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Course profile

Epidemiology in Practice (PUBH7611)

Study period
Sem 2 2024
Location
Herston
Attendance mode
In Person

Course overview

Study period
Semester 2, 2024 (22/07/2024 - 18/11/2024)
Study level
Postgraduate Coursework
Location
Herston
Attendance mode
In Person
Units
2
Administrative campus
Herston
Coordinating unit
Public Health School

This course will provide in-depth exposure to the fundamental concepts, research designs and analytic strategies of epidemiology. It aims to develop a coherent understanding of the principles of epidemiology. This course has prerequisite of PUBH7600 Introduction to Epidemiology and students must have successfully completed this course before enrolling in PUBH7611.

This is an advanced-level epidemiology course that builds on the fundamental concepts covered in our introduction-level courses in epidemiology and biostatistics. In this course you will continue to develop your ability to assess the quality of evidence on the occurrence of diseases, and knowledge of risk factors in populations. You will also be introduced to more advanced techniques and approaches in epidemiology, and develop the skills needed to summarise and communicate epidemiological evidence to colleagues, in preparation for a possible role as an epidemiologist in the field of public health. This course will also develop students' ability to use advanced methods of epidemiology using statistical software.

Course requirements

Assumed background

Students are expected to have a soundᅠunderstanding of the core concepts of epidemiology and biostatistics, including measures of disease frequency, causal association, bias, study design, and data analysis to the level covered in the courses Introduction to Epidemiology (PUBH7600) and Introduction to Biostatistics (PUBH7630).

Students choosing this course as an elective and who received a grade of 3S4 for the prerequisite, PUBH7600 Introduction to Epidemiology, are strongly encouraged to reconsider and choose a different elective course.

Prerequisites

You'll need to complete the following courses before enrolling in this one:

PUBH7600

Course contact

Course staff

Lecturer

Timetable

The timetable for this course is available on the UQ Public Timetable.

Additional timetable information

Workshop – Tuesday 12pm to 2pmᅠin 0887-015ᅠ(Public Health Building, Herston Campus)

There are no scheduled lectures for this course. All lecture material is posted in a series of videos each week for students to work through.ᅠStudents are expected to complete the learning activities (including readings and onlineᅠlectures) prior to attending the workshops each week. All learning activities (lecture recordings, and workshop recordings, exercises and solutions) will be made available through the Blackboard site.

Aims and outcomes

This course aims to enable you to:

  1. Develop an advanced understanding of concepts in epidemiologic study design and causal inference.
  2. Acquire skills in the application of advanced methods of epidemiologyᅠusing statisticalᅠsoftware.
  3. Develop the ability to communicate epidemiological evidence to colleagues in the field of public health.

Learning outcomes

After successfully completing this course you should be able to:

LO1.

Conduct in-depth critical appraisal of epidemiological evidence

LO2.

Apply key epidemiological concepts of study design, bias and confounding in order to design an appropriate observational epidemiological study for a given research question

LO3.

Recognise and summarise current advanced methods and analytic strategies in epidemiology to address issues around causality, bias, confounding, and effect modification

LO4.

Analyse health data using advanced epidemiological methods

LO5.

Interpret and discuss the findings of epidemiological analyses using a causal framework approach

LO6.

Demonstrate effective written communication skills

Assessment

Assessment summary

Category Assessment task Weight Due date
Paper/ Report/ Annotation Critical appraisal 30%

23/08/2024 2:00 pm

Paper/ Report/ Annotation Study design development 30%

23/09/2024 2:00 pm

Paper/ Report/ Annotation Analysis & interpretation of epidemiological data 40%

25/10/2024 2:00 pm

Assessment details

Critical appraisal

Mode
Written
Category
Paper/ Report/ Annotation
Weight
30%
Due date

23/08/2024 2:00 pm

Learning outcomes
L01, L06

Task description

This assignment will involve an extended critical appraisal of an epidemiological study.

Submission guidelines

Details will be provided in the Course Blackboard site.

Deferral or extension

You may be able to apply for an extension.

Please refer to the Policies and guidelines

Study design development

Mode
Written
Category
Paper/ Report/ Annotation
Weight
30%
Due date

23/09/2024 2:00 pm

Learning outcomes
L01, L02, L06

Task description

This assignment will involve:

  1. designing an appropriate observational epidemiologic study design (including the selection of an appropriate source and study population, measures of exposure/s, outcome and confounder data sources) for a given research question
  2. providing an epidemiologically-sound and evidence-based rationale for the study protocol
  3. a discussion of the advantages and disadvantages of the methods chosen

Submission guidelines

Details will be provided in the Course Blackboard site.

Deferral or extension

You may be able to apply for an extension.

