Question 1
Question
The health department is committed to protecting and promoting the health of the country’s
residents. Which of the following components of a strategic plan does this statement represent?
Answer
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Objective
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Vision
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Mission
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Goal
Question 2
Question
Reduce the number of teenagers who begin to smoke. Which of the following components of a
strategic plan does this statement represent?
Answer
-
goal
-
mission
-
objective
-
vision
Question 3
Question
The new director of a county health department is getting acquainted with her staff. After several weeks of observing how her two associate directors supervise their subordinates, she notes striking differences in their management styles.
One associate director manages employees by assuming that they are highly motivated. He tells
members of his staff that they can time-shift their work hours to accommodate their family
schedules as long as they get their work done. This director’s approach to management
exemplifies which of the following leadership theories?
Answer
-
Contingency theory
-
House’s path goal theory
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McGregor’s theory Y
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Theory Z
Question 4
Question
The new director of a county health department is getting acquainted with her staff. After several
weeks of observing how her two associate directors supervise their subordinates, she notes
striking differences in their management styles.
One associate director manages employees by assuming that they are highly motivated. He tells
members of his staff that they can time-shift their work hours to accommodate their family
schedules as long as they get their work done. This director’s approach to management
exemplifies which of the following leadership theories?
Question 5
Question
A community-based study of a program to increase physical activity is conducted, and the
findings are evaluated. A small p-value with an estimate is reported. Which of the following
is the best interpretation of this result?
Answer
-
It is likely the estimate differs from the true value because of bias.
-
It is likely the estimate differs randomly and systematically from the norm.
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It is unlikely the estimate differs from the average because of chance.
-
It is unlikely the estimate differs from the null value because of random variability
Question 6
Question
A pilot study is conducted to examine whether a new drug effectively decreases cholesterol
levels over a 6-week period. Twelve participants are enrolled, and serum cholesterol levels are
measured before and after the 6-week treatment period. Investigators plan to use a paired t-test to examine whether the drug was effective in reducing cholesterol levels.
The paired t-test is more appropriate for analysis of the results than a two-sample t-test for
which of the following reasons?
Answer
-
dependence between the pre-test and post-test measurements
-
potential non-normality of the responses
-
heterogeneous variances of the two groups
-
non-randomness of the timing of the measurements
Question 7
Question
A pilot study is conducted to examine whether a new drug effectively decreases cholesterol
levels over a 6-week period. Twelve participants are enrolled, and serum cholesterol levels are
measured before and after the 6-week treatment period. Investigators plan to use a paired t-test to examine whether the drug was effective in reducing cholesterol levels.
Which of the following are the degrees of freedom for this paired t-test?
Question 8
Question
A pilot study is conducted to examine whether a new drug effectively decreases cholesterol
levels over a 6-week period. Twelve participants are enrolled, and serum cholesterol levels are
measured before and after the 6-week treatment period. Investigators plan to use a paired t-test to examine whether the drug was effective in reducing cholesterol levels.
If the p-value were calculated to be 0.015, which of the following would be the most
appropriate interpretation of this p-value?
Answer
-
The probability of seeing results as unusual as the observed under the alternative hypothesis is very small.
-
The probability of seeing results as unusual as the observed under the null hypothesis very small.
-
The probability that the alternative hypothesis is false is very small.
-
The probability that the alternative hypothesis is true is very small.
Question 9
Question
Which of the following statements best describes an intent-to-treat analysis?
Answer
-
Analyses compare characteristics of participants who did and did not adhere to the randomized treatment.
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Analyses exclude all participants who did not adhere to the assigned randomized treatment.
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Analyses maintain the original randomized assignment of treatments in the definition of intervention and control groups.
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Analyses reorganize participants into intervention and control groups based on their actual participation.
Question 10
Question
A study is conducted to examine whether elderly women in at-home care settings maintain
more cognitive ability than women who are residents of skilled nursing care facilities. Two
groups of 30 elderly women were recruited independently: one group included women living
at home with a caregiver, and the second group included women living in skilled nursing care
facilities. The women were asked to perform a task and received scores on the execution of
the task (higher scores indicated higher cognitive functioning). Which of the following is the
most appropriate approach for analyzing these data?
Answer
-
chi-square (χ2) test
-
correlation analysis
-
paired t-test
-
two-sample t-test
Question 11
Question
A study is conducted to evaluate the relationship between pet ownership and having
depressive symptoms. Seventy participants are recruited. Each subject is identified as a
current pet owner or a non-pet owner. Participants are categorized as having or not having
symptoms of depression. Which of the following is the most appropriate method to evaluate
the association between pet ownership and having depressive symptoms in this population?
Answer
-
paired t-test
-
two-sample t-test
-
chi-square (χ2) test
-
correlation analysis
Question 12
Question
The epidemic of methyl mercury poisoning in Minamata, Japan, in the 1950s illustrated contamination of which of the following?
Answer
-
water
-
fish
-
soil
-
feed grain
Question 13
Question
The Ministry of Health of a developing country is considering the nationwide implementation of a
test using biomarkers to screen for breast cancer. The test is delivered in health clinics in two
similar regions of the country, with the following results:
Region A Region B
Sensitivity 70% 80%
Specificity 85% 95%
The positive and negative predictive values are different between the two regions. Which of
the following is the most likely cause of the difference in the test’s predictive values between
the two regions?
