Epidemiology
Epidemiology
Epidemiology
MEANING OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
DEFINITION
AIMS OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
USES OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
To study the effects of disease rate in a population over a time and predict future
health needs
To diagnose the health of the community
To evaluate the health services
To estimate the individual risk from the group
To identify the syndrome
To complete the clinical picture of chronic diseases and describe their natural
history
To search the natural course of disease and illness
a. The systematic collection of health data (including the utilization of data collected
for other purposes)
Identification of health problems and assessment of priorities in allocation
of resources
Detection of new problems or changes in frequency of existing problems
Identification of risk factors enabling efficient distribution of resources
assigned to a particular problem
Evaluation of effectiveness of control programme
Formulation of hypothesis regarding the reasons for nonrandom
distribution of diseases
b. The search for cause of ill health
Identification of alterable causes
Identification of susceptible groups for special surveillance
Identification of disease entities
Identification of early manifestations of disease or disease syndrome
ADVANTAGES OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
EPIDEMIOLOGICAL PROCESS
Data collection begins when a case is roprted or when there is a noticeable change
in the incidence rate of particular disease or condition.once the case is known to
the health personnels data are collected from various sources to determine ifa
problem really exists.
Clinical observations,laboratory studies and lay reporting assist the
epidemiological team in confirming the homogenicity of the current
event.Timely,accurate and thorough data collection is a critical factor in this
step.The health professionals needs to be detective by interviewing the affected
individuals and then find out the individual’s environment to track down the host
agent environment factors that influence disease occurrence.
Analysing data in terms of person,place and time helps to estimate the magnitude
of the problem.Data tell the health professional the proportion of the people
affected, seriousness of affect on thehost and community,geographical distribution
of disease and also in identifying the potential source of infection.And the health
professional makes an educated guess as to the nature of causative agent on the
basis of data collected and this is called the formulation of tentative diagnosis or
hypothesis
For example : if 4 hospital emergency rooms have reported that several
individuals were treated for food poisoning in the last 24 hoursthe health personnel would
want to immediately take the following actions:
A basic starting point in this step is to identify the group affected by the disease or
problem under investigation.Individual epidemiological histories should be obtained to
classify persons according to their exposure to the suspected or causative agents and to
identify the clinical data and bacteriological findings needed to substantiate the
diagnosis.Significant variations in the incidence in the contrasted population groups
should be noted.These variations can be identified through the study of attck rates
An attack rate is an incidence rate that identifies the number of people at risk who
become ill
For example : In studying a food borne disease outbreak the attack rates for persons who
had certain foods were compared to those persons who did not have certain foods.This is
done in an attempt toidentify which food was infected by the causative agent
However identifying the causative agent is not only the step in preventing further spread
of the disease.Knowing the agent assists in treating the ill individuals who seek medical
help but does not tell how the disease is being transmitted.The chain of transmission must
be broken to stop the spread of the disease.Since one factor alone does not cause any
disease,it is not sufficient toidentify just the causative agent.After the possible agents and
attack groups have been identified,the common sources to which the affected individuals
were exposed and the environment should be investigated.
For example : with food borne disease the origin,method of preparation,sanitary
conditions of the restuarent, area were food was supplied, water supply etc are to be
assessed.
When planning for control,it is essential to identify the preventive measures based on the
knowledge of natural history of disease.Host-agent-environment factors should be
analysed to determine the following:
Population at risk
Primary ,secondary and tertiary methods of prevention that are available
Feasibility of implementing the control plan considering factors such as
available community resources,time and cost,supplies and personnel
Significance of the problem related to thecommunity needs
Control measures are directed towards breaking the chain of transmission.This includes
destroying the reseviour,interrupting the transmission of the agent or decreasing the
ability of the agent
Community health nurses are instrumental in helping the public to see the need for
effective control of the disease through effective control of disease through active
immunization.The community health nurse must identify the population at risk and
immunize them against communicable disease
Casefinding is the process which focuses on early diagnosis and treatment of nwly
detectedcases of a disease.Careful record keeping assists the epidemiologist to quickly
spot changing trends in diseases or conditions
An active effort should be made to elicit and coordinate the cooperation of the lay public
as well as private and official agencies,when control measures are put into action.A
control programme that takes into consideration the beliefs attitudes and customs of the
community is more likely to be accepted by the public than one that ignores community
norm.
