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5/31/06

        Help!  

Question
Answer
woman w/anxiety about gyn exam is told to relax and imagine going thru steps of exam is an example of:   systematic desensitization  
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a 65yo man diagnosed w/incurable metastatic pancreatic adenocarcinoma; his family asks you not to tell the patient, what do you do?   assess whether telling pt will negatively affect his health. if not, tell him  
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man admitted for chest pain is medicated for V-tach; the next day he jumps out of bed and does push ups to show nurses he didn't have a heart attack; what is this defense mechanism?   Denial  
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You find yourself attracted to a 26yo patient; what do you say?   NOTHING! the tone of interview must be professional; if you feel your actions could be misinterpreted, invite a chaperone into the room  
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large group of people is followed for 10yrs, every 2 yrs heart disease is assessed; what kind of study is it?   Cohort  
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Girl can groom herself, can hop on one foot and has an imaginary friend, how old is she?   4  
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man has flashbacks about girlfriend's death 2 months ago following an accident. he often cries and wishes he had died; what is the diagnosis?   normal bereavement  
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36yo woman w/strong family h/o breast cancer refuses a mammogram b/c she heard it hurts; what do you do?   discuss risks/benefits. she must make her own decision after being informed  
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during what stage of sleep is there variable BP, penile erection and variable EEG?   REM  
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15yo girl of normal height and wt has enlarged parotid glands, but no other complaints. the mother confides that she found laxatives in her daughter's closet; what is dx?   bulimia nervosa  
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11yo girl exhibits Tanner stage 4 sexual development (almost full breasts and pubic hair), what is diagnosis?   advanced stage, early development  
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4yo girl complains of burning in her genitalia; otherwise she behaves and sleeps normally; smear of discharge has N. gonorrhea, how was she infected?   sexual abuse  
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72yo man insists on stopping treatment for heart condition b/c it makes him feel funny; what do you do?   investigate the "funny" feeling and determine if you can switch drugs w/o this side effect  
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Person demands the best doctor in town, why?   he is Narcissistic  
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Nurse has episodes of hypoglycemia, blood has no elevated C-ptn; why?   she's self administering insulin; this is a factitious disorder  
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55yo businessman cannot get erection; 2 years ago he had a heart attack, what might be causing his problem   fear of sudden death during intercourse  
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Case-control study   observational; often retrospective; sample chosen based on presence or absence of dz; information is collected about risk factors  
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Cohort study   observational study; sample chosen based on presence or absence of risk factors; subjects followed over time for development of disease; ex: Framingham heart study  
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Meta-analysis   pooling of data from several studies (usu via literature search) to achieve greater statistical power; cannot overcome limitations of individual studies or bias in study selection  
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Clinical Trial   Experimental study; Compares therapeutic benefit of 2 or more treatments or treatment and placebo; Highest-quality study when Randomized and Double-blinded  
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Selection bias   subjects choose group  
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Recall bias   knowledge of presence of disroder alters recall by subjects  
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Sampling bias   subjects are not representative; the results are not generalizable  
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Late-look bias   information gathered at an inappropriate time  
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What are 4 ways to reduce bias of one outcome being more likely than another?   blind studies, placebo responses, crossover studies (each subject acts as own control), randomization  
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Prevalence   the total number of cases in a population at a given time  
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Incidence   the number of new cases in a population per unit time  
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How do you calculate disease prevalence?   Multiply the Incidence by the Disease Duration  
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What is the relationship btw prevalence and incidence for chronic diseases (ex: diabetes)?   the prevalence is greater  
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What is the relationship btw prevalence and incidence for acute diseases (ex: common cold)?   the prevalence is equal to the incidence  
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Sensitivity calculation   number of true positives divided by the number of all the people with the disease  
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What does the sensitivity rule?   it rules out those without the disease  
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When do you want a high sensitivity?   for screening tests; the false negative ratio is 1 minus the value  
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Specificity calculation   number of true negatives divided by the number of all people without the disease  
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What does specificity rule?   it rules people with the disease in  
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When do you want a high specificity?   in a confirmatory test  
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Positive Predictive Value (PPV) calculation   number of true positives divided by the number of people who tested positive for the disease  
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What does the positive predictive value tell you?   the probability of having a condition, given a positive test  
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Negative predictive value (NPV) calculation   number of true negatives divided by the number of people who tested negative for a disease  
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What does the negative predictive value tell you?   the probability of NOT having the condition, given a negative test result  
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Unlike sensitivity and specificity, the predictive values are....   dependent on the prevalence of the disease in the population  
