POPM 3240 Lecture Notes - Lecture 6: Sleep Deprivation, Rare Disease, Zoonosis

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Case-control studies are a type of observational study design that begins with the selection of study subjects on the basis of their disease (d) / outcome (o) status. In other words, study subjects are grouped into one of two categories: cases: disease/outcome positive (o+), controls: disease/outcome negative (o-). Investigators then look backwards in time to assess whether each subject was exposed (e+) or not (e-) to a given set of exposures of interest. Enroll cases of students with anxiety (o+) and controls without anxiety (o-), then determine if they previously had sleep deprivation in the predetermined time period (e. g. past 3 months). No information about exposure is known when subjects are enrolled in the study. Once enrolled, we then classify them according to their exposure status. There are several advantages to case-control studies: they are good for rare disease (but not for rare exposures).

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