Title: History of Epidemiology
1History of Epidemiology
- HIPPOCRATES (400 BC) On Airs, Waters, and
Places Hypothesized that disease might be
associated with the physical environment,
including seasonal variation in illness. - JOHN GRAUNT (1662) Nature and Political
Observations Made Upon the Bills of Mortality
First to employ quantitative methods in
describing population vital statistics. - JOHN SNOW (1850) Formulated natural
epidemiological experiment to test the hypothesis
that cholera was transmitted by contaminated
water.
2History of Epidemiology (cont.)
- DOLL HILL (1950) Used a case-control design to
describe and test the association between smoking
and lung cancer. - FRANCES at al. (1950) Huge formal field trial of
the Poliomyelitis vaccine in school children. - DAWBER et al. (1955) Used the cohort design to
study risk factors for cardiovascular disease in
the Framingham Heart Study.
3ROOTS OF MODERN EPIDEMIOLOGY
1. ACUTE DISEASE INVESTIGATION ----- Emphasis on
empirical systematic investigation, biology, and
environment/host manipulation
2. MEDICINE ----- All early epidemiologists
were physicians.
4ROOTS OF MODERN EPIDEMIOLOGY
3. STATISTICS ----- Emphasis on the scientific
method, quantification and measurement, and
hypothesis testing. In 1960s, many epidemiologis
ts were statisticians.
4. SOCIAL SCIENCES ----- Investigation of human
behavior in relation to disease, and methods
of data collection (surveys, etc.)
5ROOTS OF MODERN EPIDEMIOLOGY
5. COMPUTER SCIENCES ----- Emergence of chronic
disease epidemiology required the ability
to handle large amounts of data and to perform
complex analyses.
6. MANAGERIAL SCIENCES ----- Management
principles for acquisition of grants, research
collaboration, and management of clinical trials.
6ROOTS OF MODERN EPIDEMIOLOGY
7. GENOMICS ----- 2001 marked first publication
of draft sequences of the human genome.
Intensive investigations being conducted to
identify disease susceptibility genes
gene- environment interactions, and gene-gene
interactions.
7Levels of Inference from Epidemiologic Evidence,
and Attendant Concerns
Epidemiology provides varying levels of
information
REQUIREMENTS
INFERENCE
Relations between operational measurements among
study measurements
None
Accurate measurement of both exposure and disease
Association between measured exposure and disease
among study participants
Freedom from confounding
Causal effect of exposure on disease in the
study population
8Levels of Inference from Epidemiologic Evidence,
and Attendant Concerns
Epidemiology provides varying levels of
information
REQUIREMENTS
INFERENCE
Causal effect of exposure on disease in external
populations
Generalizability (external validity)
Amenability of exposure to modification
Prevention of disease through elimination or
reduction of exposure
Substantial public health impact from elimination
or reduction of exposure
Large attributable fraction
9EVOLVING FIELD OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
Chief Causes of Death in the U.S. -- 1900
- Pneumonia/Influenza 11.8
- Tuberculosis 11.3
- Gastritis, enteritis, colitis 8.3
- Heart disease 8.0
- Senility, ill-defined conditions 6.8
- Vascular lesions affecting CNS 6.2
- Nephritis and renal sclerosis 4.7
10Chief Causes of Death in the U.S. -- 2001
- Disease of heart 248
- Malignant neoplasms 196
- Cerebrovascular diseases 58
- Chronic lower respiratory diseases 44
- Unintentional injuries 36
- Diabetes mellitus 25
- Pneumonia influenza 22
Age-adjusted per 100,000
11Leading Causes of Death in Children In Developing
Countries -- 2002
- Cause of Death of all Deaths
- Perinatal conditions 23.1
- Lower respiratory infections 18.1
- Diarrhoeal diseases 15.2
- Malaria 10.7
- Measles 5.4
- Congenital anomalies 3.8
- HIV/AIDS 3.6
- Pertussis 2.9
- Other 17.2
12Causes of Mortality Worldwide 2002 Ages 15 -
59
Cause Deaths (000) HIV/AIDS 2279 Ischemi
c heart disease 1332 Tuberculosis 1036 Road
traffic injuries 814 Cerebrovascular
disease 783 Self-inflicted injuries 672 Viole
nce 473
13Causes of Mortality Worldwide 2002 Ages 60
and Older
Cause Deaths (000) Ischemic heart
