Web of Causation
Web of Causation
Web of Causation
Basic Epidemiology
Web of Causation;
Exposure and Disease Outcomes
Thomas Songer, PhD
Purpose of Epidemiology
To provide a basis for developing
disease control and prevention
measures for groups at risk. This
translates into developing measures
to prevent or control disease.
Background
Towards this purpose, epidemiology seeks to
describe the frequency of disease and its
distribution
consider person, place, time factors
Exposure
Disease
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Research Questions/Hypotheses
Big Picture
Look for links between exposure & disease
to intervene and prevent disease
Big Picture
On a population basis
An increase in the level of a causal factor
will be accompanied by an increase in the
incidence of disease (all other things
being equal).
If the causal factor is eliminated or
reduced, the frequency of disease will
decline
Exposure
[ Agent ]
[ Vector/Vehicle ]
Disease
Injury Epidemiology
Studies are undertaken to demonstrate
a link [association] between an agent /
condition and an injury outcome
Exposure
Disease
Exposure
Disease
Issues to consider
Etiology (cause) of chronic disease is often
difficult to determine
Many exposures cause more than one
outcome
Outcomes may be due to a multiple
exposures or continual exposure over time
Causes may differ by individual
Exposure
Disease
Additional Factors
Web of Causation
There is no single cause
Causes of disease are interacting
Illustrates the interconnectedness
of possible causes
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Web of Causation
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Consistency of findings
Strength of association
Biological gradient (dose-response)
Temporal sequence
Biological plausibility
Coherence with established facts
Specificity of association
Strength of Association
Strong associations are less likely to be
caused by chance or bias
A strong association is one in which the
relative risk is
very high, or
very low
Biological Gradient
There is evidence of a dose-response relationship
Changes in exposure are related to a trend in
relative risk
Temporal Sequence
Exposure must precede disease
In diseases with latency periods,
exposures must precede the latent
period
In chronic diseases, often need longterm exposure for disease induction
Judging Causality
Weigh weaknesses
in data and other
explanations
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Weigh quality
of science and
results of causal
models
Prevailing Wisdom in
Epidemiology
Most judgments of cause and effect
are tentative, and are open to change
with new evidence
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Pyramid of Associations
Causal
Non-causal
Confounded
Spurious / artefact
Chance
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