1-Introduction To Epidemiology
1-Introduction To Epidemiology
1-Introduction To Epidemiology
Epidemiology is the study of the distribution and determinants of health-related states or events
in specified populations, and the application of this study to the control of health problems
KEY TERMS
Key terms in this definition reflect some of the important principles of epidemiology.
i. Study
Epidemiology is a scientific discipline with sound methods of scientific inquiry at its foundation.
Epidemiology is data-driven and relies on a systematic and unbiased approach to the collection,
analysis, and interpretation of data. Basic epidemiologic methods tend to rely on careful
observation and use of valid comparison groups to assess whether what was observed, such as
the number of cases of disease in a particular area during a particular time or the frequency of an
exposure among persons with disease, differs from what might be expected. However,
epidemiology also draws on methods from other scientific fields, including biostatistics and
informatics, with biologic, economic, social, and behavioral sciences.
Epidemiology is often described as the basic science of public health, and for good reason.
Epidemiology is concerned with the frequency and pattern of health events in a population:
Frequency refers not only to the number of health events and to the relationship of that number
to the size of the population. The resulting rate allows epidemiologists to compare disease
occurrence across different populations.
Pattern refers to the occurrence of health-related events by time, place, and person.
a. Time patterns may be annual, seasonal, weekly, daily, hourly, weekday versus weekend,
or any other breakdown of time that may influence disease or injury occurrence.
b. Place patterns include geographic variation, urban/rural differences, and location of work
sites or schools.
c. Person-Personal characteristics include demographic factors that may be related to risk of
illness, injury, or disability such as age, sex, marital status, and socioeconomic status, as
well as behaviors and environmental exposures.
Characterizing health events by time, place, and person are activities of descriptive
epidemiology, discussed in more detail later in this lesson.
iii. Determinants
Determinants, which are the causes and other factors that influence the occurrence of disease
and other health-related events. Epidemiologists assume that illness does not occur randomly
in a population, but happens only when the right accumulation of risk factors or determinants
exists in an individual. To search for these determinants, epidemiologists use analytic
epidemiology or epidemiologic studies to provide the “Why” and “How” of such events. They
assess whether groups with different rates of disease differ in their demographic
characteristics, genetic or immunologic make-up, behaviors, environmental exposures, or
other so-called potential risk factors.
v. Specified populations
Although epidemiologists and direct health-care providers (clinicians) are both concerned with
occurrence and control of disease, they differ greatly in how they view “the patient.” The
clinician is concerned about the health of an individual; the epidemiologist is concerned about
the collective health of the people in a community or population. The clinician’s “patient” is the
individual; the epidemiologist’s “patient” is the community. Therefore, the clinician and the
epidemiologist have different responsibilities when faced with a person with illness. For
example, when a patient with diarrheal disease presents, both are interested in establishing the
correct diagnosis. However, while the clinician usually focuses on treating and caring for the
individual, the epidemiologist focuses on identifying the exposure or source that caused the
illness; the number of other persons who may have been similarly exposed; the potential for
further spread in the community; and interventions to prevent additional cases or recurrences.
vi. Application
Epidemiology is not just “the study of” health in a population; it also involves applying the
knowledge gained by the studies to community-based practice. Like the practice of medicine, the
practice of epidemiology is both a science and an art. To make the proper diagnosis and
prescribe appropriate treatment for a patient, the clinician combines medical (scientific)
knowledge with experience, clinical judgment, and understanding of the patient. Similarly, the
epidemiologist uses the scientific methods of descriptive and analytic epidemiology as well as
experience, epidemiologic judgment, and understanding of local conditions in “diagnosing” the
health of a community and proposing appropriate, practical, and acceptable public health
interventions to control and prevent disease in the community.
History of Epidemiology
Although epidemiology as a discipline has blossomed since World War II, epidemiologic
thinking has been traced from Hippocrates through John Graunt, William Farr, John Snow, and
others. The contributions of some of these early and more recent thinkers are described below.(5)
Circa 400 B.C Hippocrates attempted to explain disease occurrence from a rational rather than
a supernatural viewpoint. In his essay entitled “On Airs, Waters, and Places,” Hippocrates
suggested that environmental and host factors such as behaviors might influence the
development of disease.
