Foundations of Epidemiology - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 48
About This Presentation
Title:

Foundations of Epidemiology

Description:

Role of epidemiology in public health practice and individual decision making ... Epidemiology guides public health planning and decision making ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:34
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 49
Provided by: raym167
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Foundations of Epidemiology


1
Chapter 1
  • Foundations of Epidemiology

2
Objectives
  • Define epidemiology
  • Explain the importance of descriptive
    epidemiology
  • Explain the importance of analytic epidemiology
  • Explain the role of epidemiology in public health
    practice and individual decision making
  • Define epidemic, endemic, and pandemic
  • Describe common source, propagated, and mixed
    epidemics
  • Define the concepts and principles of case as
    used in epidemiology
  • Describe the epidemiology triangle for infectious
    disease
  • Describe the advanced epidemiology triangle for
    chronic diseases and behavioral disorders
  • Define the three levels of prevention used in
    public health and epidemiology
  • Understand basic vocabulary used in epidemiology

3
Define epidemiology
  • Epidemiology is the study of the distribution and
    determinants of health-related states or events
    in human populations, and the application of this
    study to prevent and control health problems.

4
Define epidemiology
  • The word epidemiology is based on the Greek words
  • epiprefix meaning on, upon, or befall
  • demosroot meaning the people and
  • logossuffix meaning the study
  • In other words, epidemiology is the study of what
    befalls the population

5
Key terms in the definition
  • Study - Epidemiology involves sound methods of
    scientific investigation.
  • Methods rely on careful observation and the use
    of valid comparison groups to determine whether
    the observed health events differ from what might
    be expected

6
Key terms in the definition
  • Distribution
  • Study of frequency and pattern of health events
    in the population
  • Frequency number, and number in relation to the
    population
  • Pattern the health-related state or event by
    person, place, and time characteristics

7
Key terms in the definition
  • Determinants
  • Search for causes and other factors of
    health-related states or events

8
Key terms in the definition
  • Health-related states or events
  • Epidemiology involves study of disease states
    (e.g., cholera, influenza, pneumonia)
  • Epidemiology also involves events
  • injury, drug abuse, and suicide
  • Epidemiology also involves behaviors and
    conditions associated with health
  • physical activity, nutrition, seat belt use, and
    provision and use of health services

9
The importance of descriptive epidemiology
  • Descriptive epidemiology involves
    characterization of the distribution of
    health-related states or events by
  • Person - who
  • Place - where
  • Time when
  • Clinical criteria - what

10
Descriptive epidemiology
  • Allows us to answer who, what, and where
    questions
  • This knowledge is prerequisite to effective
    education, screening, prevention, and control
    programs

11
Analytic epidemiology
  • Analytic epidemiology involves identifying and
    quantifying associations, testing hypotheses, and
    identifying causes of health-related states or
    events
  • Explains why and how health-related states or
    events occur

12
Activities performed in epidemiology
  • Identifying risk factors for disease, injury, and
    death
  • Describing the natural history of disease
  • Identifying individuals and populations at
    greatest risk for disease
  • Identifying where the public health problem is
    greatest
  • Monitoring diseases and other health-related
    events over time
  • Evaluating the efficacy and effectiveness of
    prevention and treatment programs
  • Providing information useful in health planning
    and decision making for establishing health
    programs with appropriate priorities
  • Assisting in carrying out public health programs
  • Being a resource person
  • Communicating public health information

13
Role of epidemiology in public health practice
and individual decision making
  • Epidemiological findings contribute to
  • preventing and controlling disease, injury,
    disability, and death
  • How?
  • By providing information leading to informed
    public health policy and planning, as well as
    individual health decision making

14
Epidemiologic information for influencing public
health policy and planning and individual
decisions
  • Public health surveillance
  • Causes of disease
  • Completing the clinical picture
  • Program evaluation
  • Efficacy
  • Effectiveness

15
Accurate assessment requires a standard case
definition
  • A standard set of criteria, or case definition,
    assures that cases are consistently diagnosed,
    regardless of where or when they were identified
    and who diagnosed the case

16
Epidemic, endemic, and pandemic
  • Epidemic Health-related state or event in a
    defined population above the expected over a
    given period of time
  • Endemic Persistent, usual, expected
    health-related state or event in a defined
    population over a given period of time
  • Pandemic Epidemic affecting a large number of
    people, many countries, continents, or regions

17
Obesity Trends Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 1991,
1996, 2003
(BMI ?30, or about 30 lbs overweight for 54
person)
1996
2003
No Data lt10 1014
1519 2024 25
18
Common source, propagated, and mixed epidemics
  • Common source
  • Point
  • Intermittent
  • Continuous
  • Propagated

19
Common source
  • Tend to result in more cases occurring more
    rapidly and sooner than host-to-host epidemics
  • Identifying and removing exposure to the common
    source typically causes the epidemic to rapidly
    decrease

20
Common source
  • Examples
  • anthrax, traced to milk or meat from infected
    animals
  • botulism, traced to soil-contaminated food
  • and cholera traced to fecal contamination of food
    and water

21
Propagated
  • Arise from infections being transmitted from one
    infected person to another
  • Transmission can be through direct or indirect
    routes
  • Host-to-host epidemics rise and fall more slowly
    than common source epidemics

22
Propagated
  • Examples
  • tuberculosis
  • whooping cough
  • Influenza
  • measles

23
Disease transmission
  • Disease transmission usually occurs by
  • direct, person-to-person contact (e.g., STDs)
  • fomite-borne (e.g., Hepatitis A spread by a
    contaminated eating utensil)
  • vehicle-borne (e.g., HIV/AIDS spread through
    needle sharing drug users)
  • vector-borne transmission (e.g., Malaria spread
    through mosquitoes)

24
Mixed epidemics
  • Occurs when a common source epidemic is followed
    by person-to-person contact and the disease is
    spread as a propagated outbreak
  • Example Shigellosis occurred among a group of
    3000 women attending a music festival. Over the
    next few weeks, subsequent generations of
    shigella cases spread by person-to-person
    transmission from festival attendees.

