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Measuring Population Health. Learning Objectives  To explain the difference between numerators and denominators, and their importance in population measurement.

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Presentation on theme: "Measuring Population Health. Learning Objectives  To explain the difference between numerators and denominators, and their importance in population measurement."— Presentation transcript:

1 Measuring Population Health

2 Learning 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

3 Rate  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.

4 Rate (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

5 Incidence Rate Number of new cases of disease over a period of time __________________________________ Population at Risk

6 Incidence Rates  Need: –A period of observation –Numerator (number of new cases) –Times of disease onset (diagnosis) –Denominator (Population at risk)

7 Measures 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)

8 Low incidence constantly present High incidence at set time, above endemic levels Global epidemics Infection in a Population

9 Prevalence Rate Number of existing cases of disease at a point in time ___________________________________ Total Population

10 Prevalence  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

11 Prevalence Rates  Need: –Definite point in time –Numerator (number of existing cases) –Time of disease onset –Denominator (size of population)

12 Factors 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

13 Relationship 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

14 The Bathtub Analogy

15 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. Trends

16 References:  Beaglehole, R., Bonita, R., and Kjellström, T. (1993) Basic Epidemiology. 2 nd ed. World Health Organisation 2006.  Farmer, R., Miller, D., Lawrenson, R. (2000)Lecture Notes on Epidemiology and Public Health Medicine, 4 th 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, 2 nd Edition, Lippincott Williams and Wilkins.


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