, so that
    appropriate public health actions can be taken.
    (For example, withdrawal of tainted food from
    public consumption after epidemiology case
    studies).

11
Epidemiologic Transitions
  • Epidemiologic transactions focus on dramatic
    changes in morbidity and mortality in relation
    to
  • Demographic
  • Biological
  • Socioeconomic factors

12
Epidemiologic TransitionsChanges in 10 leading
causes of death per 100,000
2000 1. Heart Disease (246) 2. Malignant
Neoplasms (194) 3. Cerebrovascular Dis. (57) 4.
Lower Respiratory (43) 5. Accidents (36) 6.
Diabetes (25) 7. Pneumonia flu (22) 8.
Alzheimers 19 9. Nephritis (14) 10. Septicemia
(11)
  • 1900
  • 1. Pneumonia Flu (202)
  • 2. Tuberculosis (194)
  • 3. Diarrhea/gastrointest. (143)
  • 4. Heart disease (137)
  • 5. Inter-cranial lesions (107)
  • 6. Nephritis (89)
  • 7. Accidents (72)
  • 8. Cancer and tumors (64)
  • 9. Senility (50)
  • 10. Diphtheria (40)

13
Demographic Transitions
14
Demographic Transitions
15
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16
Significant Historical Contributors
  • Hippocrates
  • John Graunt
  • William Farr
  • John Snow

17
  • Hippocrates (circa 400 B.C.) attempted to explain
    disease occurrence from a rational instead
  • of a supernatural viewpoint. In his essay
    entitled On Airs, Waters, and Places,
    Hippocrates
  • suggested that environmental and host factors
    such as behaviors might influence the
  • development of disease.

18
  • John Graunt
  • landmark analysis of mortality data in 1662
  • quantify patterns of birth, death, and disease
    occurrence
  • noting male-female disparities, high infant
    mortality, urban-rural differences, and seasonal
    variations
  • William Farr
  • systematically collect and analyze Britains
    mortality statistics.
  • developed many of the basic practices used today
    in vital statistics and disease classification
  • extended the epidemiologic analysis of morbidity
    and mortality data, looking at the effects of
    marital status, occupation, and altitude
  • developed many epidemiologic concepts and
    techniques still in use today.

19
  • John Snow
  • conducted studies of cholera outbreaks both to
    discover the cause of disease and to prevent its
    recurrence.
  • descriptive epidemiology from hypothesis
    generation to
  • classic study in 1854

20
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22
Early Epidemiological Beginnings
  • Cholera Outbreak 1854
  • Gathered data
  • Generated hypothesis
  • Intervened

23
  • What became of cholera?
  • In the 20th Century, sanitary improvements have
    largely eliminated cholera from industrialized
    countries. Cholera remains endemic in many areas
    of the world, however. The seventh cholera
    pandemic that began in Indonesia in 1961
    continues. After a Peruvian outbreak in 1991,
    Central and South America saw more than one
    million cases and eleven thousand deaths through
    1995, and the disease also continues to produce
    significant morbidity and mortality in Africa and
    Asia.

24
Demography
  • Demography The study of births, deaths, and
    migration and how they influence population
    changes.
  • The U.S. Census Bureau documents population
    changes in the U.S.
  • Population pyramids describe distribution by age.

25
America at the Dawn of a New Century
  • POPULATION PROFILE OF THE UNITED STATES 2000

26
Primary Data sources are
  • The Decennial Censuses of Population and Housing
    (Census 2000 and earlier censuses)
  • The Current Population Survey (CPS), and
  • The Survey of Income and Program Participation
    (SIPP).

27
Every state grew during the 1990s, but DC lost
population.
Source U.S. Census Bureau, Census 2000 and 1990
census.
28
In Census 2000, 75 percent of respondents said
they were White alone.
Source U.S. Census Bureau, Census 2000.
29
Between 1990 and 2000, the population aged 45 to
54 swelled 49 percent and those aged 85 and older
grew 38 percent.
Source U.S. Census Bureau, Census 2000 and 1990
census.
30
Women outnumber men two to one in the group aged
85 and older.
(Number of men per 100 women by age)
Source U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population
Survey, March 2000.
31
Almost one in five adults had some type of
disability in 1997 and the likelihood of having a
disability increased with age.
Source U.S. Census Bureau, Wave 5 (August -
November 1997) of the 1996 Panel of the Survey of
Income and Program Participation.
32
Families still dominate American households, but
less so than they did 30 years ago.
Source U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population
Surveys, March 1970 and 2000
33
Epidemiologic TransitionsChanges in 10 leading
causes of death per 100,000
2000 1. Heart Disease (246) 2. Malignant
Neoplasms (194) 3. Cerebrovascular Dis. (57) 4.
Lower Respiratory (43) 5. Accidents (36) 6.
Diabetes (25) 7. Pneumonia flu (22) 8.
Alzheimers 19 9. Nephritis (14) 10. Septicemia
(11)
  • 1900
  • 1. Pneumonia Flu (202)
  • 2. Tuberculosis (194)
  • 3. Diarrhea/gastrointest. (143)
  • 4. Heart disease (137)
  • 5. Inter-cranial lesions (107)
  • 6. Nephritis (89)
  • 7. Accidents (72)
  • 8. Cancer and tumors (64)
  • 9. Senility (50)
  • 10. Diphtheria (40)
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