VI semester Exam questions Public health
1. Name the main methods of studying the incidence of the population:
A. according to voucher registers; according to cause of death; on the history of diseases;
B. according to certificates of incapacity for work; outpatient cards; according to medical
examinations;
C. on seeking medical help; according to medical examinations; according to the data on the
causes of death;
D. according to the population census; on coupons for acceptance for use; by medical
history;
2. Morbidity indicators include all of the listed indicators, except for:
A. primary morbidity;
B. general morbidity
C. pathological affection;
D. total mortality;
E. morbidity by cause of death.
3. What characterizes the indicator of general morbidity?
A. the proportion of a particular disease among the population;
B. the degree of change in the incidence rate over time;
C. exhausted morbidity of the population;
D. prevalence of diseases among the population;
E. prevalence of socially significant diseases.
4. Name the data needed to calculate the primary incidence:
A. the number of diseases registered for the first time in life in a given year; average annual
population;
B. the number of diseases registered for the first time in a given year; the number of diseases
registered in the previous year;
C. the number of diseases identified during medical examinations; average annual
population;
D. the number of diseases registered for the first time in life in a given year; the total number
of diseases registered in a given year;
E. total number of diseases registered in a given year; average annual population.
5. Name the data needed to calculate the overall incidence:
A. the number of diseases detected for the first time in a given year; average annual
population;
B. the number of diseases identified during medical examinations; the number of people
who passed the medical examination;
C. the number of all diseases detected in a given year; average annual population;
D. number of all diseases detected in a given year; the total number of diseases registered in
the previous year;
E. number of diseases detected in the previous year; average annual population.
6. What document is used to study the morbidity by negotiability?
A. work diary of a general practitioner (family doctor) (f. 039/y-vop);
B. coupon for an outpatient (f. 025-12 / y);
C. medical record of an outpatient (f. 025 / y-04);
D. coupon for an appointment with a doctor (f. 024-4 / y-88);
E. medical card of an inpatient (f. 003 / y).
7. Name the data necessary for the calculation of pathological damage:
A. number of all detected diseases; the number of people seeking medical help;
B. number of diseases detected for the first time in a given year; average annual population;
C. the number of diseases identified during medical examinations; the number of persons
who underwent a medical examination;
D. the number of diseases identified during medical examinations; average annual
population;
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VI semester Exam questions Public health
E. number of reported cases of the given disease; the total number of registered diseases.
8. Name the data needed to calculate the incidence structure:
A. number of cases for each type of disease; average annual population;
B. the number of all diseases detected in a given year; average annual population;
C. number of cases of a particular disease; the total number of cases of all diseases;
D. total number of cases of all diseases detected in a given year; the total number of cases
detected in previous years;
E. the number of diseases detected during medical examinations in a given year; the number
of complaints about diseases in a given year.
9. What document is used in the statistical development of morbidity?
A. unified statistical classification of diseases and deaths;
B. international nomenclature of diseases;
C. international classification of diseases and injuries;
D. international statistical classification of diseases and problems related to health;
E. statistical classification and nomenclature of diseases and causes of death.
10. What document is used to study infectious diseases?
A. outpatient card;
B. outpatient card;
C. medical history;
D. emergency notice;
E. statistical card of the person who left the hospital.
11. What document is used to study the incidence of malignant neoplasms?
A. outpatient card;
B. statistical coupon;
C. a coupon for an appointment with a doctor;
D. notification of a patient diagnosed with cancer or other malignant neoplasm for the first
time in his life;
E. diary of the work of a polyclinic doctor.
12. What are the main areas of demography:
A. population by different age and sex groups;
B. statics and dynamics of the population;
C. natural and mechanical movement of the population;
D. composition and migration of the population;
E. pendulum and internal migration;
13. Population statics studies:
A. birth rate, death rate and population reproduction;
B. general and age-specific fertility;
C. geographical features of the birth rate and population composition;
D. migration in different regions of the country;
E. the size and composition of the population according to social and biological
characteristics.
14. Population dynamics studies:
A. migration processes and the birth rate of the population;
B. mechanical movement and mortality of the population;
C. population reproduction;
D. mechanical and natural movement of the population;
E. natural movement and birth rate of the population.
15. What are the indicators characterizing the natural movement of the population:
A. fertility, mortality, natural population growth, life expectancy at birth;
B. natural increase, life expectancy at birth, morbidity, mortality;
C. fertility, marriages, divorces, infant mortality, primary morbidity;
D. birth rate, mortality, primary morbidity, general morbidity;
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VI semester Exam questions Public health
E. marital fertility, total mortality, fertility, pathological susceptibility.
16. Name the data needed to calculate the total fertility rate:
A. number of live births and deaths in a given year / number of live births in a given year;
B. number of live births in the current year / number of live births in the previous year
C. number of live births in a given year / average annual population;
D. number of live births and deaths in a given year / average annual population;
E. Average annual population in a given year / Average annual population in the previous
year.
