Important Terms
Alphabet Soup
Stuff
Surveys & Surveillance
Numbers and Interpretation
100

Diphtheria, piece of metal in a cornea, or contact lens associated red eye are all examples of...

What are acute diseases?

100

This is program within the FDA is where you report adverse events related to disease outbreaks.

What is Medwatch?

100

This was the leading cause of death in 1900

What is Pneumonia/Influenza?

100

Largest and longest running telephone survey in our country that takes a national sample of adults

BRFSS aka the Behavior Risk Factor Surveillance System 

100

____% of work-related eye injuries can be prevented with _____.

What is 90% and safety eyewear?

200

This is the term for optimal health for all 

What is health equity

200

A division of a larger federal agency that handles intramural and extramural research  

What is the National Eye Institute (NEI)?

200
According to the Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practice study from United Healthcare this is where most people reported they get their health information?

What is TV?

200

This form of information bias is a flaw of survey research that a researcher cannot get away from and has to do with the participants 

What is recall bias?

200

The CDC attributes ___ of the 30 years of increased life expectancy in the 20th century to public health.

What is 25?

300

This term describes the symptoms and suffering caused by a disease

What is morbidity?

300

This organization protects the rights of consumers to obtaining a copy of their contact lens prescription at no cost

What is the Federal Trade Commission (FTC)?

300

This prospective study of adults is funded by the NEI and has contributed evidence to support cigarette smoking is associated with cataract and AMD

What is the Beaver Dam study?
300

Observed level of a particular disease that is usually present in a community and is considered the baseline.

What is an endemic level?

300

331.9 Million

What is the number of people living in the U.S.?

400

The 5 areas of a person's life that impact their quality of life and health outcomes. *Name all 5

What are the SDOH?

Education Access and Quality

Economic Stability

Healthcare Access and Quality

Social and Community Context

Neighborhood and Built Environment

400

This organization published the most comprehensive vision-related public health report in 2016.

What is the National Academies of Science Engineering and Medicine (NASEM)?

400

___% of vision impairment can be corrected with glasses/visual correction.

What is ~80%?

400

This is a set of data that comes from ophthalmological health records and is included on the VEHSS.

What is the (Intelligent Research in Sight) IRIS registry?

400

The term for when a researcher concludes that a finding is significant when it really is not.

What is a false positive, type I, or alpha error?

500

Improving health by targeting behaviors in social and physical environments

What is primordial prevention?

500

A vision database that is comprised of EHR registries, insurance claims, survey results, and examination based studies

What is the VEHSS (Vision and Eye Health Surveillance System)?

500

A research study in which one or more human subjects are prospectively assigned to one or more interventions to evaluate the effects of those interventions on health‐related biomedical or behavioral outcomes.





What is a clinical trial?

500

2015 BRFSS data tells us that people who have difficulty seeing also have ____ compared to those without difficulty seeing.

What are 

-More physically unhealthy days in a month

-a dx of diabetes

-a dx of arthritis

-difficulty with mobility (walking or climbing)?

500

$____ is the 2023 Federal Poverty Level household income for a family of 4.

What is $30,000?