Please submit your write-up of no more than 400 words: What is the association between coffee drinking and risk of Parkinson’s disease? In your write-up, address each of the following points:• C

A pediatrician is concerned about childhood wrist and forearm fractures affecting fine motor skills later in life. She has approached you to determine whether young adults with a childhood history of wrist/forearm bone fractures are more likely to have fine motor problems. You collected data from 289 patients (aged 18 to 24 years) from 20 clinics in Georgia and the results are summarized below: 

No fine motor problems

Fine motor problems 

Total 

No history of bone fracture

163

172

History of bone fracture

103

14

117

Total

266

23

289

Please note: this is an example for the purposes of this quiz and the table above is not based on real data.

1.

Among those with no history of bone fracture, the prevalence (risk) of fine motor problems, rounded to 0.01, is: 

a. 0.05

b. 0.06

c. 0.08

d. 0.12

e. 0.14

1 point

2.

Among those with no history of bone fracture, the odds of fine motor problems, calculated from the table, rounded to 0.01, is:

a. 0.05

b. 0.06

c. 0.08

d. 0.12

e. 0.14

1 point

3.

Among those with a history of bone fracture, the prevalence (risk) of fine motor problems, rounded to 0.01, is:

a. 0.05

b. 0.06

c. 0.08

d. 0.12

e. 0.14

1 point

4.

Among those with a history of bone fracture, the odds of fine motor problems, rounded to 0.01, is:

a. 0.05

b. 0.06

c. 0.08

d. 0.12

e. 0.14

1 point

5.

Based on the scenario described above, to describe the association between wrist/forearm fracture and fine motor problems, you calculate the odds ratio (calculated from the table, not the rounded answers above):

a. 0.41

b. 1

c. 1.33

d. 2.29

e. 2.46

f. 2.94

1 point

6.

To be comprehensive, the pediatrician asks you to also calculate the risk ratio (remember, the outcome is the presence of fine motor problems and the exposure of interest is a history of bone fracture). This risk ratio (calculated from the table, not the rounded answers above) is: 

a. 0.41

b. 1

c. 1.33

d. 2.29

e. 2.46

f. 2.94

1 point

7.

The pediatrician wants to discuss the relationship between the odds ratio and the risk ratio. You start by saying (select one best answer):

a. The risk ratio always overestimates the odds ratio and should not be reported lest it raise undue anxiety about the risk of fine motor abilities after bone fracture.

b. The risk ratio is slightly lower compared to the odds ratio, but the inference remains the same: those with a history of wrist/forearm fracture in childhood were more likely to have fine motor problems as young adults.

c. In this case, the odds ratio and the risk ratio are identical, which is an appealing property of the odds ratio.

d. If one assumes that the outcome is rare, it is better to avoid using the odds ratio.

1 point

8.

You are feeling good and now want to flex your epidemiology muscles a bit more. You decide to calculate the risk difference (calculated from the table, not the rounded answers above), rounded to the nearest 0.01, and present:

a. -0.07

b. -0.01

c. 0.01

d. 0.07

e. 1.33

f. 2.29