Deck 15: The Epidemiologic Approach to Causation

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Question
How epidemiologists determine causative and preventive factors involve a process known as which of the following?

A) Statistical interaction
B) Homogeneity of effect
C) Causal inference
D) Departure from multiplicity
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Question
Which philosophy, which has prevailed since the Scientific Revolution of the 1700s, emphasizes inductive inference-the formulation of explanatory hypotheses from making observations?

A) Rationalism
B) Empiricism
C) Utilitarianism
D) Industrialism
Question
Which doctrine states that knowledge accumulates through reason rather than observation?

A) Rationalism
B) Empiricism
C) Utilitarianism
D) Industrialism
Question
Which concept, which was first developed for infectious diseases, means that a cause should lead to a single effect and vice versa?

A) Consistency
B) Specificity
C) Temporality
D) Plausibility
Question
Which of the following is the only one of Hill's guidelines about which there is complete agreement among epidemiologists?

A) Consistency
B) Specificity
C) Temporality
D) Plausibility
Question
Rothman defined which of the following as a "complete causal mechanism" that inevitably produces disease?

A) Direct cause
B) Necessary cause
C) Sufficient cause
D) Component cause
Question
Critics of which guideline state that its absence implies only that the investigator is unimaginative, not that the association is noncausal?

A) Analogy
B) Specificity
C) Temporality
D) Plausibility
Question
Causal inference is a simple process with no hard and fast rules.
Question
Falsifiability increases with the empirical content of the hypothesis.
Question
Most "causes" of interest to epidemiologists are actually components of sufficient causes.
Question
Which of the following, the third essential attribute of a cause, means that there is an asymmetrical relationship between cause and effect?

A) Association
B) Time order
C) Direction
D) Regression
Question
Which man introduced the idea that people became ill because of an imbalance in the four body humors: phlegm, yellow bile, blood, and black bile?

A) Hippocrates
B) Jakob Henle
C) Louis Pasteur
D) Miles Berkeley
Question
In the 1970s, Rothman presented a view of causation that has come to be known as which of the following?

A) Germ theory
B) Causal criteria
C) Web of Causation
D) Sufficient-Component Theory of Causation
Question
Prospective studies designs are best for providing evidence of which of the following because epidemiologists are usually sure that the cause preceded the occurrence of the disease in this type of study?

A) Consistency
B) Specificity
C) Temporality
D) Plausibility
Question
Which of Hill's guidelines is a reprise of John Stuart Mill's "method of difference" canon, which states that A causes B if, all else being held uniform, a change in A leads to a subsequent change in B?

A) Consistency
B) Experiment
C) Temporality
D) Plausibility
Question
Rothman defined which of the following as a "complete causal mechanism" that inevitably causes disease?

A) Distant cause
B) Proximate cause
C) Sufficient cause
D) Component cause
Question
True causes must exhibit which attribute?

A) Association
B) Plausibility
C) Consistency
D) Specificity
Question
During ancient times, concepts of causation were influenced mainly by people's religious beliefs.
Question
Although the presence of consistency may provide evidence of causality, its absence does not preclude causation.
Question
Experimental studies provide most of the epidemiological data for judging whether an association is causal.
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Deck 15: The Epidemiologic Approach to Causation
1
How epidemiologists determine causative and preventive factors involve a process known as which of the following?

A) Statistical interaction
B) Homogeneity of effect
C) Causal inference
D) Departure from multiplicity
Causal inference
2
Which philosophy, which has prevailed since the Scientific Revolution of the 1700s, emphasizes inductive inference-the formulation of explanatory hypotheses from making observations?

A) Rationalism
B) Empiricism
C) Utilitarianism
D) Industrialism
Empiricism
3
Which doctrine states that knowledge accumulates through reason rather than observation?

A) Rationalism
B) Empiricism
C) Utilitarianism
D) Industrialism
Rationalism
4
Which concept, which was first developed for infectious diseases, means that a cause should lead to a single effect and vice versa?

A) Consistency
B) Specificity
C) Temporality
D) Plausibility
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k this deck
5
Which of the following is the only one of Hill's guidelines about which there is complete agreement among epidemiologists?

A) Consistency
B) Specificity
C) Temporality
D) Plausibility
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Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Rothman defined which of the following as a "complete causal mechanism" that inevitably produces disease?

A) Direct cause
B) Necessary cause
C) Sufficient cause
D) Component cause
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Critics of which guideline state that its absence implies only that the investigator is unimaginative, not that the association is noncausal?

A) Analogy
B) Specificity
C) Temporality
D) Plausibility
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Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Causal inference is a simple process with no hard and fast rules.
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k this deck
9
Falsifiability increases with the empirical content of the hypothesis.
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Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Most "causes" of interest to epidemiologists are actually components of sufficient causes.
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Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Which of the following, the third essential attribute of a cause, means that there is an asymmetrical relationship between cause and effect?

A) Association
B) Time order
C) Direction
D) Regression
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Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Which man introduced the idea that people became ill because of an imbalance in the four body humors: phlegm, yellow bile, blood, and black bile?

A) Hippocrates
B) Jakob Henle
C) Louis Pasteur
D) Miles Berkeley
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
In the 1970s, Rothman presented a view of causation that has come to be known as which of the following?

A) Germ theory
B) Causal criteria
C) Web of Causation
D) Sufficient-Component Theory of Causation
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Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Prospective studies designs are best for providing evidence of which of the following because epidemiologists are usually sure that the cause preceded the occurrence of the disease in this type of study?

A) Consistency
B) Specificity
C) Temporality
D) Plausibility
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Which of Hill's guidelines is a reprise of John Stuart Mill's "method of difference" canon, which states that A causes B if, all else being held uniform, a change in A leads to a subsequent change in B?

A) Consistency
B) Experiment
C) Temporality
D) Plausibility
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Rothman defined which of the following as a "complete causal mechanism" that inevitably causes disease?

A) Distant cause
B) Proximate cause
C) Sufficient cause
D) Component cause
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
True causes must exhibit which attribute?

A) Association
B) Plausibility
C) Consistency
D) Specificity
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18
During ancient times, concepts of causation were influenced mainly by people's religious beliefs.
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19
Although the presence of consistency may provide evidence of causality, its absence does not preclude causation.
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20
Experimental studies provide most of the epidemiological data for judging whether an association is causal.
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