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Sample exam questions for Introduction to Epidemiology and Public Health ANWERS 1. To be causally associated with disease, the etiological factor should fulfill the following criteria: Indicate all that apply. The factor is present in all subjects with the disease. Elimination of the factor reduces risk of the disease. The exposure to this factor should precede the development of the disease. The factor is more prevalent among those with the disease than among those without the disease. 2. At the start of a cohort study the exposure is determined with the help of a questionnaire. During the study there is no "loss to follow-up". At the end of the follow-up time the number of cases is known and is divided into exposed and unexposed. The odds ratio (OR) is used as the association measure. Which comment is the most appropriate here? Anwer: a a. b. c. d. 3. Researchers should have better calculated the risk ratio (=incidence proportion ratio). The OR has no useful interpretation. Researchers should have better calculated the incidence rate ratio. The OR approaches the incidence rate ratio. During a study of 20 years five people are followed to measure the occurrence of upper respiratory tract infection. As this infection can occur more than once, all disease events are included in this study. 1 person is lost to follow-up after 1.5 years. 2 persons died respectively after 10 and 15 years from a different cause. 1 person got the first respiratory tract infection after seven years and the second infection after 12 years of follow-up. Both infections take half a year of recovery. This person is followed-up until the end of the study. One person is followed-up the whole period without occurrence of disease. What is de incidence rate in this study? Answer: b a. b. c. d. 0.06 per person-year 0.03 per person-year 0.15 per person-year 0.08 per person-year Page 1 4. What is the fraction of cases with the disease among the exposed that is attributable to the exposure? Answer: a Unexposed Exposed Disease 9 17 No disease 7 5 a. b. c. d. 5. The incidence rate (IR) differs from the incidence proportion (IP) because... Answer: b a. b. c. d. 6. attributable fraction attributable risk population attributable risk percentage negative predictive value Precise measurement of exposure is important in epidemiologic research. Namely, when the exposure is not precisely measured the association between exposure and effect is likely to be... Answer: c a. b. c. d. 8. IP can be assessed in a closed population, IR not. IR can be assessed in an open population, IP not. IP takes competing mortality into account; IR does not. IR can be assessed more precisely than IP If you want to know the proportion of the disease that could be prevented by eliminating the exposure in the entire study population, you should calculate the Answer: c a. b. c. d. 7. 0.27 0.60 0.30 0.77 overestimated confounded underestimated random Which of the following designs is/are suitable for studying a genetic polymorphism in relation to risk of diabetes mellitus? Indicate all that apply. Case-control study Cross-sectional study Cohort study Randomized, controlled trial Page 2 9. The Cancer and Steroid Hormone (CASH) study, in which women with breast cancer and a comparable group of women without breast cancer were asked about their prior use of oral contraceptives is an example of which type(s) of study? Indicate all that apply. clinical trial cohort study cross sectional survey case-control study observational study experimental study 10. The precision of an estimate of a relative risk depends on the ... Answer: b a. b. c. d. generalisability size of the study validity of the study presence of bias 11. In a cohort study the relative risk for COPD for moderate smokers versus non-smokers was 4. For heavy smokers compared to non-smokers the relative risk was 10. What would have been the relative risk for COPD in this study if the heavy smokers were used as the reference category? Answer: a a. b. c. d. for non-smoking 0.1 and for moderate smoking 0.4 for non-smoking 0.2 and for moderate smoking 0.6 for non-smoking 4 and for heavy smoking 10 this cannot be calculated with the available data 12. An epidemiologist in Tanzania wants to study the efficacy of iron supplementation for the prevention of HIV infection. He wants to make sure that only subjects who are (still) free of HIV infection are enrolled in his trial. Therefore, he screens a large group of people using a diagnostic test. Based on the outcome of the test, he decides who could participate in his iron supplementation trial. For this purpose, it is very important that the diagnostic test has a high... Answer: d a. b. c. d. sensitivity positive predictive value specificity negative predictive value 13. A diabetes test is being applied in a population of 5000 men. Previous evaluation of the diabetes test in a different population showed a sensitivity of 70% and an specificity of 80%. The prevalence of diabetes is 0.5%. What is the diagnostic value of a positive test in this situation? Answer: a a. b. c. d. 2% 47 % 4% 70 % Page 3 14. Information bias in a cohort study can be avoided by ensuring that... Indicate all that apply. no competing diseases do occur. follow-up is complete. the persons who assess the disease are not aware of the exposure of the participant. disease assessment is highly standardized. the persons who collect the data are not aware of the study hypothesis. 