Title: Morbidity-data sources and measures
1Morbidity-data sources and measures
- Farid Najafi
- MD PhD
- Kermanshah Health Research Center (KHRC)
- Kermanshah University of Medical Sciences
2Question
3References
4What are we measuring?
Criteria for diagnosis is the first step (case
fefinition) Different case definition leads to
different values
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6Prevalence
Prevalence rate is a wrong expression It is a
simple proportion or percentage
Period prevalence it requires a smaller survey
sample to find enough cases For an accurate
estimate. Did your child have diarrhea during
any of the last 7 days?
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9Incidence
- Incidence measures how quickly people are
developing a disease - Population at risk
- Cervical cancer
- Women vs. men
- Women after hysterectomy
10Relationship between incidence and prevalence
- Direct relationship between incidence and
prevalence - PID
- Hepatitis A vs. Hep C
- To measure the prevalence we need to conduct a
cross-sectional study - To measure the incidence we need to conduct a
follow-up study
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13Incidence rate versus cumulative incidence
- IR is equivalent to the average speed of a car at
a particular point in time, e.g. 60 km/hour - CI is analogous to the distance travelled by a
car during a specified interval of time, e.g. 60
Km in one hour
14Measuring disease occurrence using routine data
- Most of our information come from routine data
- Data are not individual base
- No causal association between disease and other
factors - We are usually interested in incidence
- Difference between crude, age-specific and
stadardised incidence and prevalence
15Raw health data
- Data can be assessed at two levels
- Summary data
- Raw counts of health events
- More challenge about morbidity data compared to
mortality data - Capturing in a less systematic way
- Scope of information is enormous
- No complete informatin at a local level
16Disease registeries
- It covers only small minority of conditions
- CHD first studied in MONICA Project in the early
1980s - Cancer Most countries, most notably in
Scandinavia, have cancer registries that cover
the whole country - Cancer is an ideal candidate for registration
because of its clear-cut diagnosis, based on a
single simple record (pathology) - Many infectious diseases
17Health Surveys
- There are two major challenges
- Representativeness sample has been chosen to be
representative of whole population - No inclusion of homeless people
- Those who disagree to participate (response rate)
- Validity the extent to which a survey actually
measures what it set out to measure
18Validity
19Health facility data
- Hospital records usually based on discharge
diagnosis as recorded and coded on the patients
record with varying degreees on misdiagnosis,
mis-recording and mis-coding - Not representing the general population
- For fatal and serious conditions, hospital
records provide useful information - Lack of unique patients identifier
- No information about condition treated by family
practioners or n home
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21Getting access to the data
- International sources
- World Health Organization (http//www.who.int)
- World Bank (http//www.worldbank.org)
- National data sources
- Ministry of Health
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