- Statistical power.
- Clinical significance.
- Randomization.
- Blinding.
No category found.
- Incubation period.
- Latent period.
- Communicable period.
- Generation time.
- Wait to see if it jumps to humans.
- Implement immediate culling of infected poultry, establish a cordon sanitaire, and enhance surveillance for human cases.
- Only vaccinate the poultry workers.
- Blame the farm owners for poor hygiene.
- Incidence.
- Prevalence.
- Survival rate.
- Case-fatality rate.
- A general population health survey.
- An occupational epidemiology study to identify workplace hazards.
- A study of genetic predispositions.
- An investigation into individual lifestyle choices.
- Blinding of participants.
- The potential for prolonged exposure to a placebo for those who are not receiving active treatment.
- The cost of the drug.
- The number of participants.
- Prevalence.
- Incidence.
- Cumulative incidence.
- Attack rate.
- Advise people to stay indoors.
- Investigate potential environmental triggers (e.g., air pollution, allergen peaks) or an emerging respiratory pathogen.
- Assume it is a normal seasonal fluctuation.
- Only focus on treating individual patients.
- Sensitivity.
- Specificity.
- Positive Predictive Value (PPV).
- Negative Predictive Value (NPV).
- Confounding.
- Effect modification.
- Selection bias.
- Information bias.
- Case-control study.
- Cross-sectional study.
- Prospective cohort study (observational).
- Randomized controlled trial (RCT).
- Relative Risk (RR).
- Odds Ratio (OR).
- Attributable Risk (AR).
- Prevalence Ratio (PR).
- Dismiss it as random genetic mutations.
- Initiate an investigation to identify common environmental exposures, maternal factors, or infectious agents during pregnancy.
- Advise all pregnant women to leave the community.
- Only focus on treating the affected children.
- Blinding.
- Matching.
- Randomization.
- Stratification.
- Selection bias.
- Information bias (e.g., misclassification due to self-report).
- Confounding.
- Observer bias.
- Only efficacy matters.
- The balance between benefits and harms, and informed consent for patients.
- Adverse events are always acceptable.
- Only the cost of the drug matters.
- Incidence rate.
- Prevalence rate.
- Crude mortality rate.
- Case-fatality rate.
- Treat the patient and send them home.
- Immediately initiate isolation, multi-drug therapy, and rigorous contact tracing to prevent widespread transmission.
- Wait for the disease to spread to other family members.
- Only treat the patient's symptoms.
- Resistance patterns.
- Local epidemiology of pathogens and their susceptibility.
- Only individual patient symptoms.
- The cost of the antibiotic.
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