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The higher prevalence of a disease...   the higher the positive predictive value of the test  
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Odds Ratio Calculation   the odds of having a disease in exposed group divided by the odds of having a disease in a non-exposed group; (this is calculated within a group as number with disease divided by number without disease)  
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What does the Odds Ratio approximate?   The relative risk (if the prevalence of the disease is not too high)  
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When is the Odds Ratio used?   for case-controlled (restrospective) studies  
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Relative Risk   The disease risk in an exposed group divided by the disease risk in an unexposed group; (calculated within a group as the number with the disease divided by the total number of people in the group)  
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What is Relative Risk used for?   Cohort studies  
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Define Precision   the consistency and reproducibility of a test (reliability); The absense of random variation in a test  
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Define Accuracy   The trueness of test measurements  
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Rreduced precision in a test causes:   Random Error  
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Reduced accuracy in a test causes:   Systematic Error  
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When is a test reliable?   when repeat measurements are the same; the test is reproducible and dependable  
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When is a test valid?   if it measures what is supposed to be measured; it truly measures what it is supposed to; it is appropriate  
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Normal Statistical Distribution is...   Gaussian; Bell-shaped...the median = the mode = the mean  
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What is a bimodal distribution?   2 humps  
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Positively Skewed Distribution   there is asymmetry with the tail on the right; the mean > median > mode  
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Negatively Skewed Distribution   the tail is on the left; mean < median < mode  
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Null Hypothesis (H0)   is the hypothesis of no difference; there is no association between the disease and the risk factor in the population  
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Alternative Hypothesis (H1)   hypothesis that there is some difference; ex: there is some association between the disease and the risk factor in the population  
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Type I error (alpha)   states there is an effect or difference when none exists (to mistakenly accept the experimental hypothesis and reject the null hypothesis); alpha is a preset level of significance (usu p < .05)  
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p value   the probability of making a type I error  
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What does a p value < .05 mean?   there is less than a 5% chance that the data will show something that is not really there  
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What does alpha stand for?   is means you "saw" a difference that did not exist (for example, convicting an innocent man)  
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Type II error (beta)   States that there is NOT an effect of difference when one exists; (to fail to reject the null hypothesis when in fact H0 is false)  
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What does beta stand for?   the probability of making a type II error; you did not "see" a difference that does exist (ex: setting a guilty man free)  
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Power in statistics means...   the probability of rejecting the null hypothesis when it is in fact false; it depends on the total number of end points experienced by the population AND the difference in compliance btw treatment groups (differnces in the mean values btw grps)  
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What do you do to the power if you increase the sample size?   you increase it; there are no numbers; it equals 1 minus beta  
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When do you accept the null hypothesis?   When the confidence interval includes zero  
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What is the confidence interval?   the mean +/- 1.96  
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What is the purpose of a t-test?   to check the difference between the means of 2 groups  
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What does ANOVA (analysis of variance) do?   it checks the difference btw the means of 3 or more groups  
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What does X^2 (chi square) do?   it checks the difference btw 2 or more percentages or proportions of categorical outcomes (not mean values)  
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Correlation coefficient (r)   it is always between -1 and +1; an Absolute value indicates strength of correlation btw 2 variables  
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What are the 3 tiers of disease prevention? PDR   Prevent (ex: vaccine), Detect (ex: Pap smear), Reduce disability (ex: exogenous insulin for diabetes)  
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Prevention measures for Diabetes   eye, foot exams; urine tests  
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Prevention measures for Drug Abuse   HIV, TB tests; hepatitis immunizations  
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Prevention measures for Alcoholism   Influenza, Pneumococcal immunizations; TB test  
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Prevention measures for Overweight   blood sugar tests for diabetes  
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Prevention measures for Homeless, recent immigrant   TB test  
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Prevention measures for High-risk sexual behavior   HIV, hepatitis B, syphilis, gonorrhea, chlamydia tests  
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What are the reportable diseases? B. A. SSSMMART Chicken or you're Gone   HBV, HAV, Salmonella, Shigella, Syphilis, Measles, Mumps, AIDS, Rubella, TB, Chickenpox, Gonorrhea  
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Leading cause of death in infants   congenital anomalies, short gestation/low birth wt, SIDS, maternal complications of pregnancy, respiratory distress syndrome  
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Leading cause of death in 1-14yo   injuries, cancer, congenital anomalies, homicide, heart disease  
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Leading cause of death in 15-24yo   injuries, homicide, suicide, cancer, heart disease  
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Leading cause of death in 25-64yo   cancer, heart disease, injuries, suicide, stroke  
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Leading cause of death in 65+   heart disease, cancer, stroke, COPD, pneumonia, influenza  
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Created by: bscaryp