There may be many barriers to the successful implementation of the
control plan. Barriers to control involve factors such as unknown etiology, no known
treatment unavailable community resources lack of reporting etc. an individual without
disease symptoms but who harbors the disease organism is called the carriers. Individuals
for whom the diagnosis is not suspected or confirmed are also barriers to control of the
disease.
STEP VI : EVALUATE CONTROL PLAN
Evaluation ensures that an epidemiological process can be improve the next time it is
repeated. The first step in evaluation is to determine how well the objectives were
achieved. The next question to be answered is how the current situation compares to the
situations before the investigation. Finally the practicality of the control measures should
be determined. Feasibility and cause in terms of money time staff facilities and
community support should be analysed
STEP VII : MAKE APPROPRITE REPORT
Prompt accurate and concised epidermiological reporting provide a
basis for future investigations and controlled measures. Reporting should include what
was involved in the epidermiological process diagnosis, factors leading to epidermic,
control measures and recommendations for preventing similar situations
Accurate reporting is essential for the identification of the major
community health problems and preventive health actions is necessary. But for many
reasons underreporting of epidermiological investigations occur . completion of
necessary forms may be tedious and time consuming and therefore neglected. There may
be no one person assigned the responsibility for completion of the reports so
responsibility is overlooked. Usually more effective reporting occurs when one person is
designated to report activities
EPIDEMIOLOGICAL TRIAD
AGENT
An agent is a factor whose presence or absence causes a disease.It is a specific factor
without which a disease cannot occur.
The disease agents are classified as follows:
Physical agents : it includes various mechanical forces,friction as well as
atmospheric abnormalities such as extremes of heat,cold,humidity,pressure etc
Biological agents : includes all living organisms such as bacteria,virus,fungi
Chemical agents
a) Endogenous : some chemicals are produced in the body such as urea,
ketones, uric acid
b) Exogenous : arising out of the human host like allergans,metals,gases
Genetic agents : transmitted from parent to child
Nutrition agents: include specific dieary components that are
neede to survive like proteins,fats and excess or deficiencies
may cause malnutrition
Absence or insufficiencies or excess of factors
Chemical hormones – insulin
Nutrients
Chromosomes
HOST
Host refers to humans or animalks that come in contact with the agent.host factors
influence the interaction with the agent and the environment as follows :
a) Age : certain diseases are most common in some age groups than others like
childhood – measeles and oldage – atherosclerosis
b) Sex
c) Race : some disease are specifically present in certain races
d) Habits : lifestyle habits and dietary patterns of individual such as use of tobacco,
alcohol
e) Nutrition : poor nutrition increases susceptibility to infections
f) Customs : certain traditional systems like superstitions lead to diseases
g) Immunity : the reaction of human host to different infections will depend on his
previous immunologic experiences
h) Social status : certain diseases like TB are more prevalent in low socio economic
status
i) Economic status
j) Educational status
ENVIRONMENT
The environment refers to the aggregate of all the external conditions that
influence the life and development of the organism
Physical environment :it includes the non living things and physical
factors such as water, air, soil,heat,climate
Biologic environment : it involves all the living things created in the world
including the bacteria,virus etc
Social envirionment : man is a social animal and should follw the accepted
patterns of society such aschabits, beliefs, customs
Economic environment : man and economic factors may at at times be a
factor of disease
EPIDEMIOLOGICAL STUDIES
Epidemiological approaches to relationship fall into two broad categories:
Observational bstudies – the amount and distribution of disease
within a population by person, plce and time are noted
Experimental studies – the investigator intervenes and actually
changes one variable and observes what happens to other,the
investigator controls the condition
TYPES OF EPIDEMIOLOGICAL STUDIES
Epidemiological
studies
observational experimental
Prophylactic or Therapeutic or
descriptive analytical
clinical trials community trials
Retrospective Prospective
(case control) (cohort study)
OBSERVATIONAL STUDIES
Observational studies fall under two classifications:
Descriptive epidemiology
Analytical epidemiology
Descriptive epidemiology : it is the study of the amount and distribution of disease and
health status within the population by person, place and time.it usually involves
determination of incidences,prevalences and mortality rates for disease in large
population groups according to characterstics such as age, sex, race etc
It is the study of factors responsible for distribution of health and disease inhuman
population such as age, sex, social status, income, occupation etc
For example
Emergency medicine in Paarl, South Africa: a cross-sectional descriptive study
A study conducted by Hanewinckel R, Jongman HP, Wallis LA, Mulligan TM.
