Difference between revisions of "Prevalence"

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'''FEM PAGE CONTRIBUTORS 2007'''
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;Editor
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:Sabrina Bacci
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;Original Authors
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:Alain Moren
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:Marta Valenciano
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:Arnold Bosman
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;Contributors
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:Vladimir Prikazsky
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:Naomi Boxall
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:Lisa Lazareck
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:Sabrina Bacci
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[[Category:Measures of Disease Occurrence]]
 
[[Category:Measures of Disease Occurrence]]

Latest revision as of 05:24, 14 April 2023

Prevalence

Prevalence (synonym: prevalence proportion) is expressed as a percentage.

The prevalence measures the proportion of individuals in a population with a specific disease (or a specific characteristic) at a certain point of time (T0). The term prevalence pool is sometimes used to identify the subgroup of the population with the disease. Some individuals exit the prevalence pool by recovering or dying, some enter by developing disease. However prevalence is measured at a specific point in time (T0).

0552.prevalence1.png-550x0.png



The prevalence will range from 0 to 1 or 0% to 100% if expressed as a percentage. Since time is not measured in the denominator, the prevalence is not a rate.

The prevalence reflects both disease incidence and disease duration. The higher the incidence and the longer the duration of a disease, the larger the number of people with the disease at a specific point in time. If incidence rates and duration are stable over time, the prevalence and incidence rate are related in the following way [1]:

7215.prevalence2.png-550x0.png



in which P is the prevalence, I is the incidence rate, and D is the average disease duration.

If the prevalence is low, 1 – P tends to 1, and P / (1 – P) is almost equal to P.

Then the formula can be simplified as:

1007.prevalence3.png-550x0.png



The prevalence proportion is used to measure the disease burden in a population. It applies more to administrative areas of public health than into the cause of disease. It is also used to describe characteristics or conditions other than diseases (vaccine coverage, the prevalence of smokers, the prevalence of blood groups, etc.).

References

  1. Rothman KJ; Epidemiology: an introduction. Oxford University Press 2002, p.40-44.


FEM PAGE CONTRIBUTORS 2007

Editor
Sabrina Bacci
Original Authors
Alain Moren
Marta Valenciano
Arnold Bosman
Contributors
Vladimir Prikazsky
Naomi Boxall
Lisa Lazareck
Sabrina Bacci

Contributors