Please refer to the Policies and guidelines

Analysis & interpretation of epidemiological data

Mode
Written
Category
Paper/ Report/ Annotation
Weight
40%
Due date

25/10/2024 2:00 pm

Learning outcomes
L03, L04, L05, L06

Task description

This assignment will involve:

  1. the analysis of an epidemiological dataset to estimate the association between an exposure and an outcome, and to assess the role of confounding, and effect measure modification
  2. interpretation of observed findings in terms of aetiological relevance of the examined exposure-outcome relationship

Submission guidelines

Details will be provided in the Course Blackboard site.

Deferral or extension

You may be able to apply for an extension.

Please refer to the Policies and guidelines

Course grading

Full criteria for each grade is available in the Assessment Procedure.

Grade Description
1 (Low Fail)

Absence of evidence of achievement of course learning outcomes.

Course grade description: (typically 0 - 19%)

2 (Fail)

Minimal evidence of achievement of course learning outcomes.

Course grade description: (typically 20 - 44%)

3 (Marginal Fail)

Demonstrated evidence of developing achievement of course learning outcomes

Course grade description: (typically 45 - 49%)

4 (Pass)

Demonstrated evidence of functional achievement of course learning outcomes.

Course grade description: (typically 50 - 64%)

5 (Credit)

Demonstrated evidence of proficient achievement of course learning outcomes.

Course grade description: (typically 65 - 74%)

6 (Distinction)

Demonstrated evidence of advanced achievement of course learning outcomes.

Course grade description: (typically 75 - 84%)

7 (High Distinction)

Demonstrated evidence of exceptional achievement of course learning outcomes.

Course grade description: (typically 85 - 100%)

Additional course grading information

Students must attempt and submit all 3 assignments in order to successfully pass the course.

Supplementary assessment

Supplementary assessment is available for this course.

The final grade awarded will be based on the results of the supplementary assessment only, and a passing grade will be awarded if, and only if, the student receives at least 50% of the marks on the supplementary assessment. 

Additional assessment information

Students must attempt and submitᅠall 3 assignmentsᅠin order to successfully pass the course.


Assignment Submission:ᅠ

Assignments for this course will be submitted as a Word document using Turnitin via Blackboard.ᅠ

Before submitted any assignments for this course you must ensure you have completed UQ’sᅠcompulsory onlineᅠAcademic Integrity Tutorial.

When you successfully submit your assessment, you need to manually download your receipt and keep a copy as proof of submission as Turnitin no longer automatically emails students a receipt when an assignment is uploaded.ᅠ ᅠ

It is the responsibility of the student to check the assignment preview and confirm that the assignment has been successfully submitted.ᅠᅠ

If the submission was not successful:

  1. Note the error message (preferably take a screenshot)
  2. Go to your assignment page and see if it is possible to submit again
  3. If you cannot submit again, immediately email your course coordinator.ᅠ

Learning resources

You'll need the following resources to successfully complete the course. We've indicated below if you need a personal copy of the reading materials or your own item.

Library resources

Find the required and recommended resources for this course on the UQ Library website.

Other course materials

If we've listed something under further requirement, you'll need to provide your own.

Required

Item Description Further Requirement
Stata This course will use the statistical software package Stata to demonstrate and teach biostatistical and/or epidemiological methods. Students need to have access to Stata version 13 or later. UQ students are able to download Stata to their personal device via the link provided. https://www.surveydesign.com.au/clients/uq/
BYOD Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) Students will be required to bring a personal laptop (and charger) to workshops. Students can borrow a laptop for 28 days during semester periods depending on availability. Borrow a laptop from the AskUs service point at St Lucia, Dorothy Hill Engineering and Sciences Library http://web.library.uq.edu.au/library-services/it/laptop-loans own item needed

Learning activities

The learning activities for this course are outlined below. Learn more about the learning outcomes that apply to this course.

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Learning period Activity type Topic
Lecture

Designing an epidemiological study

Learning outcomes: L02, L03

Policies and procedures

University policies and procedures apply to all aspects of student life. As a UQ student, you must comply with University-wide and program-specific requirements, including the:

Learn more about UQ policies on my.UQ and the Policy and Procedure Library.

Course guidelines

School of Public Health (SPH) Guidelines for late submission of progressive assessment - Preamble

To apply for an extension to the due date for a piece of progressive assessment (eg assignments, oral presentations and computer-based assignments) students should complete the online request at  https://my.uq.edu.au/node/218/1 

Information regarding deferral of in-semester exams and end-of-semester exams is available from https://my.uq.edu.au/information-and-services/manage-my-program/exams-and-assessment/deferring-exam 

If requesting an extension on medical grounds, a medical certificate must be provided. The extension will be approved for the number of days included in the medical certificate that the student was not fit to study or work, eg if the medical certificate is for 3 days, an extension will be approved for 3 days maximum regardless of the student's request.  