15. A cohort study shows a RR of 1.8 (95% CI 1.4-2.2) for alcohol consumption and breast cancer. Another cohort study shows a RR of 1.8 (95% CI 0.6-3.5) for smoking and breast cancer. What can be concluded from the results of this study? Indicate all that apply. Both associations are likely to be due to chance. Both associations are biased. The study on smoking is probably smaller than the study on alcohol. Alcohol and smoking both cause breast cancer. 16. When studying diet and risk of chronic diseases, a cohort study generally has the following advantage compared to a case-control study: Answer: d a. b. c. d. Potential confounders can be taken into account Selection bias does not occur Various dietary exposures can be studied at the same time It has higher internal validity 17. What is a disadvantage of a cohort study compared to a clinical trial? Answer: b a. b. c. d. The external validity is lower It is more prone to confounding It is less suitable for studying clinical outcomes Participants can drop out during follow-up 18. The Framingham Study, in which a group of residents have been followed since the 1950s to identify occurrence and risk factors for heart disease, is an example of which type(s) of study? cohort case-control experimental observational clinical trial cross-sectional Page 4 19. Researchers prospectively follow a group of 100 vegetarians and 200 non-vegetarians. After 30 years of follow-up, 8 of the vegetarians and 20 of the non-vegetarians develop heart disease. The 95% confidence interval on the relative risk of 0.8 ranges from 0.6 to 0.9. Select the best statement. Answer: d a. Vegetarians were 80% less likely to develop heart disease during 30 years of follow-up compared to. non-vegetarians. b. The researchers should have calculated an odds ratio rather than a relative risk. c. The relative risk of 0.8 is not statistically significant as the 95% confidence interval contains the value 0.8. d. Vegetarians were 20% less likely to develop heart disease during 30 years of follow-up compared to non-vegetarians. 20. In the Netherlands there is an increase in the prevalence of cardiovascular diseases. This is a consequence of Answer: c a. b. c. d. deterioration of the food pattern increase in hypertension improved treatment increase in obesity 21. General practitioners decide to intensify pharmacological treatment of patients when their absolute 10-year risk of cardiovascular mortality exceeds 20%. Which risk factors form the basis for calculating this absolute risk? Answer: c a. b. c. d. Age, gender, smoking, isolated systolic hypertension and serum triglyceride levels Age, gender, smoking, blood pressure and presence of diabetes mellitus Age, gender, smoking, systolic blood pressure and serum total cholesterol Age, gender, smoking, body mass index and family history 22. In a hospital-based study of the association between coffee consumption and the occurrence of stroke, a group of patients hospitalized after suffering a stroke was compared to a control population hospitalized for other reasons. The patients hospitalized for stroke were found to consume significantly more coffee than the controls. All of the following statements represent possible explanations for the observed positive association between coffee consumption and stroke, EXCEPT: Answer: b a. Heavy coffee consumers may also be heavy smokers, so smoking rather than coffee drinking is the relevant causal factor b. The patients restricted their coffee intake after suffering a stroke. c. The hospitalized controls consume less coffee, on the average, than individuals in the general population, resulting in a spurious association between coffee consumption and stroke. d. Excessive coffee consumption can cause a stroke. 23. Select the correct statement concerning the selection of controls in a case-control study Answer:b a. Randomization can help assure comparability of cases and controls. b. Matching can be used to reduce confounding bias. c. It is best to identify controls with conditions that are related to the outcome in the case-control study. d. It is less important to assure comparability of cases and controls in a case control study than comparability of study arms in a randomized controlled trial. Page 5 24. In a case-control study the association was examined between smoking and risk of Parkinson's disease. The table below provides the results. Which of the following odds ratios is correct? Answer: a Controls Cases Smokers 55 30 Non smokers 45 70 a. b. c. d. 