21
Relative and Attributable Risks BY DR MUHAMMAD TAUSEEF JAVED CONSULTANT MINISTRY OF HEALTH MAKKAH KSA & IPH LAHORE

Document10

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Document10

Relative and Attributable Risks

BY DR MUHAMMAD TAUSEEF JAVED

CONSULTANT MINISTRY OF HEALTH MAKKAH KSA

&IPH LAHORE

Page 2: Document10

Absolute Risk

• Involves people who contract disease due to an exposure

• Doesn’t consider those who are sick but haven’t been exposed

Page 3: Document10

Calculating Excess Risk

Page 4: Document10

Relative Risk

Definition:

A measure of the strength of association based on prospective studies (cohort studies).

Page 5: Document10

Determining Relative Risk

Page 6: Document10

Interpreting Relative Risk

Page 7: Document10

Relative Risk Calculations

Page 8: Document10

Relative Risk Calculations (cont.)

Page 9: Document10

Relative Risk in Case-Control Studies

• Can’t derive incidence from case-control studiesBegin with diseased people (cases) and

non-diseased people (controls)• Therefore, can’t calculate relative

risk directly• But, we can use another method

called an odds ratio

Page 10: Document10

Odds Ratio in Prospective (Cohort) Studies

Page 11: Document10

Odds Ratio in Case-Control Studies

Page 12: Document10

Odds Ratio in Case-Control Studies (cont.)

Page 13: Document10

When is the Odds Ratio a Good Estimate of Relative Risk?

• When cases are representative of diseased population

• When controls are representative of population without disease

• When the disease being studied occurs at low frequency

Page 14: Document10

REMEMBER !!!

• An odds ratio is a useful measure of association

• In a cohort study, the relative risk can be calculated directly

• In a case-control study the relative risk cannot be calculated directly, so an odds ratio is used instead

Page 15: Document10

Attributable Risk

Definition:

The amount of disease that can be attributed to a certain exposure.

Page 16: Document10

Concept of Attributable Risk

Page 17: Document10

Attributable Risk for an Exposed Group

Page 18: Document10

OR, expressed as a proportion:

Attributable Risk for an Exposed Group (cont.)

From previous relative risk example:

Page 19: Document10

Calculation for Proportional Incidence in Total Population

First calculate A-R for group from

Formulas 11.1 & 11.2 (previous slide),

then use Formula 11.3

For proportion of the incidence in the

total population, use Formula 11.4

Page 20: Document10

Calculations for Attributable Risks (cont.)

Page 21: Document10

Summary• Relative risk and odds ratio are important as

measures of the strength of associationImportant for deriving causal inference

• Attributable risk is a measure of how much disease risk is attributed to a certain exposureUseful in determining how much disease can

be prevented• Therefore:

Relative risk is valuable in etiologic studies of disease

Attributable risk is useful for Public Health guidelines and planning