Deck 18: Epidemiology and Screening: Understanding Disease Patterns and Identifying Risks

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Question
Because which of the following conduct their studies in a controlled laboratory environment, they can regulate all important aspects of the experimental conditions?

A) Basic scientists
B) Clinical scientists
C) Environmental scientists
D) Public health scientists
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Question
Which of the following are usually the first to identify new diseases, the adverse effects of new exposures, and new links between an exposure and a disease?

A) Basic scientists
B) Clinical scientists
C) Environmental scientists
D) Public health scientists
Question
Which of the following refers to the analysis of disease patterns according to the characteristics of person, place, and time, or in other words, who is getting the disease, where is it occurring, and how it is changing over time?

A) Disease control
B) Disease frequency
C) Disease distribution
D) Disease determinants
Question
Now considered one of the founders of modern epidemiology, which of the following was the compiler of Statistical Abstracts for the General Registry Office in Great Britain from 1839 through 1880?

A) John Snow
B) John Graunt
C) James Lind
D) William Farr
Question
The Streptomycin Tuberculosis Trial was one of the first instances that which of the following was used in medical research?

A) Randomization
B) Stratification
C) Generalization
D) Standardization
Question
The people who were in Hiroshima, Japan when the atomic bomb exploded at the end of World War II are members of which type of population?

A) Fixed population
B) Dynamic population
C) Candidate population
D) Catchment population
Question
A person is a member of which type of population only as long as he or she has the defining state or condition?

A) Fixed population
B) Dynamic population
C) Candidate population
D) Catchment population
Question
Cumulative incidence is mainly used in which type of populations where there are no or small losses to follow-up?

A) Fixed populations
B) Dynamic populations
C) Candidate populations
D) Catchment populations
Question
Incidence is defined as the occurrence of new cases of disease that develop in which type of population over a specified time period?

A) Fixed population
B) Dynamic population
C) Candidate population
D) Catchment population
Question
The numerator and denominator of which commonly used measure of disease frequency often includes both livebirths and stillbirths?

A) Livebirth rate
B) Birth defect rate
C) Case fatality rate
D) Infant mortality rate
Question
Which of the following helps public health officials determine which exposures are most important to a given population and to prioritize prevention activities?

A) Risk difference
B) Prevalence difference
C) Incidence rate difference
D) Population risk difference
Question
Which of the following describes the public health impact of the exposure among the exposed?

A) Risk difference
B) Prevalence difference
C) Incidence rate difference
D) Population risk difference
Question
Which of the following measures is very useful for determining priorities for public health action?

A) Risk ratio
B) Risk difference
C) Attributable proportion among the exposed (APe)
D) Attributable proportion among the total population (APt)
Question
It is difficult to interpret absolute and relative measures of comparison based on which type of rates when the compared groups differ on a characteristic that affects the rate of disease?

A) Crude rates
B) Summary rates
C) Adjusted rates
D) Attributable rates
Question
The purpose of which survey is to "provide reliable national data on marriage, divorce, contraception, infertility, and the health of women and infants in the United States"?

A) National Survey of Family Growth
B) National Health Interview Survey
C) National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey
D) Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System
Question
Which of the following uses a stratified, multistage sampling scheme to select a sample of households that form a representative sample of the target population?

A) National Survey of Family Growth
B) National Health Interview Survey
C) National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey
D) Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System
Question
The purpose of which state-based survey is to monitor a wide-variety of health risk behaviors that are related to chronic disease, injuries, and death, including use of screening and preventive services, smoking, alcohol use, physical activities, fruit and vegetable consumption, seat belt use, and weight control?

A) National Survey of Family Growth
B) National Health Interview Survey
C) National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey
D) Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System
Question
Which of the following was a national probability survey that was conducted annually from 1965 to 2010?

A) National Hospital Discharge Survey (NHDS)
B) National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS)
C) National Hospital Care Survey (NHCS)
D) National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NAMCS)
Question
Which type of study compares the rates of disease among natives of a homeland to rates among immigrants and among natives of the adopted country?

A) Cohort studies
B) Migrant studies
C) Case-control studies
D) Longitudinal studies
Question
Which type of variations in disease frequency are the most common type of periodic fluctuations?

