Basic Health Indicators

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Contents

Cases

Before understanding any of the following terms, it’s important to define what a case of a disease is, otherwise it is impossible to compare data. A case could be hospitalized patients or deaths. It can be either discrete (present or absent) or continuous (BP, serum cholesterol, intensity of infection).

Morbidity

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It is the diseased state, disability, or poor health due to any cause. Morbidity rate can refer to either the incidence rate, or the prevalence of a disease or medical condition. This measure of sickness is contrasted with the mortality rate of a condition, which is the proportion of people dying during a given time interval.

Incidence

[edit part] Incidence is the measure of new cases (new cases = incident cases), per time unit.

There are 2 measures of incidence: risk and rate.

Risk

Risk is the probability of new occurrence of disease among individuals in an initially disease-free population during a defined time period.

To calculate a risk (r), we divide the number of new cases (d) in the defined period by the population at risk at the beginning of the period (N): r = d/N (over a defined period). Risk is a probability but is often multiplied by a suitable number (e.g.: 100000), giving rise to examples such as: “Annual risk of death was 14 per 1000 in Kenya in 1 year”

Odds of Disease/survival

It is a related measure of disease occurrence. For a defined population and time period, it is the number of cases divided by the number of people who did not become a case: Odds = Cases/Non-cases (in specified observed period of time). Also can be defined as: Odds = risk/(1-risk)

Rate

Rate is a measure of the frequency of occurrence of new cases. Rate relates the number of new cases to the person-time (Y) at risk = a measure that takes into account changes in the size of the population at risk during the follow-up period. In a defined population followed up for a period of time, we establish the total person-years at risk (Y).

The observed rate (r) is: r = d/Y (where d is number of new cases arising in the population)

We can also use person-months or person-days instead of person-years. The relationship between risk, rate and prevalence:

Prevalence

[edit part] Existing cases = prevalent cases. Prevalence is the proportion of individuals in a defined population that has the outcome (disease) under study at a defined instant (a point) in time ("point prevalence"); - Ranges between 0 and 1 (0%-100%). We use cross-sectional studies to obtain it. Achieved in intervals, cases are monitored in given time period (1 month, 1 year).

Mortality

[edit part] Mortality rate is a measure of the number of deaths (in general, or due to a specific cause) in some population, scaled to the size of that population, per unit time. Mortality rate is typically expressed in units of deaths per 1000 individuals per year.[1] Various mortality types exist:

Survival Rate

[edit part] Survival rate is the proportion of survivors in a specified group, usually patients with a disease, who survived in a specified period of time. Survival rate is the proportion of survivors in a specified group, usually patients with a disease, who survived in a specified period of time.

Lethality Rate

[edit part] Lethality = number of deaths / over number of sick with a specific disease (x100) It is also known as Case fatality rate. It is the proportion of cases in a designated population of a particular disease, which die in a specified period of time.

Note: lethality is a better measure of clinical significance of the disease than mortality. For example: Naegleria fowleri has a much higher lethality (it will surely kill you once you get it), than heart attacks who have a higher mortality, that is, more people die from heart attacks (due to much higher prevalence of cardiac disease) rather than from N. fowleri infection (very low prevalence).

Links

Related articles

References

  1. Wikipedia.org. Mortality rate [online]. The last revision 2011-11-17, [cit. 2011-11-28]. <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortality_rate>.

Bibliography

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