Prevalence: Understanding Healthcare Burden of a Disease

What is prevalence and how does it reflect the healthcare burden of a disease?

A) Prevalence reflects both new and existing cases of a disease, providing insight into the healthcare burden of a disease across populations over time.

Answer:

The statement that prevalence is the proportion of a population who have (or had) a specific characteristic in a given time period is true.

Explanation: According to the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI), prevalence estimates the likelihood that someone in a group will have a disease and is used as an indicator of the overall healthcare burden of a disease. It reflects both new and existing cases of a disease, providing insight into the healthcare burden across populations over time.

Prevalence is highly dependent on the duration of the morbidity associated with the disease, and it can increase as cases accumulate over time, encapsulating both new and existing cases. For example, if the prevalence of an infectious disease in a specific age group is 17.3 percent in a certain country, it means that 17.3 percent of the people in that age group are infected with the disease.

Prevalence is a useful measure to compare the health of populations over time. It can be calculated using the formula: Prevalence rate = Number of cases of a disease in a population ÷ Number of people at risk during a time period. It should be noted that prevalence is distinct from incidence, which measures the number of new cases of a disease in a specific time period.

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