Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
2 views

Introduction-Day 1

The document provides an introduction to epidemiology, covering its history, definitions, and basic principles, including disease causation models and classifications. It emphasizes the importance of understanding health-related states within populations and the application of epidemiological methods to public health. Key historical figures in epidemiology are highlighted, along with the basic assumptions and concepts related to disease causation.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
2 views

Introduction-Day 1

The document provides an introduction to epidemiology, covering its history, definitions, and basic principles, including disease causation models and classifications. It emphasizes the importance of understanding health-related states within populations and the application of epidemiological methods to public health. Key historical figures in epidemiology are highlighted, along with the basic assumptions and concepts related to disease causation.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 43

Measurement of health and disease

INTRODUCTION TO EPIDEMIOLOGY

B Y A L E M N E W D E S TAW ( M P H , P H D F E L L O W )
Session 1: General Principles of Epidemiology
2

 History, definition, uses, scope, and assumptions

 Disease causation: concepts and factors

 Models: Epidemiological triangle, web of causation,

wheel model

 Time, Place and Person concept in disease causation

4/9/2025
Learning Objectives
3

By the end of this session, students should be able to:


 Define epidemiology

 Describe the history of epidemiology

 Explain the basic assumptions of epidemiology

 Identify the scope of epidemiology

 Describe basic models of disease causation.

 Identify the classification of epidemiology

4/9/2025
Definition
4

Epidemiology is the study of the


 frequency,

 distribution, and

 determinants of health-related states

in specified populations, and the application of this


study to the control of health problems.

4/9/2025
Definition…
5
 Is concerned with the collective health of individuals

in communities and in getting appropriate solution to


alleviate the health problems.

 It provides useful tools and methods

 to describe variations in disease occurrence and

 identify factors that influence the occurrence of disease among


population groups.

4/9/2025
Terms from the definition
Study: Epidemiology is6 a scientific discipline,
sometimes called “the basic science of public health”.

Frequency : Epidemiology is a quantitative science.

Distribution: refers to the occurrence of health-related

events by time, place, and personal characteristics.

Determinants: used to search for causes and other

factors that influence the occurrence of health-related


events.
4/9/2025
Health-related states or events.
 Endemic communicable diseases
7
and non communicable
diseases.
 Chronic disease, injuries, birth defects, Maternal and
child health, occupational health, and environmental
health.
 behaviors related to health and well-being (eg. amount of
exercise, seat-belt use, etc.)

 Thus ,we use the term “disease” to refer the range of


health-related states or events.

4/9/2025
 Application: Epidemiology Provides the base for
8
directing practical and appropriate public health action.
“Epidemiology is practical science”

 Specified populations: Focus on the population.

 Epidemiologists and physicians in clinical practice differ

greatly in how they view “the patient.”

 Clinician usually focuses on diagnosing & treating the

individual.

4/9/2025
The epidemiologist focuses on assessing ;
 The level of health related event in
9 the community

 The number of other persons who may have been similarly exposed to
the factor

 The type and source of exposure to the factor

 The potential for further spread of the disease in the community

 Interventions to prevent additional cases or recurrences of the problem.

4/9/2025
Epidemiology Classification
10
1. Descriptive epidemiology - describing the frequency
and distribution of diseases and other health related
conditions by Person, Place and Time (PPT)
 It answers the questions Who, Where and When.

 Person (Who were affected? )

Young Vs Old
Female Vs Male
Rich Vs Poor
4/9/2025
Descriptive cont‟d
11
Place (Where was the problem occurred? )

 Lowland Vs Highland

 Urban Vs Rural

Time ( When was the problem occurred? )

 Seasonal Variations

Long term variations

4/9/2025
2. Analytic epidemiology
12
 Concerned with identification of causes and other

factors that influence the occurrence of health-related


events in the population

 It answers the questions WHY and HOW.

 Involves explicit comparison of groups of individuals

for the level of health related event to identify


determinants of health and diseases.

4/9/2025
 Descriptive and analytic 13classification is more of a

continuum than a dichotomy. They go together.

 Many studies have both descriptive and analytic

aspects.

 Data collected in one mode may end up being used in

the other as well.