Answer
-
The prevalence of disease is different between the two regions.
-
The test is detecting the disease earlier in its natural history in one of the regions.
-
The test was not administered in similar conditions in the two regions.
-
Length-biased sampling has occurred.
Question 14
Question
A study investigated the effects of exposure to radioactive fallout from the Hanford Nuclear Site
in Washington State in the 1940s and 1950s and subsequent development of thyroid cancer
among persons exposed as children and adolescents. Scientists used birth data from the study
area to trace and contact subjects to participate in the study. Screening consisted of thyroid
palpation, ultrasonography of the thyroid gland, and measurement of thyroid hormone
concentrations in serum and urine. Individual thyroid radiation doses were estimated from
interview data concerning place of residence and dietary history. As a result of screening, 19
subjects were diagnosed with thyroid cancer.
Which of the following terms best describes this type of study design?
Answer
-
case-control
-
ecological
-
retrospective cohort
-
cross-sectional
Question 15
Question
A study investigated the effects of exposure to radioactive fallout from the Hanford Nuclear Site
in Washington State in the 1940s and 1950s and subsequent development of thyroid cancer
among persons exposed as children and adolescents. Scientists used birth data from the study
area to trace and contact subjects to participate in the study. Screening consisted of thyroid
palpation, ultrasonography of the thyroid gland, and measurement of thyroid hormone
concentrations in serum and urine. Individual thyroid radiation doses were estimated from
interview data concerning place of residence and dietary history. As a result of screening, 19
subjects were diagnosed with thyroid cancer.
Which of the following is the most appropriate measure of effect for this type of study?
Answer
-
prevalence odds ratio
-
odds ratio
-
correlation coefficient
-
risk ratio
Question 16
Question
A study investigated the effects of exposure to radioactive fallout from the Hanford Nuclear Site
in Washington State in the 1940s and 1950s and subsequent development of thyroid cancer
among persons exposed as children and adolescents. Scientists used birth data from the study
area to trace and contact subjects to participate in the study. Screening consisted of thyroid
palpation, ultrasonography of the thyroid gland, and measurement of thyroid hormone
concentrations in serum and urine. Individual thyroid radiation doses were estimated from
interview data concerning place of residence and dietary history. As a result of screening, 19
subjects were diagnosed with thyroid cancer.
Which of the following terms is most appropriate to describe the cases of thyroid cancer
identified during the first screening in this study?
Answer
-
prevalent
-
interval
-
recurrent
-
incident
Question 17
Question
To specify individual susceptibilities, researchers have developed various biomarkers. Which of the following biomarkers could be ethically questionable.
Answer
-
Determination of urine metabolites
-
Determination of DNA adducts
-
Determination of protein adducts
-
Determination of the genotype
Question 18
Question
A tobacco user has contemplated quitting smoking. He is aware that smoking is a problem for him and wants to quit in the future. If the tobacco user is moving along the Stages of Change, you can assume his next action will be:
Answer
-
Quitting cold turkey
-
Gathering information about the positive effects of smoking
-
Skipping a few cigarrettes
-
Gathering information about the negative effects of smoking
Question 19
Question
A new screening test for Disease A was tested in 200 people. 40 out of 45 people with Disease A tested positive on the test. 145 out of 155 people without the disease tested negative. What is the positive predictive value of the new test?
Answer
-
40/45=0.89
-
145/155=0.94
-
145/150=0.97
-
40/50=0.80
Question 20
Question
According to the theory of reasoned action (TRA), the most important determinant of behavior is a person's:
Question 21
Question
Which of the following terms means that a tumor has spread to other locations within the body?
Answer
-
Malignant
-
Metastatic
-
Benign
-
Hyperplasia
Question 22
Question
Studies A, B, C show similar results. One limitation of a meta-analysis of these three studies is the failure to:
Answer
-
display differences between the trials.
-
resolve uncertainty when studies disagree.
-
improve estimates of effect size.
-
answer questions not posed at the start of the individual trials.
Question 23
Question
The standard error (SE) of a sample statistic is:
Answer
-
identical to the standard deviation of a sample
-
the positive square root of the sample variance
-
the produce of the sample size and the sample variance
-
The standard deviation of the sampling distribution of a statistic
Question 24
Question
Which of the following is true about the stage of change from the Transtheoretical model is true?
Answer
-
Precontemplation refers to intention to act sometime in the future.
-
Preparation refers to no intention to act at the present time
-
Contemplation refers to intention to act in the near future with some steps toward action
-
Action refers to behavioral change for less than six months.
Question 25
Question
Which of the following are the three ethical principles outlined in the Belmont report?
Answer
-
Beneficence, liberty, and risk reduction
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Justice, beneficence, and respect for people
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Quality, respect for people, and ethical treatment
-
Justice, respect for people, and integrity
Question 26
Question
The following chart illustrates a typical dose-response curve. Statistically significant responses are indicated with a * symbol. Which point best describes the "no observed adverse response level" (NOAEL)?
Answer
-
Point A
-
Point B
-
Point C
-
The Origin