17. Name the primary statistical document that is the source of information on births:
A. history of childbirth (f. 096 / y);
B. statistical card of the person who left the hospital (f. 066 / y-02);
C. history of the development of the newborn (f. 097 / y);
D. medical birth certificate (f. 103/u-08);
E. individual card of a pregnant woman and a puerperal (f. 111 / y).
18. Name the data needed to calculate the crude mortality rate:
A. average annual population in a given year / average annual population in the previous
year;
B. number of deaths in a given year/average annual population;
C. number of deaths per year/number of live births in a given year;
D. 2/3 deaths in the current year 1/3 deaths in the previous year / population;
E. the number of deaths in a given year, the number of live and dead births in a given year;
population at a given age.
19. Name the data required to calculate the indicator of the structure of causes of death:
A. the number of deaths from individual causes per year; the total number of deaths per
year;
B. the total number of deaths in a given year; average annual population;
C. the number of deaths from a particular cause per year; average annual population;
D. the number of deaths from this disease; number of live births in a given year;
E. number of deaths from all causes; the total number of births and deaths per year.
20. Name the data needed to calculate the infant mortality rate:
A. the number of deaths in the 1st month of life in a given year; number of live births in a
given year;
B. the number of deaths in the 1st week of life in a given year; number of live births in a
given year;
C. the number of deaths under the age of 1 year in a given year; number of live births in a
given year; number of live births in the previous year;
D. -number of live births in a given year; the number of live births and deaths in the first 6
days; average annual population;
E. number of deaths under the age of 1 year in a given year; average annual population.
21. Name the primary statistical document on the basis of which the mortality of the
population is studied:
A. statistical coupon for registering a death (f. 213 / y);
B. protocol (map) of post-mortem examination (F-013/u);
C. medical certificate of death (f. 106 / y-08);
D. information about the medical institution (f. 30);
E. statistical card of the person who left the hospital (f. 066 / y-02).
22. Name the data needed to calculate the perinatal mortality rate:
A. number of live births; the number of stillborns; the number of deaths in the 1st week of
life;
B. number of live births; the number of stillborns; the number of deaths in the 1st month of
life;
C. the number of deaths in the 1st week of life; the total number of births in a given year;
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VI semester Exam questions Public health
D. number of live births; the number of stillborns; average annual population
E. the number of deaths before childbirth and in childbirth; number of live births in a given
year; number of live births in the previous year.
23. What indicators characterize fetoinfantile losses?
A. stillbirth and perinatal mortality;
B. infant mortality and neonatal mortality;
C. stillbirth and infant mortality;
D. stillbirth and neonatal mortality;
E. infant mortality and post-neonatal mortality.
24. Name the data needed to calculate the special birth rate (fertility):
A. number of live births in a given year; average annual number of women aged 15-49;
B. the number of live births and stillbirths in a given year in women of reproductive age;
average annual population;
C. number of women aged 15-49; average annual population;
D. the number of live births and deaths in a given year; average annual population;
E. number of live births in a given year; number of live births in the previous year.
25. Name the data needed to calculate the maternal mortality rate:
A. the number of dead pregnant women (since the beginning of pregnancy), women in labor,
puerperas (within 42 days after the termination of pregnancy); total number of births;
B. the number of dead pregnant women (from 12 weeks of pregnancy), women in labor,
puerperas (within 42 days after the termination of pregnancy); the total number of
pregnant women;
C. the number of dead pregnant women (from 28 weeks of pregnancy), women in labor,
puerperas (within 56 days after the termination of pregnancy); total number of births;
D. the number of dead pregnant women (since the beginning of pregnancy), women in labor,
puerperas (within 56 days after the termination of pregnancy); total number of live births;
E. the number of dead pregnant women (since the beginning of pregnancy), women in labor,
puerperas (within 42 days after the termination of pregnancy); the total number of
stillborns.
26. Public health and healthcare is:
A. The science of organizational, economic and legal problems of medicine and health care
B. Public, scientific and academic discipline that studies a complex of social, economic,
organizational, legal, sociological, psychological issues of medicine, protection and
restoration of public health
C. A science that studies a complex of social, legal and organizational measures aimed at
protecting the health of the population.
27. The factors influencing the health of the population are
A. Genetic
B. Natural and climatic
C. Level and lifestyle of the population
D. Level, quality and availability of medical care
E. All of the above
28. Financing of medical organizations in the system of compulsory medical insurance is
carried out through all of the listed structures, except
A. Insurance medical organizations
B. Branches of territorial CHI funds
C. Health authorities
29. Indicate the most priority direction of structural transformations in health care
A. Development of primary health care
B. Development of a network of dispensaries
C. Increasing the role of hospitals
D. Increasing the role of health resort care
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