GCP
GCP
GCP
BUDI UTOMO
DEPARTEMEN IKM-KP
FK UNAIR
MEASURES OF RISK
– RATIO
– PROPORTION
– INCIDENCE PROPORTION (ATTACK RATE)
– INCIDENCE RATE
– PREVALENCE
– MORTALITY RATE
FREQUENCY MEASURES
Common frequency measures are ratios, proportions, and rates. All three frequency
measures have the same basic form:
𝑛𝑢𝑚𝑒𝑟𝑎𝑡𝑜𝑟
𝑥 10𝑛
𝑑𝑒𝑛𝑜𝑚𝑖𝑛𝑎𝑡𝑜𝑟
Recall that:
100 = 1 (anything raised to the 0 power equals 1)
101 = 10 (anything raised to the 1st power is the value itself)
102 = 10 x 10 = 100
103 = 10 x 10 x 10 = 1,000
RATIO
DEFINITION OF RATIO
A ratio is the relative magnitude of two quantities or a comparison of any two
values. It is calculated by dividing one interval or Ratio-scale variable by the other.
The numerator and denominator Need not be related
Method for calculating a ratio
PROPERTIES AND USES OF RATIOS
Ratios are common descriptive measures, used in all fields. In
epidemiology, ratios are used as both descriptive measures and as analytic
tools.
As an analytic tool, ratios can be calculated for occurrence of illness, injury,
or death between two groups.
A city of 4,000,000 persons has 500 clinics. Calculate the ratio of clinics per
person. The answer is ??
Delaware’s infant mortality rate in 2001 was 10.7 per 1,000 live births. New
Hampshire’s infant mortality rate in 2001 was 3.8 per 1,000 live births.
Calculate the ratio of the infant mortality rate in Delaware to that in New
Hampshire.
A commonly used epidemiologic ratio: death-to-case ratio
For a proportion, 10𝑛 is usually 100 (or n = 2) and is often expressed as a percentage.
Calculate the proportion of men in the NHANES follow-up study who were
diabetics.
Numerator = 189 diabetic men
Denominator = total number of men = 189 + 3,151 = 3,340
Proportion = (189 / 3,340) x 100 = 5.66%
In epidemiology, proportions are used most often as descriptive measures.
A proportion can be expressed as a fraction, a decimal, or a percentage
Proportions can easily be converted to ratios.
If the numerator is the number of women (179) who attended a clinic and
the denominator is all the clinic attendees (341), the proportion of clinic
attendees who are women is 179 / 341
For example, 70 new cases of breast cancer per 1,000 women per year,
This rate is an incidence rate
Attack rate is the proportion of the population that develops illness during
an outbreak
For example, 20 of 130 persons developed diarrhea after attending a picnic.
(An alternative and more accurate phrase for attack rate is incidence
proportion.)
A prevalence rate is the proportion of the population that has a health
condition at a point in time. For example, 70 influenza case-patients in
march 2005 reported in county A.
A case-fatality rate is the proportion of persons with the disease who die
from it.
MORBIDITY FREQUENCY MEASURES
The number of persons who are ill, it can also be used to describe the
periods of illness that these persons experienced, or the duration of these
illnesses. Measures of morbidity frequency characterize the number of
persons in a population who become ill (incidence) or are ill at a given time
(prevalence).
Incidence
a “motion picture” – describes what is happening in
a population. Incidence is defined as the number
of new cases divided by the population at risk
over time.
Incidence therefore includes three components:
1. New cases
2. Population at risk.
3. Interval of time.
Note that:
• Incidence involves the passage of time.
Incidence rate or person-time rate
• Thus, the 3-year risk for one of the 200 people to develop disease
X, conditional on not dying from another cause, is estimated as
0.05 or 5%.
Incidence proportion or risk
In the study of diabetics, 100 of the 189 diabetic men died during the 13-year
follow-up period. Calculate the risk of death for these men.
Numerator = 100 deaths among the diabetic men
Denominator = 189 diabetic men
10n = 102 = 100
Risk = (100 / 189) x 100 = 52.9%
Commonly used CI indicator…..
Attack Rate
•In the outbreak setting, the term attack rate is often used as a
synonym for risk.
•Risk of getting the disease during a specified period, such as the
duration of an outbreak.
•AR does not explicitly specify the time interval because for many
food-borne disease outbreaks we know that most cases occur within
a few hours or a few days after the exposure
Overall attack rate
–Total number of new cases divided by the total population
Note that:
• ID is a relative rate, not a proportion.
The units of time must be stated, since otherwise the
numeric value is ambiguous (e.g., 15 cases/100,000 person-
years = 15 cases/1,200,000 person-months).*
Two complementary measures of incidence: CI and ID
• the prevalence depends on the point in time at which the study takes place; at the
start of year 4, for example, it is the ratio of the number of people with the disease (2)
to the number of people in the population observed at that time (6), i.e. 33 cases per
100 persons. The formula P= I X D for prevalence would give an estimated average
prevalence of 30 cases per 100 population (9.1 × 3.3);
• case fatality is 33% representing 1 death out of 3 diagnosed cases.