Community Medicine: Cross-Sectional Studies (Prevalence Studies/ Surveys)
Community Medicine: Cross-Sectional Studies (Prevalence Studies/ Surveys)
Cross-sectional studies
(Prevalence studies/ Surveys)
Design
As cross-sectional studies collect data on existing (prevalent) cases so they
are also called prevalence studies.
Example:
In an survey on smoking, we collect information on the smoking habits of
each individual (outcome) in a population. We can also collect information on some
potential risk factors, such as age, sex, occupation, education of the individual
(exposures).
Examples:
1
2) Evaluation of health interventions
Example:
Vaccination coverage surveys are undertaken to asses the effectiveness of
EPI programmes
Example:
The observation that coronary heart disease is more prevalent in men
than in women has led to hypotheses about the possible protective effects of
estrogens.
The target population is the population to which the main results of the
study will be extrapolated.
2
The sample must be representative of the target population otherwise we
would not be able to extrapolate the results
Example
In a cross-sectional study of smoking habits and risk factors for smoking,
the target population of our study could be all the children and adolescents in the
country within a certain well defined age group.
3) Sample selection
4) Data collection
5) Data analysis
In an analytic study, we quantify the association between the exposure and the
outcome by calculating the prevalence ratio.
3
If exposure has different levels, we can calculate prevalence and prevalence
ratio for different levels of exposure
Example:
Overall prevalence:
Total prevalence of anemia= number of women who are anemic/ total number of
women in the study
Prevalence of anemia among the literate women= number of literate women who
are anemic/ total number of literate women in the study
Prevalence ratio:
6) Interpretation of results
During interpretation of results we must remember the following possible
sources of error.
Bias is any error in the design and conduct of a study that makes the
results different from the truth
4
Observer bias: has the data collector made mistakes in obtaining/
recording the data? If he/she has done plenty of mistakes then our
results will be biased.
Random error: was our sample really random? If it was not our results
will be biased.
Weaknesses
Measure prevalent rather than incident cases.