Title: Measuring Population Health
1Measuring Population Health
2Learning Objectives
- To explain the difference between numerators and
denominators, and their importance in population
measurement - To distinguish between different measures of
health or disease frequency in populations
3Rate
- In epidemiology, demography and vital statistics,
a rate is an expression of the frequency with
which an event occurs in a defined population in
a specified period of time. - The use of rates rather than raw numbers is
essential for comparison of experience between
populations at different times, different places
or among different classes of persons.
4Rate
(Numerator)
(Denominator)
- The components of a rate
- Numerator
- Denominator
- Specified time in which the events occur
- a multiplier (a power of 10) that converts the
rate from an awkward fraction or decimal to a
whole number
5Incidence Rate
- Number of new cases of disease over a period of
time - __________________________________
- Population at Risk
6Incidence Rates
- Need
- A period of observation
- Numerator (number of new cases)
- Times of disease onset (diagnosis)
- Denominator (Population at risk)
7Measures of Morbidity
- Incidence measures the rate at which people
without the disease develop the disease during a
specified period of time - Used to study disease aetiology (risk)
8Infection in a Population
Low incidence constantly present
High incidence at set time, above endemic levels
Global epidemics
9Prevalence Rate
- Number of existing cases of disease at a point in
time - ___________________________________
- Total Population
10Prevalence
- Prevalence measures the number of people in a
population who have the disease at a given point
in time - Depends on Incidence and duration
- P I X D
- Used to measure disease burden
11Prevalence Rates
- Need
- Definite point in time
- Numerator (number of existing cases)
- Time of disease onset
- Denominator (size of population)
12Factors that Influence Prevalence
- Change in Incidence ( )
- Longer duration of the disease
- Prolongation of life of patients without cure
- Change in case fatality rate
- Selective migration
- In-migration of cases, out-migration of healthy
people - In-migration of susceptible people
- Improved diagnostic facilities
- Primary and Secondary Prevention strategies
13Relationship Between Incidence and Prevalence
- Prevalence depends on incidence
- Higher incidence leads to higher prevalence if
duration of cases does not change. - Limitation of the bathtub analogy flow rate
needs to be expressed relative to the size of the
source - Prevalence Incidence x Duration of disease
14The Bathtub Analogy
15Trends
Secular trend refers to a change in the
prevalence of infection over years. This relates
to better living conditions, better hygiene, and
vaccination. An example of a secular trend is the
decrease in tuberculosis (TB) in UK. Seasonal
trend refers to changes in the prevalence of
infection occurring over the year, e.g., flu
outbreaks - the reason the seasonality is unclear
but changes of temperature, crowding and humidity
may play a role.
16References
- Beaglehole, R., Bonita, R., and Kjellström, T.
(1993) Basic Epidemiology. 2nd ed. World Health
Organisation 2006. - Farmer, R., Miller, D., Lawrenson, R.
(2000)Lecture Notes on Epidemiology and Public
Health Medicine, 4th Edition, Blackwell Science. - HOUSTON, J.C., JOINER, C.L., and TROUNCE, J.R.
(1979) A short textbook of medicine. 6thed.
Sevenoaks Hodder and Stoughton. - Rothman, KJ., Greenland, S. (1998) Modern
Epidemiology, 2nd Edition, Lippincott Williams
and Wilkins.