A) Diurnal
B) Weekly
C) Seasonal
D) Annual
Question
Epidemiologists have varying opinions about the usefulness of investigating the causes of which of the following because follow-up investigations often fail to produce fruitful results and the consume time and resources?

A) Disease outbreaks
B) Disease clusters
C) Disease transmission
D) Disease progression
Question
The epidemic curve of which of the following rises rapidly to a peak and then falls gradually?

A) Point source outbreak
B) Continuous common source outbreak
C) Propagated outbreak
D) Disease cluster
Question
Which type of study is preferable when little is known about the health consequences of an exposure?

A) Cohort study
B) Ecological study
C) Case-control study
D) Cross-sectional study
Question
Investigators are usually confident that which type of controls are comparable to the cases with respect to demographic and other important variables?

A) Population controls
B) Hospital and clinic controls
C) Dead controls
D) Friend/spouse/relative controls
Question
In which type of study, cases serve as their own controls and the exposure during the hazard period is compared with that from a control period?

A) Cohort study
B) Ecological study
C) Cross-sectional study
D) Case-crossover study
Question
Which type of studies are fairly common in occupational settings using data from preemployment physical examinations and company health insurance plans?

A) Cohort studies
B) Ecological studies
C) Case-control studies
D) Cross-sectional studies
Question
Which type of trials usually take many years to conduct and require tens of thousands of participants because they often focus on reducing the incidence of diseases that typically occur at a yearly cumulative incidence of 1% or less?

A) Prevention trials
B) Therapeutic trials
C) Crossover trials
D) Parallel trials
Question
Which phase of a clinical trial provides metabolic and pharmacologic profiles of the drug, including determination of the maximally tolerated dose?

A) Phase 1
B) Phase 2
C) Phase 3
D) Phase 4
Question
Which of the following is used "to ensure balance in the mix of the treatment groups with regard to time of enrollment" and helps to control for "shifts in the nature of persons enrolled over the course of a trial"?

A) Blocking
B) Masking
C) Stratification
D) Standardization
Question
Which of the following accompanies randomization to ensure that key confounding variables are equally distributed between the treatment and comparison groups?

A) Blocking
B) Masking
C) Stratification
D) Standardization
Question
Cohort studies that are conducted in which type of population usually take into account population changes, such as in-and-out migration, and therefore the incidence rate is the most suitable measure of disease frequency for monitoring health outcomes in this setting?

A) Open population
B) Fixed population
C) Candidate population
D) Catchment population
Question
A general cohort would be assembled to study which of the following?

A) Medical procedures
B) Use of oral contraceptives
C) Unusual diets and lifestyles
D) Health effects of rare exposures
Question
The interval between the action of a cause and disease onset is referred to as which of the following?

A) Latent period
B) Hazard period
C) Induction period
D) Dormant period
Question
Proportional mortality ratio (PMR) studies suffer from which of the following, which means that a higher proportion of deaths from one cause must be counterbalanced by a lower proportion of deaths from another cause?

A) Placebo effect
B) Seesaw effect
C) Hawthorne effect
D) Healthy worker effect
Question
Public health has had a greater effect on the health of populations than medicine has had.
Question
Public health scientists focus their research questions mainly on disease diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis in individual patients.
Question
Location of residence, such as country, state, city, or neighborhood, is one of the most common ways to define a population.
Question
Regardless of the way in which it is defined, a population can be divided into subgroups on the basis of any characteristic.
Question
Most epidemiologists prefer to use the relative method of comparison for etiologic research because of the way it is anchored by a baseline value.
Question
Crude rates are summary measures of disease frequency that are based on the raw data.
Question
Although U.S. birth and death data pertain to the whole U.S. population, the target population for most national surveys is institutionalized civilians.
Question
The primary purpose of the census is to assign members of the House of Representatives to the states.
Question
Mortality data are adequate for examining nonfatal diseases, and they give a complete picture of the health status of a population.
Question
Race and ethnicity have a profound influence on disease patterns and can be particularly difficult to measure.
Question
Observational studies suffer the same ethical and feasibility issues as experimental studies.
Question
Ecological studies can be done quickly and inexpensively because they often rely on preexisting data.
Question
Trials that prevent or delay the onset of disease among healthy individuals are called secondary prevention trials.
Question
When trials involve procedures rather than pills, "sham" procedures are administered to match as closely as possible the experience of the treatment and comparison groups.
Question
Retrospective cohort studies are considered less vulnerable to bias because the outcomes have not occurred when the cohort is assembled and the exposures are assessed.
Question
Masking guarantees comparable follow-up efforts and outcome ascertainment, which in turn helps ensure valid results.
Question
Which type of studies are preferable when little is known about the disease because they allow the investigators to evaluate more than one hypothesis?