1662 Another early contributor to epidemiology was John Graunt, a London haberdasher and
council member who published a landmark analysis of mortality data in 1662. This publication
was the first to quantify patterns of birth, death, and disease occurrence, noting disparities
between males and females, high infant mortality, urban/rural differences, and seasonal
variations.(5)
1800-William Farr built upon Graunt’s work by systematically collecting and analyzing
Britain’s mortality statistics. Farr, considered the father of modern vital statistics and
surveillance, developed many of the basic practices used today in vital statistics and disease
classification. He concentrated his efforts on collecting vital statistics, assembling and evaluating
those data, and reporting to responsible health authorities and the general public.(4)
1854-In the mid-1800s, an anesthesiologist named John Snow was conducting a series of
investigations in London that warrant his being considered the “father of field epidemiology.”
Twenty years before the development of the microscope, Snow conducted studies of cholera
outbreaks both to discover the cause of disease and to prevent its recurrence. Because his work
illustrates the classic sequence from descriptive epidemiology to hypothesis generation to
hypothesis testing (analytic epidemiology) to application, two of his investigations will be
described in detail.
Snow conducted one of his now famous studies in 1854 when an epidemic of cholera erupted in
the Golden Square of London.(5) He began his investigation by determining where in this area
persons with cholera lived and worked. He marked each residence on a map of the area, as
shown in Figure 1.1. Today, this type of map, showing the geographic distribution of cases, is
called a spot map.
Because Snow believed that water was a source of infection for cholera, he marked the location
of water pumps on his spot map, then looked for a relationship between the distribution of
households with cases of cholera and the location of pumps. He noticed that more case
households clustered around Pump A, the Broad Street pump, than around Pump B or C. When
he questioned residents who lived in the Golden Square area, he was told that they avoided Pump
B because it was grossly contaminated, and that Pump C was located too inconveniently for most
of them. From this information, Snow concluded that the Broad Street pump (Pump A) was the
primary source of water and the most likely source of infection for most persons with cholera in
the Golden Square area. He noted with curiosity, however, that no cases of cholera had occurred
in a two-block area just to the east of the Broad Street pump. Upon investigating, Snow found a
brewery located there with a deep well on the premises. Brewery workers got their water from
this well, and also received a daily portion of malt liquor. Access to these uncontaminated rations
could explain why none of the brewery’s employees contracted cholera.
Uses of Epidemiology
Epidemiology and the information generated by epidemiologic methods have been used in many
ways. Some common uses are described below.
Public health officials responsible for policy development, implementation, and evaluation use
epidemiologic information as a factual framework for decision making. To assess the health of a
population or community, relevant sources of data must be identified and analyzed by person,
place, and time (descriptive epidemiology).
What are the actual and potential health problems in the community?
Where are they occurring?
Which populations are at increased risk?
Which problems have declined over time?
Which ones are increasing or have the potential to increase?
How do these patterns relate to the level and distribution of public health services
available?
More detailed data may need to be collected and analyzed to determine whether health services
are available, accessible, effective, and efficient. For example, public health officials used
epidemiologic data and methods to identify baselines, to set health goals for the nation in 2000
and 2010, and to monitor progress toward these goals
ii. Making individual decisions
Many individuals may not realize that they use epidemiologic information to make daily
decisions affecting their health. When persons decide to quit smoking, climb the stairs rather
than wait for an elevator, eat a salad rather than a cheeseburger with fries for lunch, or use a
condom, they may be influenced, consciously or unconsciously, by epidemiologists’ assessment
of risk. Since World War II, epidemiologists have provided information related to all those
decisions. In the 1950s, epidemiologists reported the increased risk of lung cancer among
smokers. In the 1970s, epidemiologists documented the role of exercise and proper diet in red
ucing the risk of heart disease. In the mid-1980s, epidemiologists identified the increased risk of
HIV infection associated with certain sexual and drug-related behaviors. These and hundreds of
other epidemiologic findings are directly relevant to the choices people make every day, choices
that affect their health over a lifetime.
Much epidemiologic research is devoted to searching for causal factors that influence one’s risk
of disease. Ideally, the goal is to identify a cause so that appropriate public health action might
be taken. One can argue that epidemiology can never prove a causal relationship between an
exposure and a disease, since much of epidemiology is based on ecologic reasoning.
