It was never on a test I took, but I guess it can't hurt to study it a bit.username1 wrote:Do I need to know Kochs postulates?
Oh, can anyone recommend what food borne illnesses should be learned? Thanks!
It was never on a test I took, but I guess it can't hurt to study it a bit.username1 wrote:Do I need to know Kochs postulates?
I actually said something similar, but it was marked wrong as well, and we expanded more than what you have written above. When we dissussed this with our coach, he said maybe they were looking for a few dishes, or something else such as contamination between a few different dishes.French_Toast wrote:Finally, it asked "Which of the food items do you think is most likely to have caused this outbreak? Why?". My answer of "Goulash, a measure of association that high over one is significant" was counted wrong. I'm not sure if I missed an important reason, or if the proctor was just confused by my wording, which, in hindsight, is really bad.
I have seen Koch's Postulates on a few tests, usually in passing. Once I simply had the question of which of a list of diseases was in compliance with Koch's Postulates.username1 wrote:Do I need to know Kochs postulates?
That's entirely possible, as it does say "items". I'm gonna ask my coach about it on Monday and get his opinion.butter side up wrote:I actually said something similar, but it was marked wrong as well, and we expanded more than what you have written above. When we dissussed this with our coach, he said maybe they were looking for a few dishes, or something else such as contamination between a few different dishes.French_Toast wrote:Finally, it asked "Which of the food items do you think is most likely to have caused this outbreak? Why?". My answer of "Goulash, a measure of association that high over one is significant" was counted wrong. I'm not sure if I missed an important reason, or if the proctor was just confused by my wording, which, in hindsight, is really bad.
This is what our team put, and we answered it correctly, or correctly enough to get full points.French_Toast wrote:That's entirely possible, as it does say "items". I'm gonna ask my coach about it on Monday and get his opinion.butter side up wrote:I actually said something similar, but it was marked wrong as well, and we expanded more than what you have written above. When we dissussed this with our coach, he said maybe they were looking for a few dishes, or something else such as contamination between a few different dishes.French_Toast wrote:Finally, it asked "Which of the food items do you think is most likely to have caused this outbreak? Why?". My answer of "Goulash, a measure of association that high over one is significant" was counted wrong. I'm not sure if I missed an important reason, or if the proctor was just confused by my wording, which, in hindsight, is really bad.
That's word for word what we wrote, and Paprikash was circled, so that was probably a determining factor.Paprikash and Goulash because they have the highest relative risk. Nearly all the people that ate Goulash were sickened and very few people that did not eat Paprikash got sick.
I don't check any of your math. First of all, there is a problem with your fisherman's soup data - 25 + 25 does not equal 40. Also, though, I get 2.1 for the risk from goulash - 20/21 divided by the baseline, which is 45/99 if I am reading your table correctly.French_Toast wrote:Okay, I have some questions on some calculations problems that I messed up at our last invitational. I'll just give all the information that was made available, even if some is irrelevant [...]
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