A) Cohort studies
B) Ecological studies
C) Case-control studies
D) Cross-sectional studies
Question
Which of the following depends on the rate at which new cases develop as well as the duration that the cases have the disease?

A) Incidence
B) Prevalence
C) Morbidity
D) Mortality
Question
The most difficult aspect of using which type of controls is determining which diseases or events are suitable for the control group?

A) Dead controls
B) Population controls
C) Hospital or clinic controls
D) Friend, spouse, and relative controls
Question
In which sampling approach does the investigator select a control from the population at risk when the case is diagnosed?

A) Cluster sampling
B) Survivor sampling
C) Case-base sampling
D) Risk set sampling
Question
Which type of bias can occur in cohort and experimental studies from differential losses to follow-up?

A) Recall bias
B) Interviewer bias
C) Information bias
D) Selection bias
Question
The best way to ensure that which type of bias does not occur is to obtain high participation rates among both cases and controls?

A) Recall bias
B) Information bias
C) Self-selection bias
D) Control-selection bias
Question
The healthy worker effect is a form of selection bias that occurs in two special types of which type of studies-proportional mortality ratio (PMR) and standardized mortality ratio (SMR) studies?

A) Cohort studies
B) Ecological studies
C) Case-control studies
D) Cross-sectional studies
Question
Although which type of bias can occur in both case-control and retrospective cohort studies, it is typically described in the context of a traditional case-control study with nondiseased controls?

A) Recall bias
B) Interviewer bias
C) Information bias
D) Selection bias
Question
A variable that is a step in the causal chain is referred to as which of the following?

A) Outlier
B) Mediator
C) Confounder
D) Biomarker
Question
Which of the following reflects the fact that treatments are given to individuals with a particular disease, and therefore, there is a mixing of effects between the treatment, the disease for which the treatment is given, and the outcome under study?

A) Positive confounding
B) Negative confounding
C) Confounding by indication
D) Confounding by severity
Question
A unique advantage of which of the following is that it will control for variables that study investigators are unable to measure?

A) Matching
B) Restriction
C) Randomization
D) Literature review
Question
Which of the following is advantageous when the case series in a case-control study is very small, and therefore other options for controlling confounding do not work well?

A) Matching
B) Restriction
C) Randomization
D) Literature review
Question
During the third phase of biostatistical history, between World Wars I and II, researchers took methods for testing hypothesis using in which type of research and applied them to medicine and public health?

A) Industrial research
B) Sociological research
C) Agricultural research
D) Ecological research
Question
Although many epidemiologists and biostatisticians emphasize the role of which of the following as an explanation for study findings, others believe that it is overemphasized to the point of misinterpreting study results?

A) Bias
B) Confounding
C) Random error
D) Generalization
Question
Which mathematical theory provides the basis for making statistical inferences?

A) Distribution
B) Elimination
C) Probability
D) Singularity
Question
Which of the following represents a low to moderate level of effect measure modification?

A) Statistical interaction
B) Homogeneity of effect
C) Departure from additivity
D) Departure from multiplicity
Question
Which of the following is said to occur when the excess relative risk among individuals with both factors is greater than the sum of the excess relative risks of each factor considered alone?

A) Synergy
B) Validity
C) Precision
D) Antagonism
Question
Epidemiologists conduct stratified analyses to evaluate simultaneously the presence of which of the following?

A) Bias and confounding
B) Bias and random error
C) Effect measure modification and random error
D) Effect measure modification and confounding
Question
Which section of a journal article provides the scientific interpretation of the findings, places the findings in the context of other research, and acknowledges the study limitations?

A) Results section
B) Discussion section
C) Conclusion section
D) Materials and methods section
Question
The main limitation of which type of study is that they do not allow investigators to infer the temporal sequence between exposure and disease if the exposure is a changeable characteristic?

