Epid 600 Class 1 Intro To Epidemiology
Epid 600 Class 1 Intro To Epidemiology
Epid 600 Class 1 Intro To Epidemiology
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Course details
Fall Term 2008
Lecture on Tuesdays 10:00am-11:30am
Lecture is in SPHII Auditorium
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Primary instructor
Sandro Galea, MD, DrPH
Center for Social Epidemiology and Population Health
Department of Epidemiology
University of Michigan
1214 S. University
Ann Arbor, MI 48103
734.647.9741
sgalea@umich.edu
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Malta
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Toronto
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Toronto
Philippines
Guatemala PNG
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Geraldton
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Geraldton
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Somalia
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Boston
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New York
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My work
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Graduate student instructors
Lauren Wallner, MPH
lwallner@umich.edu
All instructors are VERY available by email and by appointment when you need us
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Course objectives
To
introduce epidemiology students to the key concepts
and methods of epidemiology
Toprepare students for further courses in epidemiology,
particularly EPID 655 and EPID 601
Tointroduce students to and to familiarize students with
epidemiologic writing in peer-reviewed journals
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Therefore, the implicit aims of this course
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Course organization
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Course grading
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Class participation (10%)
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Structure of discussion sections
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Assignments (25%)
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Epidemiologic paper critique (20%)
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Exams; mid-term + final (15+30%)
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How did people typically do in this
60
class?
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Number of students
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0
A A- B+ B B- C+
Letter grade
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So how do I do well in this course?
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So, should I be in this class?
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Academic conduct
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The trouble with epidemiologists and the
solutions for this course
Use of different terminology
Occasionally cantankerous adherence to one way
of doing and speaking about things
We will use a book by Rothman, the same author
for the book used in EPID 601
There may be some inconsistencies between EPID
600 lectures and the book—for the purposes of this
course, the material in the lectures should guide
answers to assignments and exams
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What is epidemiology?
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What is epidemiology?
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Operationally
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Definition of epidemiology
epi = among
demos = people
logos = doctrine
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Basic assumptions of epidemiology
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Epidemiology and populations
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History of epidemiology (1)
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History of epidemiology (2)
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William Farr (1807-1883)
“The fatality of every class of
disease...is augmented in the
concentrated city population...
let the rejected vegetables, the
offal of slaughtered animals, the
filth produced in every way
decay in the houses...and the
atmosphere will be an active
poison, which will destroy...5-7
percent of the inhabitants
annually.”
Farr W. Letter to the Registrar General. First Annual Report of the Registrar General of Births, Deaths, and Marriages in England. 1839; London, HMSO. 46
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Life expectancy, England and Wales,
1800-1900
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Life expectancy (years)
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1800 1810 1820 1830 1840 1850 1860 1870 1880 1890 1900
Year
Bongaarts J, ed. Beyond Six Billion: Forecasting the World’s Population. 2000; National Academy Press, pg. 123. 49
History of epidemiology (3)
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Cholera and John Snow
Four cholera epidemics with over 100,000
deaths in London in the mid-nineteenth
century
“Miasma” and “Germ” theories
John Snow published treatise in 1849
supporting germ theory and suggesting
contaminated water as a means of
transmission
An 1854 cholera outbreak was shown to be
associated with one of London’s two water
companies
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Determinants of cholera
200,000 cesspools
Cesspools in disrepair
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The efficacy of medical interventions?
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History of epidemiology (4), the
twentieth century
During the first half of the twentieth century, the study of
epidemiology was largely concerned with infectious
diseases
In the second half of the twentieth century, epidemiology
was concerned with chronic diseases
HIV/AIDS confuses the whole focus in the late 1980s
Growing emphasis on the “proximal” and immediate causes
of health and disease until recent (past decade) rediscovery
of the “social” determinants of health
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Ten greatest public health achievements, US,
1900-1999
Vaccination
Motor-vehicle safety
Safer workplace
Control of infectious disease
Decline in deaths from coronary heart disease and stroke
Safer and healthier foods
Healthier mothers and babies
Family planning
Fluoridation of drinking water
Recognition of tobacco use as a health hazard
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A metaphor
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Rich
Poor
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Leading causes of death in the US, 2005
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Leading causes of death in the US, 2005
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Leading causes of death in the US, 2005
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Leading causes of death in the US, 2005
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Kung HC, Hoyert DL, Xu JQ, Murphy SL. Deaths: Final data for 2005. National vital statistics reports; vol 56 no 10. Hyattsville, MD: National Center for Health Statistics. 2008.
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Kung HC, Hoyert DL, Xu JQ, Murphy SL. Deaths: Final data for 2005. National vital statistics reports; vol 56 no 10. Hyattsville, MD: National Center for Health Statistics. 2008.
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Kung HC, Hoyert DL, Xu JQ, Murphy SL. Deaths: Final data for 2005. National vital statistics reports; vol 56 no 10. Hyattsville, MD: National Center for Health Statistics. 2008.
Leading causes of death?
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Epidemiologic papers, papers, papers...
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The empiric epidemiologic paper
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
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Introduction
What is the scope of the problem?
e.g., obesity is a national emergency etc
Sample
Location, time, population, data collection methods, IRB
approval
Variables
Discuss each variable used in analysis
Analysis
Step-by-step analysis
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Results
Table 1 shows…
Figure 1 shows...
Table 2 shows…
Table 3 shows…
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Discussion
Summary of study results
i.e., “This population-based study showed…”
Limitations
Conclusions/implications
“Notwithstanding these limitations…”
“Implications of this work are…”
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