Abstract
Analytical epidemiology
Analytical epidemiology is concerned with searching for the underlying causes.its main
purposes are to uncover the source and mode of spread of disease.here the
epidemiologists seeks to determine the multiple factors that brought the disease
situation .the clue about origin, nature and size of the problem is discovered.
Data derived from descriptive studies often provide clues or findings about a problem
that leads an investigator to make guesses or formulate hypotheses for further study.
These ypothesses are tested by analytical methods.The study focuses on the determinant
of or reasons for relatively high or low frequencies of disease in specific groups.The
methos analytical study commonly employed for testing epidemiological hypothesis are :
Retrospective method (backward survey)
Prospective survey (forward survey)
PROSPECTIVE
It is a forward study in which the host, agent, and environmental factors are studied.the
study is planned in a population group in which frequency and distribution of a disease is
to be studied.A prospective method is also called cohort study.The cohort is a specific
group of people at a certain time.The study begins with aa disease or a condition and
watches it over a period of time to see what develops.The prospective method helps to
make estimation about the risk of developing particular condition in presence of certain
charcterstics,two kinds of risk are measured:
Relative risk is the ratio between the incidence or mortality among exposed to the
incidence or mortality among non exposed
Relative risk = incidence among exposed
An attributed risk is the rate of the disease in the exposed individuals that can be
attributed to suspected cause
Example :
EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES
In experimental studies the researcher intervenes and changes one variable and observes
what happens to the others.In this method the conditions are under the careful control of
the investigator.Experimental studies are taken to confirm an etiological hypothesis or to
assess the effectiveness of a therapeutic agent before applying them to community.These
studies may be conducted in laboratory or fieldsThe basic principles involved in the
experimental epidemiology includes:
Random allocation of subjects to appropriate sub groups :in this two groups are
formed one the experimental or study group which receives a intervention and a
control group which receives no treatment
Medical, ethical and moral issues : these are observed while conducting
experiments particularly on human beings
Ability to generalize : if the experiment is conducted on a represetntative sample
of the toytal population it is possible to make generalization
Double blindedness : in a double blinded study neither the investigator nor the
subjects know who receives the study treatment and who receives the control
treatment.The outcome is measured in such a way that the type of treatment is not
known.Thus no bias is introduced
TYPES:
Prophylactic or clinical types : this type is designed to prevent a disease in which
the efficiency of the therapeutic or preventive agent is tested in individual
subjects
Example: administration of BCG vaccine as prophylaxis for TB
Community trials this type is designed to treat a established disease process in
which a group of individuals as a whole is used to ddtermine the efficiency of a
drug or procedure
Example:the evaluation of flurides in preventing dental caries
STATISTICAL DATA
Staistical data of malarial epidemiology on world
Increased risk of malarial andemic in areas of central and south America, Africa
and tropical regions of asia
Major cause of infant death in tropical regions of world
Malaria is the most common cause of fever in trvellers returning fron foreign
countries
Incidence
Worldwide estimate of 300 – 500 million cases of malaria occurring annually
1.5 – 3 million children die
- WHO
Malaria in india
Malaria kills nearly 2 lakh people in india every year including 80000 children
below 15 years