A) Cohort studies
B) Ecological studies
C) Experimental studies
D) Cross-sectional studies
Question
Which method of data analysis is commonly used to control for demographic characteristics such as age?

A) Randomization
B) Standardization
C) Stratification
D) Multivariate analysis
Question
Most practicing epidemiologists consider which of Hill's guidelines to be useless because it has so many well-known exceptions?

A) Consistency
B) Specificity
C) Temporality
D) Plausibility
Question
Empiricism emphasizes which of the following-the formulation of explanatory hypotheses from making observations?

A) Causal inference
B) Inductive inference
C) Deductive inference
D) Statistical inference
Question
According to what man's hypothetico-deductive approach, hypotheses are formed using creativity and imagination, and no data are needed?

A) Harold Kushner
B) Karl Popper
C) John Stuart Mill
D) Sir Austin Bradford Hill
Question
Mandatory screening for which disease was instituted among immigrants and premarital couples to stop the spread of the disease before effective treatments were available?

A) HIV
B) Syphilis
C) Chlamydia
D) Human papilloma virus
Question
Which type of efforts do not prevent disease occurrence but instead identify asymptomatic individuals during the window between the pathological onset and the occurrence of clinical symptoms?

A) Health promotion
B) Primary prevention
C) Secondary prevention
D) Tertiary prevention
Question
Careful control of insulin levels and patient education to prevent retinopathy and other complications among patients with diabetes is an example of which type of efforts?

A) Health promotion
B) Primary prevention
C) Secondary prevention
D) Tertiary prevention
Question
Three major principles that apply to research with human subjects are identified in which of the following; respect for persons, beneficence, and justice, and these remain the fundamental principles in current U.S. regulations for human subjects research?

A) Belmont Report
B) Nuremburg Code
C) Declaration of Helsinki
D) Kefauver-Harris Bill
Question
Adherence to which ethical principle helps determine whether the burdens and benefits of research are distributed fairly?

A) Justice
B) Autonomy
C) Beneficence
D) Nonmaleficence
Question
When a new prevention measure for a disease is developed, both the incidence and prevalence of the disease will decrease over the long term.
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Deck 18: Epidemiology and Screening: Understanding Disease Patterns and Identifying Risks
1
Because which of the following conduct their studies in a controlled laboratory environment, they can regulate all important aspects of the experimental conditions?

A) Basic scientists
B) Clinical scientists
C) Environmental scientists
D) Public health scientists
Basic scientists
2
Which of the following are usually the first to identify new diseases, the adverse effects of new exposures, and new links between an exposure and a disease?

A) Basic scientists
B) Clinical scientists
C) Environmental scientists
D) Public health scientists
Clinical scientists
3
Which of the following refers to the analysis of disease patterns according to the characteristics of person, place, and time, or in other words, who is getting the disease, where is it occurring, and how it is changing over time?

A) Disease control
B) Disease frequency
C) Disease distribution
D) Disease determinants
Disease distribution
4
Now considered one of the founders of modern epidemiology, which of the following was the compiler of Statistical Abstracts for the General Registry Office in Great Britain from 1839 through 1880?

A) John Snow
B) John Graunt
C) James Lind
D) William Farr
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
The Streptomycin Tuberculosis Trial was one of the first instances that which of the following was used in medical research?

A) Randomization
B) Stratification
C) Generalization
D) Standardization
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
The people who were in Hiroshima, Japan when the atomic bomb exploded at the end of World War II are members of which type of population?

A) Fixed population
B) Dynamic population
C) Candidate population
D) Catchment population
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
A person is a member of which type of population only as long as he or she has the defining state or condition?

A) Fixed population
B) Dynamic population
C) Candidate population
D) Catchment population
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Cumulative incidence is mainly used in which type of populations where there are no or small losses to follow-up?

A) Fixed populations
B) Dynamic populations
C) Candidate populations
D) Catchment populations
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Incidence is defined as the occurrence of new cases of disease that develop in which type of population over a specified time period?

A) Fixed population
B) Dynamic population
C) Candidate population
D) Catchment population
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
The numerator and denominator of which commonly used measure of disease frequency often includes both livebirths and stillbirths?