disease 5825 Cerebrovascular disease 4689 COPD
2399 Lower respiratory infections 1396 Trac
hea, bronchus, lung cancers 928 Diabetes
mellitus 754 Hypertensive heart
disease 735 Stomach cancer 605
14Causes of Disease Burden (DALYs) Worldwide
2002 Ages 15 - 59
Cause DALYs (000) HIV/AIDS 68661 Unipola
r depressive disorders 57843 Tuberculosis 283
80 Road traffic injuries 27264 Ischemic heart
disease 26155 Alcohol use disorders 19567 Hear
ing loss, adult onset 19486 Violence 18962
15Causes of Disease Burden (DALYs) Worldwide
2002 Ages 60 and Older
Cause DALYs (000) Ischemic heart
disease 31481 Cerebrovascular
disease 29595 COPD 14380 Alzheimers and
other dementias 8569 Cataracts 7384 Lower
respiratory infections 6597 Hearing loss, adult
onset 6548 Trachea, bronchus, lung cancers 5952
16EVOLVING FIELD OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Historically, in developed countries, there has
been a marked shift in the leading causes of
mortality from infectious to chronic
diseases. - In the U.S. today, the fastest growing segment of
the population is aged 85 and older. - Virtually all chronic diseases have
multi-factorial etiologies.
17Discussion Question 3
If a cure was found for heart disease, how
might this likely affect mortality rates from
(1) AIDS and (2) Cancer in the United States?
18Discussion Question 3
- Most likely
- 1. AIDS-related mortality would be largely
unaffected since most deaths from AIDS occur in
persons not at high risk (age) for heart disease
mortality. - 2. Cancer mortality would increase since persons
who would have died from heart disease would now
be at risk of dying from cancer. - This concept of one cause of mortality affecting
another is know as competing risks.
19PRACTICAL AND ETHICAL ISSUES
- Measures of disease and exposure occurrence are
often not easy to obtain. - Many diseases occur infrequently in human
populations.
20PRACTICAL AND ETHICAL ISSUES
- Unlike experimental science, the investigator
cannot manipulate study variables (i.e those
hypothesized to be causes of disease). - Investigator must deal with budgetary and
subject privacy concerns.
21EXAMPLES OF UNETHICAL RESEARCH
- Criminal and unscientific behavior of physicians
in concentration camps in Nazi Germany led to
adoption of Nuremberg Code (1947). - 1936 U.S. Public Health Service started study
of effects of untreated syphilis in Tuskegee, AL
long after effective treatment for the disease
was known. - 1963- Jewish Chronic Diseases Hospital 22
elderly patients injected with cancer cells
without their knowledge to test immunological
response. - Willowbrook State Hospital, NY retarded children
deliberately infected with viral hepatitis to
study natural history.
22ETHICS
- 1974 Congress established the National
Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects
of Biomedical and Behavioral Research. - Requires the establishment of Institutional
Review Boards (IRBs) for all research funded in
whole or in part by the federal government. - 1996 Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act (HIPAA) Privacy Rule issued
to assure that individuals health information is
properly protected, while allowing the flow of
health information needed to promote high-quality
health care and to protect the publics health
and well-being.
23HIPAA
- The HIPAA Privacy Rule protects individual
identifiable health information known as
protected health information transmitted or
maintained in any form or medium. Includes - --- Demographic or other information relating to
past, current, or future physical or mental
health or condition of an individual - --- Provision or payment of health care to an
individual that is created or received by a
health care provider, health plan, employer, or
health care clearinghouse - --- Individual genetic information
24SOME PROFESSIONAL AND ETHICAL ISSUES
- Should informed consent be required for routine
review of medical records? - Who should have access to the study data, and
when? - How should study findings be disseminated to the
public? - Should epidemiologists be advocates for specific
public health policies?