25
Concepts and principles of case as used in
epidemiology
  • A case is a person who has been diagnosed as
    having a disease, disorder, injury, or condition

26
Primary case, index case
  • The first disease case in the population is the
    primary case.
  • The first disease case brought to the attention
    of the epidemiologist is the index case.
  • The index case is not always the primary case.

27
Secondary case
  • Those persons who become infected and ill once a
    disease has been introduced into a population and
    who became infected from contact with the primary
    case

28
Different levels of diagnosis
  • Suspect
  • Probable
  • Confirmed

29
Different levels of diagnosis
  • As more information (such as laboratory results)
    becomes available to the physician, he or she
    generally upgrades the diagnosis. When all
    criteria are met and they meet the case
    definition, the case is classified as a confirmed
    case.

30
Suspect case
  • An individual or group of individuals who have
    all of the signs and symptoms of a disease or
    condition yet has not been diagnosed as having
    the disease, nor have the cause of the symptoms
    connected to a suspected pathogen (i.e., any
    virus, microorganism, or other substance that
    causes disease)

31
Epidemiology triangle for infectious disease
32
Triangle is based on the communicable disease
model
  • Shows the interaction and interdependence of
    agent, host, environment, and time as used in the
    investigation of diseases and epidemics.
  • Agent is the cause of the disease
  • Host is an organism, usually a human or an
    animal, that harbors a disease
  • Environment is those surroundings and conditions
    external to the human or animal that cause or
    allow disease transmission
  • Time accounts for incubation periods, life
    expectancy of the host or the pathogen, and
    duration of the course of the illness or
    condition.

33
Stopping an epidemic
  • An epidemic can be stopped when one of the
    elements of the triangle is interfered with,
    altered, changed, or removed from existence, so
    that the disease no longer continues along its
    mode of transmission and routes of infection

34
Some disease transmission concepts
  • Fomites
  • Objects such as clothing, towels, and utensils
    that may harbor a disease agent and are capable
    of transmitting it usually used in the plural
  • Example transmission of cutaneous anthrax from
    drums to an individual

35
Vector
  • An invertebrate animal (e.g., tick, mite,
    mosquito, bloodsucking fly) capable of
    transmitting an infectious agent among
    vertebrates
  • Can spread an infectious agent from an infected
    animal or human to other susceptible animals or
    humans through its waste products, bite, body
    fluids, or indirectly through food contamination

36
Reservoir
  • The habitat (living or nonliving) on which an
    infectious agent lives, grows, and multiplies and
    is dependent on for its survival in nature
  • Humans often serve as both reservoir and host

37
Zoonosis
  • When an animal transmits a disease to a human
  • Examples Rabies, Rocky Mountain spotted fever,
    shigellosis

38
Carrier
  • A carrier contains, spreads, or harbors an
    infectious organism
  • Example Typhoid Mary

39
Six types of carriers
  • Active carrier
  • Convalescent carrier
  • Healthy carrier
  • Incubatory carrier
  • Intermittent carrier
  • Passive carrier (same as healthy carrier)

40
Modes of disease transmission
  • Direct transmission direct physical contact
    such as touching with contaminated hands,
    skin-to-skin contact, kissing, or sexual
    intercourse
  • Indirect transmission occurs when pathogens or
    agents are transferred or carried by some
    intermediate item, organism, means, or process to
    a susceptible host, resulting in disease

41
The chain of infection
  • There is a close association between the triangle
    of epidemiology and the chain of infection

42
Advanced epidemiology triangle for chronic
diseases and behavioral disorders
43
Three levels of prevention used in public health
and epidemiology
  • Primary prevention (occurs prior to exposure)
  • Immunization
  • Sanitation
  • Education
  • Media campaigns
  • Warning labels

44
Active primary prevention
  • Requires behavior change on part of subject
  • Wearing protective devises
  • Obtaining vaccinations

45
Passive primary prevention
  • Does not require behavior change
  • Vitamin fortified foods
  • Fluoridation of public water supplies

46
Secondary prevention
  • Occurs to reduce the progress of disease
  • The disease already exists in the person
  • Cancer screening cancer already present. The
    goal is to detect the cancer before clinical
    symptoms arise in order to improve prognosis

47
Tertiary prevention
  • To reduce the limitation of disability from
    disease
  • The disease has already occurred
  • Physical therapy for stoke victims
  • Halfway houses for recovering alcoholics
  • Shelter homes for the developmentally disabled
  • Fitness programs for heart attack patients

48
Conclusion
  • Epidemiology involves application of scientific
    methods for describing the frequency and pattern
    of health-related states or events
  • Epidemiology identifies causes of health-related
    states or events and modes of transmission
  • Epidemiology guides public health planning and
    decision making
  • Epidemiology assists individuals in making
    informed health behavior changes
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com