0.35 2.85 1.83 0.55 25. Indicate three types of cancers that are most frequently occurring in Westernized countries. lymphoma bladder cancer cervical cancer colon cancer prostate cancer breast cancer 26. An epidemiologist performed a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial to examine the effect of fish oil supplementation on memory complaints. In the group that received fish oil, 19% of the participants forgot to take their daily supplements during the study whereas this was only 3% in the placebo group. Is this a problem? Answer: b a. Yes, because this affects the external validity of the study. b. Yes, because the study outcome can be biased. c. No, because participants and investigators were blinded towards the type of treatment in both groups d. No, because all confounders were equally distributed over both groups due to randomization 27. An epidemiologist wants to assess the effect of tea drinking on blood pressure. He decides to do an intervention study. Which of the following measures does not increase the internal validity of the study? Answer: d a. b. c. d. Careful monitoring of blood pressure during the study Inclusion of a control group Randomization Random selection of participants from the general population 28. The main advantage of a randomized controlled trial (RTC) compared to all other epidemiology study designs is that the RCT: Answer: a a. equally distributes characteristics that may be independent risk factors for the outcome of interest over the study arms. b. is prospective thereby eliminating the need for historical data. c. is less expensive. d. guarantees that confounding bias will not occur. Page 6 29. A pharmaceutical company showed the following in an article: "1500 subjects with a cold were treated with our new medicine. Within three days, 95% were asymptomatic and this result was statistically significant." The company claims the new medicine was effective. Is this conclusion justified? Answer: c a. b. c. d. Yes, because the effect was very large (95% of the subjects benefitted from treatment). No, because statistical significance indicates that the null hypothesis ("no effect") was correct. No, because no control group was involved in the study. Yes, because the effect of treatment could not be explained by chance. 30. Public health surveillance includes various activities. Which one is not part of public health surveillance? Answer: c a. b. c. d. Data collection Data dissemination Disease control Data analysis 31. The problem of confounding can be solved by... Answer: c a. b. c. d. choosing a prospective design. increasing the precision of the measurements. stratification during data analysis. this cannot be solved. 32. Consider a population of three persons. For each of the members the life expectancy at birth is 80 and this does not change by age. Answer: d Person A is a man who gets COPD at the age of 30, reducing his quality of life from 1.0 to 0.3. This man dies at the age of 80. Person B is a woman who gets a depression at the age of 25, reducing her reducing her quality of life from 1.0 to 0.5. She recovers from her depression at the age of 35. At the age of 60 she dies because of a heart attack. Person C is a man who gets lung cancer at the age of 60, reducing his quality of life from 1.0 to 0.1. This man dies at the age of 65. The number of DALY’s lost in each person’s life history can be calculated. By combining all life histories in this population of three persons, the population health in terms of DALY’s can be described for this population. Which of the following combination is correct? a In the life history of person A 35 DALY’s are lost and the total loss of DALY’s for the population of three is 70 b In the life history of person A 15 DALY’s are lost and the total loss of DALY’s for the population of three is 55,5 c In the life history of person B 5 DALY’s are lost and the total loss of DALY’s for the population of three is 9,5 d In the life history of person C 19,5 DALY’s are lost and the total loss of DALY’s for the population of three is 795 Page 7 33. In a study on the prevalence of disease X in nursing homes A and B you get the following data. Nursing home A = index 1 Persons Number of cases Prevalence rate with disease X (per 100) Age Young 200 4 2.0 Old 400 24 6.0 Total 600 28 4.7 Nursing home B = index 2 Persons Number of cases Prevalence rate with disease X (per 100) Age Young 800 24 3.0 Old 100 8 8.0 Total 900 32 3.6 Nursing home A + B = standard Persons Number of cases Prevalence rate with disease X (per 100) Age Young Old Total One can calculate the standardized prevalence rate and comparative mortality figure (CMF) by means of direct standardization, using the joint population of nursing home A and B as the standard. Which calculation is correct? Answer: a a. b. c. d. The standardized rate of nursing home A is 3.3/100 The CMF of nursing home A is 0.97 The standardized rate of nursing home A is 2.4/100 The standardized rate of nursing home B is 6.3/10 Page 8