4/9/2025
History of Epidemiology
Hippocrates (400 B.C.): 14
 attempted to explain disease rationally rather than
through supernatural beliefs.
 Wrote the essay „„On Airs, Waters, and Places‟‟:
 Emphasized the role of environmental factors
(like air, water, and living conditions) in disease
causation.
 Considered as the first epidemiologist

4/9/2025
John Graunt (1662)
15
 The most important advances in epidemiology are

attributed to the Englishman John Graunt (1620–1674).

 He was the first epidemiologist to quantify patterns of

birth, death, and disease occurrence

 Observed male-female disparities, high infant


mortality, urban-rural differences, and seasonal
variations.

4/9/2025
James Lind (1747)
16

 First person to conduct an experimental study in human

populations.

 In 1747, conducted a controlled trial aboard a British

naval ship.

 Identified that scurvy (gum bleeding) was caused by a

deficiency of citrus fruits (vitamin C).

4/9/2025
Edward Jenner (1749-1823)
17

 Pioneered the smallpox vaccine.

 His work laid the foundation for vaccination programs

and contributed to the eradication of smallpox in the 20th


century.

4/9/2025
William Farr (1839-1883)
18
Father of Modern Vital Statistics:
 Established the use of vital statistical data for evaluating health
problems.
 Developed concepts like population at risk and choosing
appropriate comparison groups, still in use today.
Extended John Graunt's Work:
 Systematically collected and analysed Britain‟s mortality
statistics.

4/9/2025
John Snow (1853):The First Modern Epidemiologist

19
 Formulated and tested a hypothesis about the origin of a
cholera epidemic in London.
 Postulated that cholera was transmitted by contaminated water.

 During the cholera outbreak in Golden Square, London, Snow


investigated where cholera patients lived and worked.
 Then he mapped the locations of cholera cases on a spot map.

 Identified the source of the outbreak as a specific water pump


on Broad Street.

4/9/2025
Scope of Epidemiology
20
Currently Epidemiology deals with health related
problems whether they belong to;

Communicable,

Non-communicable Or

Any Type Of Injury Category.

Its scope in public health ranges from routine


surveillance to research strategies

4/9/2025
Use/applications of Epidemiology
21

Elucidate the natural history of disease.

Describe the health status of the population.

 Establish disease causation

 Provide basic information about what causes or

sustains disease in populations.

Guide healthcare policy and health planning.

4/9/2025
 Assist in the management and care of health and
22
disease in individual

 Evaluations of preventive, diagnostic and therapeutic

programmes and technologies.

 Define standards and ranges for normal values of

biological and social measures.

4/9/2025
Basic Epidemiologic Assumptions
23

The two basic assumptions in epidemiology are:

1. Human disease does not occur at random

2. Human disease has causal and preventive factors

4/9/2025
Basic epidemiological assumptions….
24
Human disease does not occur at random:

There are patterns of occurrence in which some behavioral


and environmental factors (exposures) increase the risk of
acquiring/developing a particular disease among group of
individuals.

4/9/2025
Basic epidemiological assumptions……
25
Human disease has causal and preventive factors

 identified through systematic investigation of populations

or group of individuals within a population in different


places or at different times.

 Thus, identifying these factors creates opportunity for

prevention and control of diseases in Human population


either by eliminating the cause or introducing appropriate
treatment.
4/9/2025
26

Epidemiological Concepts of Disease Causation

4/9/2025
Learning objectives
27

At the end of the session the students will be able to:

 Describe the concept of disease causation

 Explain Models of disease causation

4/9/2025
Introduction
Cause of Disease 28

is an event, condition, characteristic or a combination of


these factors which plays an important role in producing
the disease.
Characteristics of a cause
1. Must precede the effect
2. Can be either host or environmental factors
e.g., conditions, actions of individuals, events, natural,
social or economic phenomena
3. Positive (presence of a causative exposure –smoking
for lung ca) or negative (lack of a preventive exposure-
immunization for measles)

4/9/2025
Classification of Causes of Disease

29
1. Primary Cause / Necessary Cause: A factor that
must be present for the disease to occur. If it is
absent, the disease will not develop.

