Dictionary Definition
efficacy n : capacity or power to produce a
desired effect; "concern about the safety and efficacy of the
vaccine" [syn: efficaciousness] [ant:
inefficacy]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- /ˈɛf.ɪ.kə.si/, /"Ef.I.k@.si/
Noun
- Ability to produce a desired amount of a desired effect.
Derived terms
Synonyms
Translations
- Catalan: eficàcia
- Dutch: doeltreffendheid
- Finnish: tehokkuus
- French: efficience, efficacité
- German: Wirksamkeit
- Indonesian: khasiat, kemanjuran, keampuhan
- Interlingua: efficacia
- Polish: efektywność, sktuteczność
- Portuguese: eficácia
- Spanish: eficacia
- Swedish: effektivitet
Extensive Definition
Efficacy is the ability to produce a desired
amount of an effect.
Explanation
Medical
In a medical context it indicates that the
therapeutic
effect of a given intervention (e.g. intake of a medicine, an
operation, or a public health measure) is acceptable. 'Acceptable'
in that context refers to a consensus that it is at least as good
as other available interventions to which it will have ideally been
compared to in a clinical
trial. For example, an efficacious vaccine has the ability to
prevent or cure a specific
illness in an acceptable
proportion of exposed individuals. In strict epidemiological
language, 'efficacy' refers to the impact of an intervention in a
clinical trial, differing from 'effectiveness' which refers to the
impact in real world situations.
The concept of 'self-efficacy' is an important
one in the self-management of chronic
diseases because doctors and patients often do not follow best
practice in using a treatment. For instance, a patient using
combined oral contraceptive pills to prevent pregnancy may
sometimes forget to take a pill at the prescribed time; thus, while
the perfect-use failure rate for this form of contraception in the
first year of use is just 0.3%, the typical-use failure rate is
8%.http://www.agi-usa.org/pubs/fb_contr_use.html
Pharmacology
In pharmacology, intrinsic activity or efficacy
refers to the ability of a drug to induce a biological response in
its molecular target. This must be distinguished from the
affinity, which refers to the ability of the drug to bind to
its molecular target. The term introduced by Stephenson (1956) to
describe the way in which agonists vary in the response they
produce even when they occupy the same number of receptors.
High-efficacy agonists can produce their maximal response while
occupying a relatively low proportion of receptors; agonists of
lower efficacy cannot activate the receptors to the same degree and
may not be able to produce the same maximal response even when they
occupy the entire receptor population, thereby behaving as partial
agonists
The term is often used to classify the activity
of a drug upon binding to its receptor.
- agonist: affinity and maximum efficacy
- antagonist : affinity without efficacy
- partial agonist: affinity and partial efficacy
Lighting
In lighting design, "efficacy" refers to the amount of light (luminous flux) produced by a lamp (a light bulb or other light source), usually measured in lumens, as a ratio of the amount of energy consumed to produce it, usually measured in watts. This is not to be confused with efficiency which is always a dimensionless ratio of output divided by input which for lighting relates to the watts of visible energy as a ratio of the energy consumed in watts. The visible energy can be approximated by the area under the Planck curve between 300 nm and 700 nm for a blackbody at the temperature of the filament as a ratio of the total energy under the blackbody curve. Efficacy values for light from a heat source are typically less than two percent.Difference amplifiers
The efficacy of a differential amplifier is
measured by the degree of its rejection of common-mode signals
impreference to differential signals. Refer to common-mode
rejection ratio (CMRR).
See also
References
efficacy in German: Effektivdosis
efficacy in Spanish: Eficacia
efficacy in Lithuanian: Efektingumas
efficacy in Portuguese:
Eficácia