8,234views
00:00 / 00:00
Epidemiology
Sensitivity and specificity
Positive and negative predictive value
Test precision and accuracy
Incidence and prevalence
Relative and absolute risk
Odds ratio
Attributable risk (AR)
Mortality rates and case-fatality
DALY and QALY
Direct standardization
Indirect standardization
Study designs
Ecologic study
Cross sectional study
Case-control study
Cohort study
Randomized control trial
Clinical trials
Sample size
Placebo effect and masking
Disease causality
Selection bias
Information bias
Confounding
Interaction
Bias in interpreting results of clinical studies
Bias in performing clinical studies
Modes of infectious disease transmission
Outbreak investigations
Disease surveillance
Vaccination and herd immunity
Prevention
Incidence and prevalence
0 / 7 complete
0 / 4 complete
0 / 4 complete
of complete
of complete
of complete
Sam Gillespie, BSc
Prevalence and incidence are two ways to measure the number of people who have a certain disease in a population.
Prevalence includes all individuals with a disease, or all cases, regardless of when they developed it, divided by the total population.
Whereas incidence includes the new cases of a disease - meaning anyone who develops a disease, over some period of time, divided by the population of individuals that can get that disease.
And both of these have to take into account the population at risk.
Sometimes incidence and prevalence are reported as a proportion of a population like 5 per 1000, or 5 per 100, 000 if it’s a rare disease.
Let’s use a quick analogy to show the relationship between incidence and prevalence.
Imagine a bucket of green marbles - with each marble representing a sick person.
New green marbles keep falling into the bucket - these are the new cases.
We can count up how many green marbles enter the bucket in a year, and that would be the incidence.
Now some marbles also fall out of the bucket - perhaps some cases recover from the disease while other cases die.
Either way, they don’t have the disease anymore and are no longer cases in our bucket.
We can count up the number of green marbles in the bucket and that would be our prevalence.
So the prevalence really depends on the incidence of new cases, the recovery rate of the cases, and the death rate of the cases.
So for prevalence we have all cases of a disease over the population at risk.
If it’s done at some specific moment, like the day that a survey is being done, then it’s called point prevalence.
And occasionally, if it’s done over a period of time, like over a month or year, then it’s called period prevalence.
Now when we have new cases of a disease in a certain period of time, it’s called incidence rate.
This can’t be done at a specific moment, since we need some time window to capture the new cases, and sometimes it’s hard to follow up with everyone for the entire study period.
When this happens, we can use something called person time to find the incidence rate.
That’s when you sum up the time observed for every person during the study period.
Let’s look at an example of incidence rate using person-time.
Let’s say we want to figure out the incidence rate of pneumonia in a small retirement home that has 10 people, and that we do a 3 year study.
Both incidence and prevalence are ways to measure the number of people who have a certain disease in a population. More specifically, incidence of a disease refers to the number of new cases that occur in a population over a specific period of time; whereas prevalence refers to the number of existing cases that are found in a population at any given point in time.
Copyright © 2023 Elsevier, except certain content provided by third parties
Cookies are used by this site.
USMLE® is a joint program of the Federation of State Medical Boards (FSMB) and the National Board of Medical Examiners (NBME). COMLEX-USA® is a registered trademark of The National Board of Osteopathic Medical Examiners, Inc. NCLEX-RN® is a registered trademark of the National Council of State Boards of Nursing, Inc. Test names and other trademarks are the property of the respective trademark holders. None of the trademark holders are endorsed by nor affiliated with Osmosis or this website.