Title: Disease Detectives
1Disease Detectives
2What is Disease Detectives?
- Epidemiology Study of health/sickness of
populations - Includes Public Health Surveillance
- Data collection for prevention and control of
illness - Uses scientific study methods
- Heavy emphasis on data analysis
3The event
- B/C events similar in content
- C has more math, vocab, evaluation of research
design - Nonprogrammable calculators (absolutely
essential) - One sheet of notes
- This years focus foodborne illness
- Includes prevention and remediation
4Event format
- 2-3 data sets on public health problems
- Mostly short answer/fill in questions
- Multi-point math problems
- Show work for partial credit!
- Matching/multiple choice for vocab
- Essays, long reading passages?
- ten steps to investigating an outbreak
5Major foodborne agents
- Viruses Norwalk/norovirus rotavirus, hep A (a)
- Bacteria Campylobacter, Salmonella, E. coli
O157H7, Clostridium perfringens, Listeria,
Staphylococcus, Shigella, Vibrio, Yersinia (a)
C. botulinum (c) - Bacterial toxins endo- vs exo-
- Contaminants melamine, mercury etc. (a, c)
- Toxins seafood, mushrooms, berries (all)
- Parasites and prions (a, c)
- Symptoms a) gastroenteritis, b) allergic, c)
neurological see chart
6Biology of disease
- Virus, bacteria, parasite life cycles, modes of
transmission - Immunity active, passive, herd
- Epidemic, pandemic, endemic
- Case definition person, place, time
- Epidemiological triad agent, host, environment
- John Snows cholera study
7Statistics
- Prevalence of existing cases at a given time
(or period) - Incidence of new cases in a period of time
- Both usually expressed as rates (e.g., per 1,000
pop.) - For incidence, person/time may be used (e.g.,
person/year) - Attack rate cases/exposed pop.
- Case fatality rate CSD/cases
8Statistics Relative Risk
- Technically, Relative Risk includes Risk Ratio,
Rate Ratio and Odds Ratio - Usually, Relative Risk Risk Ratio
- Risk of cases/population
- Risk Ratio risk in pop. of interest / control
group risk - may be study pop./general population OR
exposed/unexposed
9Odds Ratio
- Odds of outcome in pop. 1
- odds of outcome in pop.2
- postives in pop. 1
negatives in pop. 1 - divided by positives in pop. 2 negatives in
pop. 2 - Or, by invert and multiply
- pos. in pop.1 X neg. in pop. 2 neg. in pop.
1 X pos. in pop.2 -
10Research methods
- Case/control study compare cases to some group
of unaffected persons - Cannot use RR b/c no true baseline
- Cohort study tracks population over time,
compares to some baseline - Can use RR
- May be prospective or retrospective
- Experimental methods
- Basically limited to randomized clinical trials
of treatments, supplements etc.
11Example Nurses health study
- Cohort study (prospective), so RR is applicable
- RR 411/39242 / 596/74068
- RR 1.30
Breast Cancer No Breast Cancer Totals
Ever smoked 411 38831 39242
Never Smoked 596 73472 74068
Totals 1007 112303 113,310
12Example 2 Hip fractures
of months on hormone replacement therapy Hip fracture patients (Cases) Sample of other patients (controls) Totals
gt 6 60 579 639
lt 6 20 213 233
Totals 80 792 872
- case/control study, so must use OR
- OR 60/20 / 579/213 or
- 60213 / 20579 1.1
13Epi curves point source
- Single peak, lt1 incubation period
- Single environmental source no PTP
- Example transient environmental agents, most
food contamination
14Continuous common source
- One peak or declining peaks, gt1 IP
- Ongoing environmental exposure no PTP
- Example persistent environmental agents,
waterborne pathogens (cholera)
15Progressive source(aka Propagated)
- Multiple, often successively higher peaks gt1 IP
- Person-to person transmission
- Example communicable diseases (MRSA, flu)
16Line Listing
Signs/Symptoms Signs/Symptoms Signs/Symptoms Lab Demographics Demographics
Case Report Date Onset Date Physician Diagnosis N V J HAIgM Sex Age
1 10/12/02 10/5/02 Hepatitis A 1 1 1 1 M 37
2 10/12/02 10/4/02 Hepatitis A 1 0 1 1 M 62
3 10/13/02 10/4/02 Hepatitis A 1 0 1 1 M 38
4 10/13/02 10/9/02 NA 0 0 0 NA F 44
5 10/15/02 10/13/02 Hepatitis A 1 1 0 1 M 17
6 10/16/02 10/6/02 Hepatitis A 0 0 1 1 F 43
17SIR Graph
- susceptible, infected, recovered (removed)
18Contagion
- Now a major motion picture
- Made with the cooperation of the CDC
- Go see it!
- Make your students see it!
- It is really good!
19Links
- National site resources http//soinc.org
- Soinc store http//store.soinc.org/
- Free online introductory textbook from the CDC
http//www.ihs.gov/MedicalPrograms/PortlandInjury/
PDFs/PrinciplesOfEpidemiologyInPublicHealthPractic
e.pdf - CDCs DD site http//www.cdc.gov/excite/disease_d
etectives/index.htm - Weekly reports from CDC http//www.cdc.gov/mmwr/
- Awesome chart of foodborne agents
http//www.doh.wa.gov/notify/other/foodchart.pdf - Glossaries http//www.cdc.gov/reproductivehealth/
EpiGlossary/glossary.htmC http//www.ispub.com/o
stia/index.php?xmlFilePathjournals/ijpn/vol3n1/gl
ossary.xml - Nice explanation of odds ratio relative risk
http//www.childrens-mercy.org/stats/journal/oddsr
atio.asp - Epi curves http//nccphp.sph.unc.edu/focus/vol1/i
ssue5/1-5EpiCurves_issue.pdf -