25Discussion Question 4
What are the important criteria that IRBs
consider in approving human research studies?
26Discussion Question 4
- Criteria include
- Risks to study participants are minimized.
- Risks are reasonable in relation to anticipated
benefits. - Selection of study participants is equitable.
- Informed consent is obtained and documented for
each participant. - Adequate monitoring of data collection to ensure
the safety of study participants. - Privacy of participants and confidentiality of
data are protected.
27THE HOST - ENVIRONMENT INTERACTION
ANKYLOSING SPONDYLITIS
- Persons with HLA-B27 approximately 90 times more
likely to develop the disease (Genetic
Susceptibility) - However, only 10 of the individuals with HLA-B27
will develop the disease (Environmental Exposure)
28THE HOST - ENVIRONMENT INTERACTION
Virtually all chronic diseases have
multi-factorial etiologies -- many may have
infectious components.
- Enteroviruses Type I diabetes
- Epstein Barr virus B-cell lymphomas
- Chlamydia pneumoniae Heart disease
- Helicobacter pylori Peptic ulcers
- Hepatitis B and C Liver cancer
- Borna disease virus Schizophrenia
29Natural history of disease
Usual time of diagnosis
Onset of symptoms
Exposure
Pathologic changes
Stage of recovery, disability or death
Stage of subclinical disease
Stage of clinical disease
Stage of susceptibility
PRIMARY PREVENTION
SECONDARY PREVENTION
TERTIARY PREVENTION
30The natural history of disease
- STAGE 1 Susceptibility
- DESCRIPTION Risk factors which assist
the development of disease exist,
but disease has not developed - EXAMPLE Smoking
31The natural history of disease
(contd)
- STAGE 2 Presymptomatic disease
- DESCRIPTION Changes have occurred to lead
toward illness but disease is not
yet clinically detectable - EXAMPLE Alveoli deteriorate
32The natural history of disease
(contd)
- STAGE 3 Clinical Disease
- DESCRIPTION Detectable signs and/or
symptoms of disease exist - EXAMPLE Emphysema detected by
pulmonary function test
33The natural history of disease
(contd)
- STAGE 4 Disability
- DESCRIPTION Disease has progressed to the
point of causing a residual effect -
- EXAMPLE Person has difficulty
breathing
34LEVELS OF PREVENTION
- LEVEL Primary
- DESCRIPTION Promote general health
- and avoid risk factors for
- disease --- Utilize protective
measures to prevent
susceptibility and
presymptomatic disease - EXAMPLE Stop smoking or choose
not to start avoid areas
where people are smoking
35LEVELS OF PREVENTION (contd)
- LEVEL Secondary
- DESCRIPTION Early detection and
timely treatment - EXAMPLE Routine pulmonary
function tests for those at risk
medicine to help patients breath more
easily smoking cessation programs if
patient smokes
36LEVELS OF PREVENTION (contd)
- LEVEL Tertiary
- DESCRIPTION Rehabilitation and
prevention of further disease or disability - EXAMPLE Oxygen therapy facilitating
ambulation with technical devices
37PREVENTION APPROACHES
- Population-Based Approach
- Preventive measure widely applied to an entire
population (public health approach) - Strive for small absolute change among many
persons - Must be relatively inexpensive and non-invasive
38PREVENTION APPROACHES
- High-Risk Approach
- Target group of individual at high risk
- Strive for strong risk factor control
- Often times requires clinical action to
identify the high risk group and to motivate risk
factor control.
39LEVELS OF PREVENTION (Review)PRIMARY PREVENTION
- Prevention of disease by controlling risk factors
(e.g., non-smoking promotion)
40LEVELS OF PREVENTION (Review)SECONDARY
PREVENTION
- Reduction in consequences of disease by early
diagnosis and treatment - (e.g., cervical cancer screening)
41LEVELS OF PREVENTION (Review)TERTIARY
PREVENTION
- Reduction in complications of disease
- (e.g., MV crashes and ICU)