Title: Measuring Epidemiologic Outcomes
1Measuring Epidemiologic Outcomes
2Epidemiological Outcomes
- Ratio Relationship between two numbers
- Example males/females
- Proportion A ratio where the numerator is
included in the denominator - Example males/total births
- Rate A proportion with the specification of time
- Example (deaths in 1999/population in 1999) x
1,000
3In epidemiology, the occurrence of a disease or
condition can be measured using rates and
proportions. We use these measures to express
the extent of these outcomes in a community or
other population.
- Rates tell us how fast the disease is occurring
in a population. - Proportions tell us what fraction of the
population is affected. - (Gordis, 2000)
4Morbidity Measures
Number of new events during a time period
X 1,000
Incidence Rate
Population at risk
- Incidence is always calculated for a given period
of time - An attack rate is an incidence rate calculated
for a specific disease for a limited period of
time during an epidemic
5Morbidity Measures
- Prevalence is not a rate
- Point prevalence measures the frequency of all
current events (old and new) at a given instant
in time - Period prevalence measures the frequency of all
current events (old and new) for a prescribed
period of time
6- High prevalence may reflect
- High risk
- Prolonged survival without cure
- Low prevalence may reflect
- Low risk
- Rapid fatal disease progression
- Rapid cure
Examples Ebola, Common cold
7Relationship Between Incidence and Prevalence
(cont.)
- Cancer of the pancreas
- Incidence low
- Duration short
- Prevalence low
- Adult onset diabetes
- Incidence low
- Duration long
- Prevalence high
- Roseola infantum
- Incidence high
- Duration short
- Prevalence low
- Essential hypertension
- Incidence high
- Duration long
- Prevalence high
8- Skin Cancer on Sunny Beach
- Point prevalence on 9/28/1974
- Period prevalence for year 1975
- Incidence rate for year 1975
What information will you need?
9Diagnosed cases of Skin Cancer on Sunny Beach,
9/28/1974
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of existing cases 10 Total population at risk
450
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Point Prevalence (9/28/1974) (10/450)1000
22 per 1000
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10Diagnosed cases of Skin Cancer on Sunny Beach,
1975 Average population at risk 500
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of new cases 5
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Incidence rate (year 1975) (5/500)1000
10 per 1000
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Period prevalence (year 1975) (15/500)1000
30 per 1000
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11Number of cases of disease beginning, developing,
and ending during a period of time, January 1,
2000 December 31, 2000. Length of each line
corresponds to duration of each case.
JAN 2000
DEC 2000
MAY
JULY
SEPT
What is the numerator for incidence in
2000? What is the numerator for point prevalence
if a survey was done in May? July? September?
December?
12Risk Versus Rate
- Risk and rate are often used interchangeably by
epidemiologists but there are differences
13Risk Versus Rate (cont.)
- Risk is a probability statement assuming an
individual is not removed for any other reason
during a given period of time - As such, risk ranges from 0 to 1 (no chance to
100 probability of occurrence) - Risk requires a reference period and reflects the
cumulative incidence of a disease over that
period - Example 1 in a million chance of developing
cancer in a 70 year lifetime
14Risk Versus Rate (cont.)
- Rates can be used to estimate risk if the time
period is short (annual) and the incidence of
disease over the interval is relatively constant - If however, individuals are in a population for
different periods of time for any reason, then
you should estimate risk by incidence density
15Incidence Density
16ID Example
- In the Iowa Womens Health Study (IWHS), 37,105
women contributed 276,453 person-years of
follow-up - Because there were 1,085 incident cases, the rate
of breast cancer using the incidence density
method is - 1,085/276,453 392.5/100,000 person-years
17ID Example (cont.)
- If each woman had been followed for the entire
8-year period of the study, the total
person-years would have been 296,840 and the rate
would have been lower (assuming the number of
incident cancers was the same) - The incidence density method yielded a higher and
more accurate estimate
18Natality Outcomes
- Natality measures are used primarily by
demographers for population projection
Number of live births for a given time period
(year)
Crude Birth Rate
X 1,000
Estimated mid-interval total population
19Concerns About Crude Birth Rates
- Definitions of a live birth may vary
- U.S. any product of conception that shows any
sign of life after complete birth (pulse,
heartbeat, respiration, crying, pulsation of
umbilical cord or movement of the voluntary
muscles) - The denominator used for birth rates is
inaccurate because men are not part of the
population-at-risk
20Natality Outcomes (cont.)
Number of live births for a given time period
(year)
X 1,000
General Fertility Rate
Estimated of women 15-44 years at mid-interval
21Natality Outcomes (cont.)
- Total fertility rate Same as above, but use
women 10-49 years and adjust for age cohorts - Gross reproductive rate Same as TFR, but use
only live births of females in numerator - Net reproductive rate Same as GRR, but count
only births of females who survive to
reproductive age in the numerator
22Net Reproductive Rate (NRR)
- If NRR 1,000, each generation will just replace
itself - If NRR lt 1,000, indicates a potentially declining
population - If NRR gt 1,000, indicates a potential population
increase
23Mortality Measures Related to Natality
- Fetal Death Rate or Ratio Used primarily by
public health officials to estimate the health of
populations
Fetal Death Rate
Number of fetal deaths 20 weeks or more gestation
in a given interval
X 1,000
Fetal deaths plus live births in that interval
Estimates risk of death associated with late
states of gestation
24Mortality Measures Related to Natality (cont.)
Fetal Death Ratio
Number of fetal deaths 20 weeks or more gestation
in a given interval
X 1,000
Number of live births reported during the same
time interval
Measures fetal loss relative to live births
25Mortality Measures Related to Natality (cont.)
Perinatal Mortality Rate
Number of fetal deaths 20 weeks or more gestation
plus number of neonatal deaths (28 days or
less in age) during a given interval
X 1,000
Number of fetal deaths 20 weeks or more gestation
plus number of live births during the same
interval
Reflects events occurring during pregnancy and
after birth
26Mortality Measures Related to Natality (cont.)
Number of deaths of neonates (28 days or
less) in a given interval
Neonatal Mortality Rate
X 1,000
Number of live births during the
same interval
Estimates events immediately after birth,
primarily congenital malformations, prematurity
and low birth weight
27Mortality Measures Related to Natality (cont.)
Infant Mortality Rate
Number of deaths under 1 year during a given
interval
X 1,000
Number of live births during the same interval
Used for international comparisons high rates
indicate unmet public health needs and poor
socioeconomic and environmental conditions
28Mortality Measures Related to Natality (cont.)
Maternal Mortality Rate
Number of deaths assigned to causes related to
pregnancy during a given interval
X 1,000
Number of live births during the same
interval
Rates reflect health care access and
socioeconomic factors
29Chart of Early Life Mortality Measures
30Mortality Outcomes
- Crude rate
- The number of events in a population over a given
period of time, usually a calendar year - Crude rates reflect the probability of an event
- As the probability of death increases with age,
the crude death rate reflects the age structure
of the population
31Mortality Outcomes (cont.)
Example 1980
The larger crude death rate in Florida reflects
the larger population of elderly in that state.
32Mortality Outcomes (cont.)
- Specific rate
- Used to construct rates for specific segments of
the population so we can compare among strata or
between groups (used especially for age, race,
ethnicity, gender) - We can also construct cause-specific rates to
compare rates among causes
33Mortality Outcomes (cont.)
- Examples
- Age-specific rates
- Gender-specific rates
- Race-specific rates
- Cause-specific rates