If requesting an extension using a Student Access Plan for Disability (SAPD) as evidence, a maximum of 7-day extension will be approved in the first instance. Updated medical documentation, as well as a copy of the SAPD, is required if requesting an extension for more than 7 days. 

The maximum time for an in-semester extension is four weeks.  

The following SPH guidelines are consistent with the UQ policy. However, the SPH Guidelines contain specific rules and interpretations for SPH courses, and requests for extension and penalties for late submissions will be judged according to the guidelines outlined in this document. You should read both the information in your my.UQ at the following link: https://my.uq.edu.au/information-and-services/manage-my-program/exams-and-assessment/applying-assessment-extension?p=1#1 and the SPH guidelines (below) before submitting a request for an extension. The SPH Guidelines apply to all courses offered by the School of Public Health unless the ECP explicitly states otherwise.

SPH Guidelines for late submission of progressive assessment

Initial extension for an individual item of assessment – the SPH Teaching & Assessment Support Team and/or the Course Coordinator decides.

This could be for medical or compassionate reasons, or if, in the opinion of the Course Coordinator, there are exceptional circumstances.

Acceptable and unacceptable reasons for an extension are listed at the following link, along with the required evidence to be provided: https://my.uq.edu.au/information-and-services/manage-my-program/exams-and-assessment/applying-assessment-extension?p=1#1 

All requests should be lodged at least 24 hours prior to the due date for the assessment.

If applying for an extension after the due date and time of the assessment item, your request may not be approved. An explanation as to why your request was not submitted prior must be included.       

If approved, a new due date will be set. This would generally be no later than 7 days after the original due date, however this can be modified to take account of the circumstances of the request and the time that would have been lost from studies.

If the new due date is past the date for submission of end-of-semester results, the student will receive an INC (incomplete) result.

Second and all subsequent extensions for an individual item of assessment – the SPH Teaching & Assessment Support Team and/or the Program Director together with the Course Coordinator decides.

This would only be approved for exceptional circumstance with supporting documentation.

  • Online requests must be made at least 24 hours prior to the due date from the first extension.
  • The SPH Teaching & Assessment Support Team and/or the Course Coordinator will consult with the Program Director, who will make the final decision.
  • If approved, the new due date would generally be no later than 7 days after the first extension due date.
  • The Program Director should consider if remedial or other support should be offered to the student.
  • The Program Director should provide a report on these matters as needed at SPH Examiners’ Meetings.

Please Note: In order to support course progression, extensions that total more than 14 calendar days from the original due date of an assessment item will only be approved in very exceptional circumstances. These requests are assessed and approved or denied on a case-by-case basis. 

If you have been ill or unable to attend class for more than 14 days, we advise you to carefully consider whether you are capable of successfully completing your courses this semester. You might be eligible to withdraw without academic penalty.

Penalty for late submission

Submission of assignments, practical reports, workbooks, and other types of written assessments after the due date specified in the Electronic Course Profile (ECP) will receive a penalty.

The penalty will be a deduction of 10% RELATIVE PERCENTAGE per day (24 hour period or part thereof, including weekends and public holidays) or for work graded on a 1-7 scale, a deduction of one grade per day, e.g If the original mark is 73%, then 10% relative percentage is 10% of this value, ie 7.3%, The final mark for this assessment item after applying the penalty for 1 day late submission would be 73 -7.3 = 65.7% The same outcome is achieved by multiplying the original score by .9; ie 73 x .9 = 65.7%

The penalty for multiple days late is the relative percentage multiplied by the number of days late. 

A submission that is not made within 10 days of the due date will receive a mark of 0% for that assessment item.

Where a student has sought more than one extension, the due date for calculating the penalty will be the due date for the most recently approved extension.

Submission of Medical Certificates

Students are responsible for ensuring that any medical documentation they submit is authentic and signed by a registered medical practitioner. Such practitioners can be identified via the AHPRA website. Also note that:

  • Not all online medical services are staffed by registered practitioners
  • If the registration status of the practitioner cannot be verified, then an alternative practitioner should be sought
  • Students will be held fully responsible for all documentation they submit, even if done so in ignorance of the practitioner's registration status

Medical documentation may be subjected to an audit by the University.

 

School of Public Health (SPH) Assessment Guidelines

The School of Public Health assessment tasks have been designed to be challenging, authentic and complex. While students may us AI technologies, successful completion of assessment in this course will require students to critically engage in specific contexts and tasks for which artificial intelligence will provide only limited support and guidance.

A failure to reference AI use may constitute student misconduct under the Student Code of Conduct.

To pass this assessment, students will be required to demonstrate detailed comprehension of their written submission independent of AI tools.