Nevertheless, epidemiology often provides enough information to support effective action.
Examples date from the removal of the handle from the Broad St. pump following John Snow’s
investigation of cholera in the Golden Square area of London in 1854, to the withdrawal of a
vaccine against rotavirus in 1999 after epidemiologists found that it increased the risk of
intussusceptions, a potentially life-threatening condition. Just as often, epidemiology and
laboratory science converge to provide the evidence needed to establish causation.
Exercise 1.2
In August 1999, epidemiologists learned of a cluster of cases of encephalitis caused by West Nile
virus infection among residents of Queens, New York. West Nile virus infection, transmitted by
mosquitoes, had never before been identified in North America.
Describe how this information might be used for each of the following:
Public health surveillance is the ongoing, systematic collection, analysis, interpretation, and
dissemination of health data to help guide public health decision making and action. Surveillance
is equivalent to monitoring the pulse of the community. The purpose of public health
surveillance, which is sometimes called “information for action,”. Is to portray the ongoing
patterns of disease occurrence and disease potential so that investigation, control, and prevention
measures can be applied efficiently and effectively. This is accomplished through the systematic
collection and evaluation of morbidity and mortality reports and other relevant health
information, and the dissemination of these data and their interpretation to those involved in
disease control and public health decision making.
Morbidity and mortality reports are common sources of surveillance data for local and state
health departments. These reports generally are submitted by health-care providers, infection
control practitioners, or laboratories that are required to notify the health department of any
patient with a reportable disease such as pertussis, meningococcal meningitis, or AIDS. Other
sources of health-related data that are used for surveillance include reports from investigations of
individual cases and disease clusters, public health program data such as immunization coverage
in a community, disease registries, and health surveys.
Most often, surveillance relies on simple systems to collect a limited amount of information
about each case. Although not every case of disease is reported, health officials regularly review
the case reports they do receive and look for patterns among them. These practices have proven
invaluable in detecting problems, evaluating programs, and guiding public health action.
One of the first actions that results from a surveillance case report or report of a cluster is
investigation by the public health department. The investigation may be as limited as a phone
call to the health-care provider to confirm or clarify the circumstances of the reported case, or it
may involve a field investigation requiring the coordinated efforts of dozens of people to
characterize the extent of an epidemic and to identify its cause.
The objectives of such investigations also vary. Investigations often lead to the identification of
additional unreported or unrecognized ill persons who might otherwise continue to spread
infection to others. For example, one of the hallmarks of investigations of persons with sexually
transmitted disease is the identification of sexual partners or contacts of patients. When
interviewed, many of these contacts are found to be infected without knowing it, and are given
treatment they did not realize they needed. Identification and treatment of these contacts prevents
further spread.
For some diseases, investigations may identify a source or vehicle of infection that can be
controlled or eliminated. For example, the investigation of a case of Escherichia coli O157:H7
infection usually focuses on trying to identify the vehicle, often ground beef but sometimes
something more unusual such as fruit juice. By identifying the vehicle, investigators may be able
to determine how many other persons might have already been exposed and how many continue
to be at risk. When a commercial product turns out to be the culprit, public announcements and
recalling the product may prevent many additional cases.
Symbol of EIS
Occasionally, the objective of an investigation may simply be to learn more about the natural
history, clinical spectrum, descriptive epidemiology, and risk factors of the disease before
determining what disease intervention methods might be appropriate. Early investigations of the
epidemic of SARS in 2003 were needed to establish a case definition based on the clinical
presentation, and to characterize the populations at risk by time, place, and person. As more was
learned about the epidemiology of the disease and communicability of the virus, appropriate
recommendations regarding isolation and quarantine were issued.(21)
Field investigations of the type described above are sometimes referred to as “shoe leather
epidemiology,” conjuring up images of dedicated, if haggard, epidemiologists beating the
pavement in search of additional cases and clues regarding source and mode of transmission.
This approach is commemorated in the symbol of the Epidemic Intelligence Service (EIS),
CDC’s training program for disease detectives — a shoe with a hole in the sole.
Surveillance and field investigations are usually sufficient to identify causes, modes of
transmission, and appropriate control and prevention measures. But sometimes analytic studies
employing more rigorous methods are needed. Often the methods are used in combination —
with surveillance and field investigations providing clues or hypotheses about causes and modes
of transmission, and analytic studies evaluating the credibility of those hypotheses.
