Measures of Disease Frequency
Study Design
Measures of Association
Statistical Inference
Confounding and Effect Measure Modification
100

The total number of cases of a disease in a population at a given time.

What is prevalence?

100

This study design is commonly used to measure the incidence to a disease.

What is a cohort study?

100

The relative measure of association when comparing cumulative incidences of two groups. 

What is the Risk Ratio?

100

The widely accepted alpha level when assessing statistical significance.

What is p < 0.05?

100

This term describes a situation where the effect of the primary exposure on the outcome is mixed with the effect of another variable.

What is confounding?

200

The number of new cases of a disease that occur in a specified population during a defined time period. 

What is incidence?
200

The gold standard study design to assess causality between an exposure and outcome.

What is a randomized controlled trial.

200

The Relative Risk when there is no association between the exposure and the outcome.

What is 1?

200

This range of values is used to estimate the true population parameter with a certain level of confidence.

What is a confidence interval?

200

This term refers to a situation where the effect of the main exposure on the outcome differs depending on the level of another variable.

What is effect measure modification? 

300

The units of a denominator of a prevalence.

What is people.

300

The two types of cohort studies.

What are prospective and retrospective. 

300

This type of table is used in epidemiology to display the relationship between two categorical variables, often used to calculate measures like odds ratios and relative risks.

What is a 2X2 table?

300

This term refers to the initial assumption that there is no effect or no difference in a statistical test.

What is the null hypothesis?

300

This statistical technique can be used to adjust for confounding variables in the analysis phase.

What is multivariable regression?

400

The units of a denominator of a rate. 

What is person-time?

400

This type of study compares individuals with a disease to those without the disease to identify possible causes.

What is a case-control study?

400

The two types of measures of association.

What are absolute and relative measures?

400

Increasing this aspect of a study can reduce the margin of error and increase the precision of the estimates.

What is sample size?

400

How we typically present results when effect measure modification is present?

What is a stratified analysis?
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