 In infectious diseases, this is referred to as the

etiologic agent.

Example: Mycobacterium tuberculosis is the primary


cause (etiologic agent) of pulmonary TB.

4/9/2025
30

2. Sufficient Cause: A set of conditions that inevitably


produce a disease when present.

 A disease may have multiple sufficient causes.

Eg. Rabies virus is a sufficient cause of clinical rabies.

4/9/2025
Risk Factors :
Increases the likelihood of31disease, but are not the
necessary causes.
Predisposing Factors: Make individuals more
susceptible to disease (Age, genetic susceptibility).
Contributing (Enabling) Factors: Help facilitate the
onset of disease by affecting exposure or resistance
E.g. Poor nutrition
Aggravating (Precipitating) Factors: Trigger or
worsen the disease condition. e.g stress

4/9/2025
Risk factors can be categorized
32
as:
 Modifiable: smoking, alcohol use, seat belt etc

 Non-Modifable: E.g Age, sex, genetics etc

 Etiology of Disease: is the sum total of all factors


(primary causes and risk factors) that contribute to the
occurrence of the disease.

4/9/2025
Models of disease causation
33
 Epidemiologists use various models to illustrate the

multifactorial nature of disease causation.

 While there are several disease causation models, some

of the most well-known include: Epidemiological


Triangle, Web of Causation, and Wheel Model.

4/9/2025
Epidemiological Triangle
34
 The most familiar disease model illustrates the
relationship among three key factors in the occurrence
of disease or injury: Agent, Environment, and Host.
 From the perspective of the Epidemiological Triangle,
the Host, Agent, and Environment must coexist
harmoniously for health to be maintained.
 Disease or injury occurs only when there is an altered
equilibrium or imbalance between these three factors.

4/9/2025
Agent: A factor whose presence, absence, excess, or
35
deficiency is necessary for a particular disease or
injury to occur.
Host: Host factors influence an individual‟s exposure,
susceptibility, or response to a causative agent.
Examples include age, sex, race, socioeconomic
status, and behaviours (e.g., smoking, drug use,
lifestyle, eating habits).
Environment: All external factors, other than the
agent, that can influence health. These include social,
physical, and biological environments.

4/9/2025
Epidemiologic Triad (Balance Beam)
36

4/9/2025
Web of Causation Model
37
 This model explains that diseases result from a

complex interplay of multiple interrelated factors.

 It is particularly useful for understanding chronic

diseases, such as CVD, which are influenced by


factors like stress, diet, heredity, and physical activity

 This model emphasizes that diseases develop through

a chain of causation and can also be applied to injuries


and communicable diseases.
4/9/2025
Web of causation model

38

4/9/2025
Wheel Model
 Core (Host): The center of the 39
wheel represents the host (human)
and their genetic make-up, which plays a central role in disease
susceptibility.
 The environment is divided into three sectors:
1. Biological: Includes pathogens (e.g., bacteria, viruses) and other
biological factors that contribute to disease.
2. Social: Factors such as culture, lifestyle, socioeconomic status,
and social interactions that impact health.
3. Physical: The physical environment, including pollution, climate,
and physical surroundings that affect health.
 The model stresses the unity and interaction of these factors in the
development of diseases.
 The relative size of the components depends on the disease.
e.g. For hereditary diseases, the genetic core is large.
For measles, the biological sector and host immunity are larger.

4/9/2025
Wheel Model
40

4/9/2025
41

Thank you!

4/9/2025
SESSION 2: Concepts in Infectious Disease
Epidemiology
42

Topics

 Chain of infection and mechanisms of transmission

 Transmission probability

 Infection timeline & natural history

 Levels of prevention

 Disease outcomes: Infectiousness, pathogenicity,


virulence
4/9/2025
Learning Objectives
43
 By the end of this session, students should be able to:

 Describe the chain of infection and transmission types.

 Understand transmission probability and apply it to real-world


settings.
 Outline the stages in the natural history of diseases.

 Classify preventive interventions by level.

 Differentiate key disease outcome terms: infectiousness,


pathogenicity, and virulence.

4/9/2025

You might also like