The hallmark of an analytic epidemiologic study is the use of a valid comparison group.
Epidemiologists must be skilled in all aspects of such studies, including design, conduct,
analysis, interpretation, and communication of findings.
Design includes determining the appropriate research strategy and study design, writing
justifications and protocols, calculating sample sizes, deciding on criteria for subject
selection (e.g., developing case definitions), choosing an appropriate comparison group,
and designing questionnaires.
Conduct involves securing appropriate clearances and approvals, adhering to appropriate
ethical principles, abstracting records, tracking down and interviewing subjects,
collecting and handling specimens, and managing the data.
Analysis begins with describing the characteristics of the subjects. It progresses to
calculation of rates, creation of comparative tables (e.g., two-by-two tables), and
computation of measures of association (e.g., risk ratios or odds ratios), tests of
significance (e.g., chi-square test), confidence intervals, and the like. Many
epidemiologic studies require more advanced analytic techniques such as stratified
analysis, regression, and modeling.
Finally, interpretation involves putting the study findings into perspective, identifying
the key take-home messages, and making sound recommendations. Doing so requires that
the epidemiologist be knowledgeable about the subject matter and the strengths and
weaknesses of the study.
iv. Evaluation
Epidemiologists, who are accustomed to using systematic and quantitative approaches, have
come to play an important role in evaluation of public health services and other activities.
Evaluation is the process of determining, as systematically and objectively as possible, the
relevance, effectiveness, efficiency, and impact of activities with respect to established goals.
Effectiveness refers to the ability of a program to produce the intended or expected results in the
field; effectiveness differs from efficacy, which is the ability to produce results under ideal
conditions.
Efficiency refers to the ability of the program to produce the intended results with a
minimum expenditure of time and resources.
The evaluation itself may focus on plans (formative evaluation), operations (process evaluation),
impact (summative evaluation), or outcomes — or any combination of these. Evaluation of an
immunization program, for example, might assess the efficiency of the operations, the proportion
of the target population immunized, and the apparent impact of the program on the incidence of
vaccine-preventable diseases. Similarly, evaluation of a surveillance system might address
operations and attributes of the system, its ability to detect cases or outbreaks, and its usefulness.
v. Linkages
Epidemiologists working in public health settings rarely act in isolation. In fact, field
epidemiology is often said to be a “team sport.” During an investigation an epidemiologist
usually participates as either a member or the leader of a multidisciplinary team. Other team
members may be laboratorians, sanitarians, infection control personnel, nurses or other clinical
staff, and, increasingly, computer information specialists. Many outbreaks cross geographical
and jurisdictional lines, so co-investigators may be from local, state, or federal levels of
government, academic institutions, clinical facilities, or the private sector. To promote current
and future collaboration, the epidemiologists need to maintain relationships with staff of other
agencies and institutions. Mechanisms for sustaining such linkages include official memoranda
of understanding, sharing of published or on-line information for public health audiences and
outside partners, and informal networking that takes place at professional meetings.
An epidemiology definition ends with the following phrase: “…and the application of this study
to the control of health problems.” While some academically minded epidemiologists have stated
that epidemiologists should stick to research and not get involved in policy development or even
make recommendations, public health epidemiologists do not have this luxury. Indeed,
epidemiologists who understand a problem and the population in which it occurs are often in a
uniquely qualified position to recommend appropriate interventions. As a result, epidemiologists
working in public health regularly provide input, testimony, and recommendations regarding
disease control strategies, reportable disease regulations, and health-care policy.
Counts cases or health events, and describes them in terms of time, place, and person;
Divides the number of cases by an appropriate denominator to calculate rates; and
Compares these rates over time or for different groups of people.
An epidemiologist:
Counts
Divides
Compares
Frequency Distributions
Look again at the data in Table 2.1. How many of the cases (or case-patients) are male?
When a database contains only a limited number of records, you can easily pick out the
information you need directly from the raw data. By scanning the 5th column, you can see that 12
of the 20 case-patients are male.
With larger databases, however, picking out the desired information at a glance becomes
increasingly difficult. To facilitate the task, the variables can be summarized into tables called
frequency distributions.
