Getting Organized
Let's Get it Started: Mgr. Epidemiology
Population Health
Infectious Disease, Morbidity, and Mortality
Study Design and Statistics
100

This tool helps you manage and organize scholarly materials.

What is Endnote or RefWorks?

100

Combining tools from fields of epidemiology and management allow concerted use of tools for informed decision making

What is evidence-based management (EBM)

100

These are "preventable difference in burden of disease, injury, violence, or opportunities to achieve optimal health that are experienced by socially disadvantaged populations".

What are health disparities.
100

Along the spectrum of disease, the point at which the disease becomes detectable through technology such as imaging.

What is the "clinical horizon"?

100

This type of study is especially suited for rare diseases.

What is a case control study.

200

Common business research databases.

What are:  Google Scholar, EBSCO, PubMed, ProQuest.

200

Most common study designs used in managerial epidemiology are:

What is observational, retrospective, cohorts, case-control, cross-sectional, or quasi-experiments.

200

These are a group of people with at least one distinguishing characteristic:  Live in a particular region, are part of a particular race or gender, or are born in a particular year.

What is a population?

200

New cases of diseases are measured by this type of rates.

What are incidence rates?

200

This is the odds of exposure in cases compared to contorls.

What is the odds ratio?

300

These are common citation styles.

APA, MLA, ACS, ASA, CSE, Chicago Style (Turabian), Medicine (NLM)

300

Name some sources of epidemiologic data in the US.

What is:  US Census Bureau, National Center for Health Statistics- National Vital Statistics System; National Health Interview Survey (NHIS), National Survey of Children's Health (NSCH), Health Resources and Services Administration_ Maternal and Child Health Bureau, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, US Census Bureau (American Community Survey), US Bureau of Labor Statistics- Injuries, Illnesses, and fatalities, etc.

300

These should reflect a population's dynamic state of physical, mental, and social well-being.

What are population health outcomes?

300

Statistical measurement for the percent of people with a disease who test positive.

What is sensitivity?

300

The time from initial development of disease until it is detected.

What is a latency period.

400
Common pitfalls in academic writing that help promote the use of Endnote and Refworks.

What are:  (1) Incomplete or incorrect metadata, (2) Duplicate references, (3) Mis-formatted citations, (4) Forgetting to organize folders early.

400

Some reasons Managerial epidemiology is important.

(1) Improve organizational efficiency, (2) improve cost of care, (3) Increase quality of care, (4) Improve population health outcomes - OVERALL supports strategic organizational goals

400

“A collective or individual risk factor (or set of factors) that is causally related to a health condition, outcome, or other defined characteristic”

What are health determinants?

400

The chance that a person who tests negative for a disease actually does not have the disease.

What is negative predictive value?
400

This type of study, requires fewer subjects than a cohort study.

What is a case-control study.

500

What allows multiple researchers to collaborate on written works in endnote and update references in real time.

What is the "Shared Library" function.

500

This is a measurement used in managerial epidemiology to measure the # of potential years of life lost due to a disease.

YPLL - Years of Potential Life Lost

500

The relationship between mortality and age is best characterized by this kind of curve.

What is a J curve?

500

Indicates the percent of people without a disease who can be ruled out as being disease-free.

What is specificity?

500

An odds ratio < 1.0 means this.

What is the exposure is protective?

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