Methods for Studying the Distribution of Health, 7.5 credits
Metoder för att studera sjukdomars förekomst och spridning, 7.5 hp- Course code
- 4FH082
- Course name
- Methods for Studying the Distribution of Health
- Credits
- 7.5 credits
- Form of Education
- Higher Education, study regulation 2007
- Main field of study
- Public Health Sciences
- Level
- AV - Second cycle
- Grading scale
- Pass with distinction, Pass, Fail
- Department
- Institute of Environmental Medicine
- Decided by
- Education committee PHS
- Decision date
- 2018-10-09
- Course syllabus valid from
- Autumn 2019
Specific entry requirements
A Bachelor's degree or a professional degree equivalent to a Swedish Bachelor's degree of at least 180 credits in public health science, healthcare or other relevant social sciences subject area. And proficiency in English equivalent to English B/English 6.
Objectives
After completion of the course, the student should be able to:
- estimate and interpret measures of disease occurrence.
- describe and discuss the key components of epidemiology (measures of disease occurrence, comparison of disease occurrence, epidemiological study designs, random and systematic error).
- discuss the application of epidemiological methods in different contexts, including etiological and descriptive purposes.
- be familiar with methods for collecting health data in Sweden an internationally and be able to discuss their cons and pros.
- distinguish between experimental and observational studies and describe the key characteristics of these studies
- draw basic conclusions from descriptive epidemiological concepts when critically reviewing scientific literature.
Content
The course aims to give knowledge about basic epidemiological methods and its different applications, including:
- measures of disease occurrence (prevalence, incidence, cumulative incidence)
- methods for collecting information on and monitoring of public health (registries, questionnaires, interviews, screening).
- methods for comparing disease occurrence across different determinants and populations
- sources of bias in epidemiological studies (random and systematic errors).
- interpretation of epidemiological findings, using real-world examples
- introduction to epidemiological study design(e.g. observational/experimental, cross sectional/prospective, ecological/individual based).
Teaching methods
The theories and concepts presented in lectures are applied and expanded upon in group exercises, group discussions, and reviews of scientific articles. Individual written tasks are given on a regular basis (e.g. every week).
Examination
Group tasks along with written individual tasks and a written examination.
The grade will be based on results from the written examination (70%) together with individual and group exercises (30%).
Compulsory participation
Quizzes and group work are compulsory. The course director assesses if and, in that case, how absence can be compensated. Before the student has participated in all compulsory parts or compensated absence in accordance with the course director's instructions, the student's results for the course/respective part will not be registered in LADOK.
Limitation of number of occasions to write the exam
The student has the right to write the exam six times. If the student has not passed the exam after four participations he/she is encouraged to visit the study advisor.
The number of times that the student has participated in one and the same examination is regarded as an examination session. Submission of a blank examination is regarded as an examination. An examination for which the student registered but not participated in will not be counted as an examination.
Transitional provisions
After each course occasion there will be at least six occasions for the examination within a 2-year period from the end of the course.
Other directives
Course evaluation will be carried out in accordance with the guidelines established by the Board of Higher Education.
The course language is English.
Literature and other teaching aids
Scientific articles will be distributed during the course.
4. ed. : Philadelphia : Elsevier/Saunders, cop. 2009 - xv, 375 s. ISBN:978-1-4160-4002-6 LIBRIS-ID:10877647 Library search
2. ed. : New York, NY : Oxford University Press, cop. 2012 - viii, 268 s. ISBN:978-0-19-975455-7 (pbk. : alk. paper) LIBRIS-ID:13454717 Library search
New York ;a Oxford : Oxford University Press, 1995 - x, 317 s. ISBN:0-19-507490-4 (inb.) LIBRIS-ID:4611326 Library search