A) Livebirth rate
B) Birth defect rate
C) Case fatality rate
D) Infant mortality rate
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Which of the following helps public health officials determine which exposures are most important to a given population and to prioritize prevention activities?

A) Risk difference
B) Prevalence difference
C) Incidence rate difference
D) Population risk difference
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Which of the following describes the public health impact of the exposure among the exposed?

A) Risk difference
B) Prevalence difference
C) Incidence rate difference
D) Population risk difference
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Which of the following measures is very useful for determining priorities for public health action?

A) Risk ratio
B) Risk difference
C) Attributable proportion among the exposed (APe)
D) Attributable proportion among the total population (APt)
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
It is difficult to interpret absolute and relative measures of comparison based on which type of rates when the compared groups differ on a characteristic that affects the rate of disease?

A) Crude rates
B) Summary rates
C) Adjusted rates
D) Attributable rates
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
The purpose of which survey is to "provide reliable national data on marriage, divorce, contraception, infertility, and the health of women and infants in the United States"?

A) National Survey of Family Growth
B) National Health Interview Survey
C) National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey
D) Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Which of the following uses a stratified, multistage sampling scheme to select a sample of households that form a representative sample of the target population?

A) National Survey of Family Growth
B) National Health Interview Survey
C) National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey
D) Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
The purpose of which state-based survey is to monitor a wide-variety of health risk behaviors that are related to chronic disease, injuries, and death, including use of screening and preventive services, smoking, alcohol use, physical activities, fruit and vegetable consumption, seat belt use, and weight control?

A) National Survey of Family Growth
B) National Health Interview Survey
C) National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey
D) Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Which of the following was a national probability survey that was conducted annually from 1965 to 2010?

A) National Hospital Discharge Survey (NHDS)
B) National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS)
C) National Hospital Care Survey (NHCS)
D) National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NAMCS)
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Which type of study compares the rates of disease among natives of a homeland to rates among immigrants and among natives of the adopted country?

A) Cohort studies
B) Migrant studies
C) Case-control studies
D) Longitudinal studies
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Which type of variations in disease frequency are the most common type of periodic fluctuations?

A) Diurnal
B) Weekly
C) Seasonal
D) Annual
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Epidemiologists have varying opinions about the usefulness of investigating the causes of which of the following because follow-up investigations often fail to produce fruitful results and the consume time and resources?

A) Disease outbreaks
B) Disease clusters
C) Disease transmission
D) Disease progression
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
The epidemic curve of which of the following rises rapidly to a peak and then falls gradually?

A) Point source outbreak
B) Continuous common source outbreak
C) Propagated outbreak
D) Disease cluster
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Which type of study is preferable when little is known about the health consequences of an exposure?

A) Cohort study
B) Ecological study
C) Case-control study
D) Cross-sectional study
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Investigators are usually confident that which type of controls are comparable to the cases with respect to demographic and other important variables?

A) Population controls
B) Hospital and clinic controls
C) Dead controls
D) Friend/spouse/relative controls
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
In which type of study, cases serve as their own controls and the exposure during the hazard period is compared with that from a control period?

A) Cohort study
B) Ecological study
C) Cross-sectional study
D) Case-crossover study
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Which type of studies are fairly common in occupational settings using data from preemployment physical examinations and company health insurance plans?

A) Cohort studies
B) Ecological studies
C) Case-control studies
D) Cross-sectional studies
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Which type of trials usually take many years to conduct and require tens of thousands of participants because they often focus on reducing the incidence of diseases that typically occur at a yearly cumulative incidence of 1% or less?

A) Prevention trials
B) Therapeutic trials
C) Crossover trials
D) Parallel trials
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Which phase of a clinical trial provides metabolic and pharmacologic profiles of the drug, including determination of the maximally tolerated dose?

A) Phase 1
B) Phase 2
C) Phase 3
D) Phase 4
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Which of the following is used "to ensure balance in the mix of the treatment groups with regard to time of enrollment" and helps to control for "shifts in the nature of persons enrolled over the course of a trial"?

A) Blocking
B) Masking
C) Stratification
D) Standardization
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Which of the following accompanies randomization to ensure that key confounding variables are equally distributed between the treatment and comparison groups?

