Basic Epidemiology
Study Designs
Risk & Prevention
Real-World Epidemiology
100

What is epidemiology?

This science studies the distribution and determinants of diseases in populations.

100

This study measures exposure and outcome at one point in time

a cross-sectional study

100

Smoking is an example of this type of determinant.

a risk factor

100

Low vaccination coverage led to this type of event in measles.

outbreak

200

What is incidence?

This term refers to the number of new cases in a population over time.

200

What is a case-control study?

This study compares people with a disease to those without it.

200

What is primary prevention?

This type of prevention includes vaccination.

200

What is an environmental risk factor?

Air pollution

300

What is prevalence?

This term includes all existing cases (new + old)

300

This study follows a group over time to observe outcomes.

a cohort study

300

What is herd immunity?

This concept protects unvaccinated individuals when coverage is high.

300

 Hypertension prevalence is best measured using this study type.

cross-sectional study

400

 What is age-standardized mortality rate?

This rate adjusts for differences in age distribution between populations to allow valid comparisons of mortality.

400

What is a descriptive study?

This type of study describe who, where and when is sick

400

What is relative risk?

This measure compares risk between exposed and unexposed groups.

400

This type of data is essential during outbreak investigation.

incidence data (or surveillance data)

500

Epidemiology studies only infectious diseases.

False

500

This system continuously collects and analyzes health data.

Surveillance

500

Herd immunity protects only vaccinated individuals.

False

500

️ What is odds ratio?

This measure is preferred in case-control studies to estimate association between exposure and outcome.