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Cross Sectional Studies and Public Health Surveillance

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Title: Cross Sectional Studies and Public Health Surveillance


1
Cross Sectional Studies and Public Health
Surveillance
  • Introduction to Epidemiology
  • Sharon Cooper, Ph.D.
  • June 14, 2001

2
Cross-Sectional Studies
  • Often used to investigate non-fatal diseases
  • May necessitate special studies
  • Distinct from other study designsprevalence
  • Some studies may be designed to estimate burden
    of disease in a population others only exposure
  • Can be difficult to assess time sequence between
    exposure and disease

3
Cross-Sectional Studies
2 uses descriptive and analytic
4
Features of Cross-Sectional Studies
  • Measures disease prevalence-gt of existing cases
    in population (disease, symptoms, physiologic
    states)
  • Point prevalence
  • Period prevalence (less often)
  • Prevalence rate
  • cases/ of people, therefore a proportion,
    not a rate
  • If measure prevalence in exposed and unexposed,
    can calculate prevalence odds ratio
  • Can also calculate means, correlation
    coefficients

5
Population Surveys
  • Focus is on some real population that can be
    defined geographically and temporally
  • Purposes include
  • Describing the extent of a condition, by
    determining the prevalence, mean value, or
    distribution
  • Testing a hypothesis about an association
  • Finding cases for treatment, or participation in
    a study

6
Example Determine the prevalence of
disease/condition
  • What is the prevalence of NOT having received
    prenatal counseling among women delivering at LBJ
    Hospital, Houston, Texas in 1999?
  • Possible purposes
  • Determine need for services
  • Evaluate effect of a program
  • Among adults in California, what is the
    prevalence of elevated blood lead levels?
  • Identify high risk workers and workplaces
  • Design interventions

7
Example Test a hypothesis about an association
  • Among smoking pregnant women, is the average
    number of cigarettes smoked associated with
    hemoglobin levels?
  • Is there a difference in mean serum cholesterol
    between males and females?

8
Population Definitions
  • Target Population The collection of individuals
    about which it is desired to make inferences.
  • Study Population The collection of individuals
    selected for study.
  • Examined Population The collection of
    individuals who were actually studied by
    investigators (subset of study population)

9
Steps in Population Survey
  • Identify target population?
  • Determine sampling frame?
  • Draw sample to identify study pop.?
  • Examine study population?
  • Characterize examined population

10
Designing an Epidemiologic StudySkin Cancer
Background
  • Most common type of cancer in U.S. 40-50 of
    Americans who live to age 65 will have skin
    cancer at least once.
  • Types
  • Non-melanoma (basal and squamous), more than 1/2
    million new cases/year in U.S.
  • Melanoma (27,000 new cases/year in U.S.)

11
Skin Cancer Cont.
  • Primary risk factor--UV radiation from sun
  • Occupational risk factors--ionizing radiation,
    PAH, arsenic
  • Risk varies with age, hair and eye color, skin
    type, ease of freckling, and geographic location

12
Keratoses
  • Keratosis--dysplastic growth of keratin producing
    cells of skin
  • Risks for keratoses appear to be same as for SC
    and BC carcinoma
  • Natural history of keratosis--??, perhaps 10-20
    progress to squamous cell carcinoma

13
Background for Study
  • Two reports (Bowra et al., 1982 Wang et al.,
    1987) suggested risk of keratoses among workers
    in production of 4,4 bi-pyridyl
  • No good background data, clinical impressions,
    and clustering within job titles
  • Both reports involved production using HTS or MAG
    processes, but new cases also diagnosed after
    switching to LTS process

14
Design the Study
  • Texas plant (100 employees)--LTS process only
    does excess exist among workers attributable to
    occupational exposure?
  • What types of expertise would you desire study
    team to have?
  • Considerations study design, definition and
    ascertainment of exposure/health outcome, bias.

15
SURVEILLANCE
  • Surveillance--French word keeping a close
    watch over an individual. . .in order to detect
    subversive tendencies (monitoring/intervention)
  • CDC defines surveillance
  • ongoing, systematic collection, analysis, and
    interpretation of health data essential to
    planning, implementation, and evaluation of
    public health practice. . .and dissemination of
    these data. . .for the purposes of prevention and
    control.
  • Ultimately, a single element, a single addition
    to the strategy of the eradication process was
    responsible for its success--that change was
    the incorporation of the principle of
    surveillance.
  • D.A. Henderson, 1980

16
TWO CONNOTATIONS OF SURVEILLANCE
  • Public health surveillance--activities by
    federal, state, local agencies to monitor or
    follow-up on occupational diseases/injuries
    (usually population-based)
  • Medical surveillance--refers to application of
    medical tests and procedures to individuals to
    detect particular disorder (medical screening is
    subset)

17
PURPOSES OF SURVEILLANCE
  • to recognize a problem
  • to define the scope of the problem (descriptive
    epidemiology, priority setting, trends)
  • to activate epidemiologic research (not
    synonymous with)
  • evaluate effectiveness of interventions

18
STEPS IN PUBLIC HEALTH SURVEILLANCE
  • Gather information on cases of disease and injury
    or on exposures
  • analyze data
  • disseminate data to medical community, unions,
    government agencies, researchers, public
  • intervene to reduce or eliminate health
    events/hazards
  • (to count, evaluate,act)

19
TWO AXES OF SURVELILLANCE
  • Health effect surveillance (public health,
    medical)
  • Hazard surveillance (freq., distribution, and
    trends in hazard responsible for disease, e.g.,
    lead, behavioral risk factors, noise, ozone
    levels, inspection of kitchens by health
    departments)

20
TWO TYPES OF SURVELILLANCE
  • Passive--data collected for other purposes, e.g.,
    insurance data, hospital discharge
  • Active--data collected specifically for program
    needs

21
EXAMPLES OF SOURCES OF SURVELILLANCE DATA
  • National Notifiable Disease Surveillance System
    (NNDSS)--notifiable diseases in the U.S.
  • Vital statistics
  • Sentinel surveillance--based on an event that is
    a preventable disease, disability, or untimely
    death whose occurrence serves as a warning signal
    that the quality of preventative and/or
    therapeutic medical care may need to be improved
    (Rutstein, 1983)
  • Registries (exposure, cancer, birth defects)
  • Surveys (e.g., National Health Interview Survey
    100,000 people annually)
  • Administrative data collection systems (hospital
    discharge, Medicare Provider Analysis and Review
    MEDPAR, ERs, public health clinics, etc.)

22
EXAMPLES OF CRITERIA FOR EVALUATING SURVELILLANCE
SYSTEMS(MMWR 37(No. S-5)1-18, 1988)
  • Public health importance
  • usefulness/cost
  • acceptability to persons recording data
  • timeliness
  • representativeness of cases in population
  • simplicity of data collection and management
  • flexibility (to include additional conditions)
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