A) Blocking
B) Masking
C) Stratification
D) Standardization
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Cohort studies that are conducted in which type of population usually take into account population changes, such as in-and-out migration, and therefore the incidence rate is the most suitable measure of disease frequency for monitoring health outcomes in this setting?

A) Open population
B) Fixed population
C) Candidate population
D) Catchment population
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
A general cohort would be assembled to study which of the following?

A) Medical procedures
B) Use of oral contraceptives
C) Unusual diets and lifestyles
D) Health effects of rare exposures
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
The interval between the action of a cause and disease onset is referred to as which of the following?

A) Latent period
B) Hazard period
C) Induction period
D) Dormant period
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Proportional mortality ratio (PMR) studies suffer from which of the following, which means that a higher proportion of deaths from one cause must be counterbalanced by a lower proportion of deaths from another cause?

A) Placebo effect
B) Seesaw effect
C) Hawthorne effect
D) Healthy worker effect
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Public health has had a greater effect on the health of populations than medicine has had.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Public health scientists focus their research questions mainly on disease diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis in individual patients.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Location of residence, such as country, state, city, or neighborhood, is one of the most common ways to define a population.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Regardless of the way in which it is defined, a population can be divided into subgroups on the basis of any characteristic.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Most epidemiologists prefer to use the relative method of comparison for etiologic research because of the way it is anchored by a baseline value.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
Crude rates are summary measures of disease frequency that are based on the raw data.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
Although U.S. birth and death data pertain to the whole U.S. population, the target population for most national surveys is institutionalized civilians.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
The primary purpose of the census is to assign members of the House of Representatives to the states.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
Mortality data are adequate for examining nonfatal diseases, and they give a complete picture of the health status of a population.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
Race and ethnicity have a profound influence on disease patterns and can be particularly difficult to measure.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
Observational studies suffer the same ethical and feasibility issues as experimental studies.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 190 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
Ecological studies can be done quickly and inexpensively because they often rely on preexisting data.
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47
Trials that prevent or delay the onset of disease among healthy individuals are called secondary prevention trials.
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48
When trials involve procedures rather than pills, "sham" procedures are administered to match as closely as possible the experience of the treatment and comparison groups.
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49
Retrospective cohort studies are considered less vulnerable to bias because the outcomes have not occurred when the cohort is assembled and the exposures are assessed.
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50
Masking guarantees comparable follow-up efforts and outcome ascertainment, which in turn helps ensure valid results.
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51
Which type of studies are preferable when little is known about the disease because they allow the investigators to evaluate more than one hypothesis?

A) Cohort studies
B) Ecological studies
C) Case-control studies
D) Cross-sectional studies
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52
Which of the following depends on the rate at which new cases develop as well as the duration that the cases have the disease?

A) Incidence
B) Prevalence
C) Morbidity
D) Mortality
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53
The most difficult aspect of using which type of controls is determining which diseases or events are suitable for the control group?

A) Dead controls
B) Population controls
C) Hospital or clinic controls
D) Friend, spouse, and relative controls
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54
In which sampling approach does the investigator select a control from the population at risk when the case is diagnosed?

A) Cluster sampling
B) Survivor sampling
C) Case-base sampling
D) Risk set sampling
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55
Which type of bias can occur in cohort and experimental studies from differential losses to follow-up?

A) Recall bias
B) Interviewer bias
C) Information bias
D) Selection bias
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56
The best way to ensure that which type of bias does not occur is to obtain high participation rates among both cases and controls?

A) Recall bias
B) Information bias
C) Self-selection bias
D) Control-selection bias
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57
The healthy worker effect is a form of selection bias that occurs in two special types of which type of studies-proportional mortality ratio (PMR) and standardized mortality ratio (SMR) studies?

A) Cohort studies
B) Ecological studies
C) Case-control studies
D) Cross-sectional studies
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58
Although which type of bias can occur in both case-control and retrospective cohort studies, it is typically described in the context of a traditional case-control study with nondiseased controls?

A) Recall bias
B) Interviewer bias
C) Information bias
D) Selection bias
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59
A variable that is a step in the causal chain is referred to as which of the following?