A frequency distribution displays the values a variable can take and the number of persons or
records with each value. For example, suppose you have data from a study of women with
ovarian cancer and wish to look at parity, that is, the number of times each woman has given
birth. To construct a frequency distribution that displays these data:
First, list all the values that the variable parity can take, from the lowest possible value to
the highest.
Then, for each value, record the number of women who had that number of births (twins
and other multiple-birth pregnancies count only once).
Table 2.4 displays what the resulting frequency distribution would look like. Notice that the
frequency distribution includes all values of parity between the lowest and highest observed,
even though there were no women for some values. Notice also that each column is clearly
labeled, and that the total is given in the bottom row.
Deaths occurring during a given time period ÷ Size of the population among which
the deaths occurred × 10n
When mortality rates are based on vital statistics (e.g., counts of death certificates), the
denominator most commonly used is the size of the population at the middle of the time period.
In the United States, values of 1,000 and 100,000 are both used for 10n for most types of
mortality rates. Table 3.4 summarizes the formulas of frequently used mortality measures.
The cause-specific mortality rate is the mortality rate from a specified cause for a population.
The numerator is the number of deaths attributed to a specific cause. The denominator remains
the size of the population at the midpoint of the time period. The fraction is usually expressed per
100,000 population. In the United States in 2003, 108,256 deaths were attributed to accidents
(unintentional injuries), yielding a cause-specific mortality rate of 37.2 per 100,000 population.
An age-specific mortality rate is a mortality rate limited to a particular age group. The numerator
is the number of deaths in that age group; the denominator is the number of persons in that age
group in the population. In the United States in 2003, a total of 130,761 deaths occurred among
persons aged 25–44 years, or an age-specific mortality rate of 153.0 per 100,000 25–44 year
olds.(8) Some specific types of age-specific mortality rates are neonatal, postneonatal, and infant
mortality rates, as described in the following sections.
The infant mortality rate is perhaps the most commonly used measure for comparing health
status among nations. It is calculated as follows:
Number of deaths among children < 1 year of age reported during a given time period
The infant mortality rate is generally calculated on an annual basis. It is a widely used measure
of health status because it reflects the health of the mother and infant during pregnancy and the
year thereafter. The health of the mother and infant, in turn, reflects a wide variety of factors,
including access to prenatal care, prevalence of prenatal maternal health behaviors (such as
alcohol or tobacco use and proper nutrition during pregnancy, etc.), postnatal care and behaviors
(including childhood immunizations and proper nutrition), sanitation, and infection control.
Is the infant mortality rate a ratio? Yes. Is it a proportion? No, because some of the deaths in the
numerator were among children born the previous year. Consider the infant mortality rate in
2003. That year, 28,025 infants died and 4,089,950 children were born, for an infant mortality
rate of 6.951 per 1,000.8 Undoubtedly, some of the deaths in 2003 occurred among children born
in 2002, but the denominator includes only children born in 2003.
Is the infant mortality rate truly a rate? No, because the denominator is not the size of the mid-
year population of children < 1 year of age in 2003. In fact, the age-specific death rate for
children < 1 year of age for 2003 was 694.7 per 100,000.(8) Obviously the infant mortality rate
and the age-specific death rate for infants are very similar (695.1 versus 694.7 per 100,000) and
close enough for most purposes. They are not exactly the same, however, because the estimated
number of infants residing in the United States on July 1, 2003 was slightly larger than the
number of children born in the United States in 2002, presumably because of immigration.
The neonatal period covers birth up to but not including 28 days. The numerator of the neonatal
mortality rate therefore is the number of deaths among children under 28 days of age during a
given time period. The denominator of the neonatal mortality rate, like that of the infant
mortality rate, is the number of live births reported during the same time period. The neonatal
mortality rate is usually expressed per 1,000 live births. In 2003, the neonatal mortality rate in
the United States was 4.7 per 1,000 live births.
The post neonatal period is defined as the period from 28 days of age up to but not including 1
year of age. The numerator of the post neonatal mortality rate therefore is the number of deaths
among children from 28 days up to but not including 1 year of age during a given time period.
The denominator is the number of live births reported during the same time period. The
postneonatal mortality rate is usually expressed per 1,000 live births. In 2003, the postneonatal
mortality rate in the United States was 2.3 per 1,000 live births.(8)
The maternal mortality rate is really a ratio used to measure mortality associated with pregnancy.
