Answer:
1. Relative risk: proportion of the disease after exposition / proportion of the disease without exposition
= (104/125) / (15/125)
= 83.2 / 12 = 6.93
The relative risk is calculated as the probability of having the disease in one exposed group when it is compared to the expected outcome in the non-exposed group. A relative risk of 6.93 indicates a risk of almost seven times higher than the average risk, being its value very high
2. Attributable Risk (AR) for an exposed group:
the incidence in the exposed group - incidence in the non exposed group/incidence in the non exposed group
AR = 104 -15 /104
AR= 0.85
The relative risk is useful to determine whether the local well water is associated with the parasitic infection, while attributable risk allows to determine how much of schistosomiasis infection may be attributable to the exposition with the local well water. In this case, a AR of 0.85 is considered to be high and therefore people's contact with suspected well water should be avoided