A) Outlier
B) Mediator
C) Confounder
D) Biomarker
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60
Which of the following reflects the fact that treatments are given to individuals with a particular disease, and therefore, there is a mixing of effects between the treatment, the disease for which the treatment is given, and the outcome under study?

A) Positive confounding
B) Negative confounding
C) Confounding by indication
D) Confounding by severity
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61
A unique advantage of which of the following is that it will control for variables that study investigators are unable to measure?

A) Matching
B) Restriction
C) Randomization
D) Literature review
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62
Which of the following is advantageous when the case series in a case-control study is very small, and therefore other options for controlling confounding do not work well?

A) Matching
B) Restriction
C) Randomization
D) Literature review
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63
During the third phase of biostatistical history, between World Wars I and II, researchers took methods for testing hypothesis using in which type of research and applied them to medicine and public health?

A) Industrial research
B) Sociological research
C) Agricultural research
D) Ecological research
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64
Although many epidemiologists and biostatisticians emphasize the role of which of the following as an explanation for study findings, others believe that it is overemphasized to the point of misinterpreting study results?

A) Bias
B) Confounding
C) Random error
D) Generalization
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65
Which mathematical theory provides the basis for making statistical inferences?

A) Distribution
B) Elimination
C) Probability
D) Singularity
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66
Which of the following represents a low to moderate level of effect measure modification?

A) Statistical interaction
B) Homogeneity of effect
C) Departure from additivity
D) Departure from multiplicity
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67
Which of the following is said to occur when the excess relative risk among individuals with both factors is greater than the sum of the excess relative risks of each factor considered alone?

A) Synergy
B) Validity
C) Precision
D) Antagonism
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68
Epidemiologists conduct stratified analyses to evaluate simultaneously the presence of which of the following?

A) Bias and confounding
B) Bias and random error
C) Effect measure modification and random error
D) Effect measure modification and confounding
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69
Which section of a journal article provides the scientific interpretation of the findings, places the findings in the context of other research, and acknowledges the study limitations?

A) Results section
B) Discussion section
C) Conclusion section
D) Materials and methods section
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70
The main limitation of which type of study is that they do not allow investigators to infer the temporal sequence between exposure and disease if the exposure is a changeable characteristic?

A) Cohort studies
B) Ecological studies
C) Experimental studies
D) Cross-sectional studies
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71
Which method of data analysis is commonly used to control for demographic characteristics such as age?

A) Randomization
B) Standardization
C) Stratification
D) Multivariate analysis
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72
Most practicing epidemiologists consider which of Hill's guidelines to be useless because it has so many well-known exceptions?

A) Consistency
B) Specificity
C) Temporality
D) Plausibility
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73
Empiricism emphasizes which of the following-the formulation of explanatory hypotheses from making observations?

A) Causal inference
B) Inductive inference
C) Deductive inference
D) Statistical inference
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74
According to what man's hypothetico-deductive approach, hypotheses are formed using creativity and imagination, and no data are needed?

A) Harold Kushner
B) Karl Popper
C) John Stuart Mill
D) Sir Austin Bradford Hill
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75
Mandatory screening for which disease was instituted among immigrants and premarital couples to stop the spread of the disease before effective treatments were available?

A) HIV
B) Syphilis
C) Chlamydia
D) Human papilloma virus
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76
Which type of efforts do not prevent disease occurrence but instead identify asymptomatic individuals during the window between the pathological onset and the occurrence of clinical symptoms?

A) Health promotion
B) Primary prevention
C) Secondary prevention
D) Tertiary prevention
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77
Careful control of insulin levels and patient education to prevent retinopathy and other complications among patients with diabetes is an example of which type of efforts?

A) Health promotion
B) Primary prevention
C) Secondary prevention
D) Tertiary prevention
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78
Three major principles that apply to research with human subjects are identified in which of the following; respect for persons, beneficence, and justice, and these remain the fundamental principles in current U.S. regulations for human subjects research?

A) Belmont Report
B) Nuremburg Code
C) Declaration of Helsinki
D) Kefauver-Harris Bill
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79
Adherence to which ethical principle helps determine whether the burdens and benefits of research are distributed fairly?

A) Justice
B) Autonomy
C) Beneficence
D) Nonmaleficence
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80
When a new prevention measure for a disease is developed, both the incidence and prevalence of the disease will decrease over the long term.
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