The numerator is the number of deaths during a given time period among women while pregnant
or within 42 days of termination of pregnancy, irrespective of the duration and the site of the
pregnancy, from any cause related to or aggravated by the pregnancy or its management, but not
from accidental or incidental causes. The denominator is the number of live births reported
during the same time period. Maternal mortality rate is usually expressed per 100,000 live births.
In 2003, the U.S. maternal mortality rate was 8.9 per 100,000 live births.(8)
A sex-specific mortality rate is a mortality rate among either males or females. Both numerator
and denominator are limited to the one sex.
A race-specific mortality rate is a mortality rate related to a specified racial group. Both
numerator and denominator are limited to the specified race.
Combinations of specific mortality rates
Mortality rates can be further stratified by combinations of cause, age, sex, and/or race. For
example, in 2002, the death rate from diseases of the heart among women ages 45–54 years was
50.6 per 100,000.(9) The death rate from diseases of the heart among men in the same age group
was 138.4 per 100,000, or more than 2.5 times as high as the comparable rate for women. These
rates are a cause-, age-, and sex-specific rates, because they refer to one cause (diseases of the
heart), one age group (45–54 years), and one sex (female or male).
Table 3.5 provides the number of deaths from all causes and from accidents (unintentional
injuries) by age group in the United States in 2002. Review the following rates. Determine what
to call each one, then calculate it using the data provided in Table 3.5.
Rate =
× 100,000
Rate = Number of deaths from all causes among 25–34 year olds ÷ estimated midyear
population of 25–34 year olds × 100,000
Rate = number of deaths from all causes among male ÷ Estimated midyear population of males ×
100,000
= (1,199,264 ⁄ 141,656,000) × 100,000
Rate =
× 100,000
Table 3.5 All-Cause and Unintentional Injury Mortality and Estimated Population by Age Group,
For Both Sexes and For Males Alone — United States, 2002
Exercise 3.3
In 2001, a total of 15,555 homicide deaths occurred among males and 4,753 homicide deaths
occurred among females. The estimated 2001 midyear populations for males and females were
139,813,000 and 144,984,000, respectively.
1. Calculate the homicide-related death rates for males and for females.
2. What type(s) of mortality rates did you calculate in Question 1?
3. Calculate the ratio of homicide-mortality rates for males compared to females.
4. Interpret the rate you calculated in Question 3 as if you were presenting information to a
policymaker.
Age-adjusted mortality rate: a mortality rate statistically modified to eliminate the effect of
different age distributions in the different populations.
Mortality rates can be used to compare the rates in one area with the rates in another area, or to
compare rates over time. However, because mortality rates obviously increase with age, a higher
mortality rate among one population than among another might simply reflect the fact that the
first population is older than the second.
Consider that the mortality rates in 2002 for the states of Alaska and Florida were 472.2 and
1,005.7 per 100,000, respectively (see Table 3.6). Should everyone from Florida move to Alaska
to reduce their risk of death? No, the reason that Alaska’s mortality rate is so much lower than
Florida’s is that Alaska’s population is considerably younger. Indeed, for seven age groups, the
age-specific mortality rates in Alaska are actually higher than Florida’s.
Death-to-case ratio
The death-to-case ratio is the number of deaths attributed to a particular disease during a
specified time period divided by the number of new cases of that disease identified during the
same time period. The death-to-case ratio is a ratio but not necessarily a proportion, because
some of the deaths that are counted in the numerator might have occurred among persons who
developed disease in an earlier period, and are therefore not counted in the denominator.
Table 3.6 All-Cause Mortality by Age Group — Alaska and Florida, 2002
ALASKA FLORIDA
Age
Death Rate Death Rate
group Population Deaths Population Deaths
(per 100,000) (per 100,000)
(years)
<1 9,938 55 553.4 205,579 1,548 753
1–4 38,503 12 31.2 816,570 296 36.2
5–9 50,400 6 11.9 1,046,504 141 13.5
10–14 57,216 24 41.9 1,131,068 219 19.4
15–19 56,634 43 75.9 1,073,470 734 68.4
20–24 42,929 63 146.8 1,020,856 1,146 112.3
25–34 84,112 120 142.7 2,090,312 2,627 125.7
35–44 107,305 280 260.9 2,516,004 5,993 238.2
45–54 103,039 427 414.4 2,225,957 10,730 482
55–64 52,543 480 913.5 1,694,574 16,137 952.3
65–74 24,096 502 2,083.30 1,450,843 28,959 1,996.00
65–84 11,784 645 5,473.50 1,056,275 50,755 4,805.10
85+ 3,117 373 11,966.60 359,056 48,486 13,503.70
Unknown NA 0 NA NA 43 NA
Total 3,030 3,030 472.2 16,687,068 167,814 1,005.70
Age-
adjusted 794.1 787.8
Rate:
Number of new cases of the disease identified during the specified period
× 10n
Between 1940 and 1949, a total of 143,497 incident cases of diphtheria were reported. During
the same decade, 11,228 deaths were attributed to diphtheria. Calculate the death-to-case ratio.
or
Exercise 3.4
Table 3.7 provides the number of reported cases of diphtheria and the number of diphtheria-
associated deaths in the United States by decade. Calculate the death-to-case ratio by decade.
Describe the data in Table 3.7, including your results.
Table 3.7 Number of Cases and Deaths from Diphtheria by Decade — United States, 1940–1999
Death-to-case Ratio (×
Decade Number of New Cases Number of Deaths
100)
1940–1949 143,497 11,228 7.82
1950–1959 23,750 1,710
1960–1969 3,679 390
1970–1979 1,956 90
1980–1989 27 3
1990–1999 22 5
Data Sources: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Summary of notifiable diseases,
United States, 2001. MMWR 2001;50(No. 53).
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Summary of notifiable diseases, United States,
1998. MMWR 1998;47 (No. 53).
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Summary of notifiable diseases, United States,
1989. MMWR 1989;38 (No. 53).
Case-fatality rate
The case-fatality rate is the proportion of persons with a particular condition (cases) who die
from that condition. It is a measure of the severity of the condition. The formula is:
The case-fatality rate is a proportion, so the numerator is restricted to deaths among people
included in the denominator. The time periods for the numerator and the denominator do not
need to be the same; the denominator could be cases of HIV/AIDS diagnosed during the calendar
year 1990, and the numerator, deaths among those diagnosed with HIV in 1990, could be from
1990 to the present.
In an epidemic of hepatitis A traced to green onions from a restaurant, 555 cases were identified.
Three of the case-patients died as a result of their infections. Calculate the case-fatality rate.
The concept behind the case-fatality rate and the death-to-case ratio is similar, but the
formulations are different. The death-to-case ratio is simply the number of cause-specific deaths
that occurred during a specified time divided by the number of new cases of that disease that
occurred during the same time. The deaths included in the numerator of the death-to-case ratio
are not restricted to the new cases in the denominator; in fact, for many diseases, the deaths are
among persons whose onset of disease was years earlier. In contrast, in the case-fatality rate, the
deaths included in the numerator are restricted to the cases in the denominator.
Proportionate mortality
Proportionate mortality describes the proportion of deaths in a specified population over a period
of time attributable to different causes. Each cause is expressed as a percentage of all deaths, and
the sum of the causes must add to 100%. These proportions are not mortality rates, because the
denominator is all deaths rather than the population in which the deaths occurred.
The distribution of primary causes of death in the United States in 2003 for the entire population
(all ages) and for persons ages 25–44 years are provided in Table 3.1. As illustrated in that table,
accidents (unintentional injuries) accounted for 4.3% of all deaths, but 21.6% of deaths among
25–44 year olds 8
However, PMRs can be misleading, because they are not based on mortality rates. A low cause-
specific mortality rate in the population of interest can elevate the proportionate mortalities for
all of the other causes, because they must add up to 100%. Those workers with a high injury-
related proportionate mortality very likely have lower proportionate mortalities for chronic or
disabling conditions that keep people out of the workforce. In other words, people who work are
more likely to be healthier than the population as a whole — this is known as the healthy worker
effect.
Exercise 3.5
Using the data in Table 3.8, calculate the missing proportionate mortalities for persons ages 25—
44 years for diseases of the heart and assaults (homicide).
Table 3.8 Number, Proportion (Percentage), and Ranking of Deaths for Leading Causes of
Death, All Ages and 25–44 Year Age Group — United States, 2003