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WHO’s World Health Magazine Devotes Issue to Epidemiology

“Facts of Life” Described as Province of Epidemiology

Activist Role Encouraged

The World Health Organization has devoted its entire June 1989 issue of World Health magazine to feature articles about epidemiology. Calling epidemiology an essential tool for health, Jean Paul Jardel, Assistant Director General of the WHO, espoused a very activist view of epidemiology in his lead article entitled “Knowledge is Strength.”

Activist Theme

According to Jardel, “More than any other of the approaches used in the health sciences, perhaps the epidemiological approach must innovate, translate its findings into language which is clear and immediately understandable, and arrive at conclusions which can be put into practice in health programmes and policies. Important communication, ethical and political problems arise...More important than cataloging the things that are wrong and the things that could be better is the need to find new ways of bringing about change. Epidemiology closely allied with health policy should help us to achieve this.” This activist theme for epidemiology permeates many of the articles in this issue of World Health.

Is Epi Dangerous?

“Tell me, doctor, is epidemiology dangerous?” is the title of an article by WHO’s Michel Thuriaux. Admitting to being disconcerted by this question, Thuriaux goes on to describe what epidemiology is, how it is used, and why it is used. He concludes with the following remarks: “All political action is risky, and no change can come about without risk...it might be useful to recall that, to the degree that it supports health policy or even just politics generally, epidemiology is neither totally harmless, innocent, nor without risk. And perhaps that is not such a bad thing.”

Passive to Active

In an article on “New Weapons” that have been developed in the fight against tropical diseases (diagnostics, drugs, vaccines, vector control measures and educational methods), WHO’s Richard Morrow makes the point that “The challenge to epidemiology is to shift from relatively passive, descriptive studies concerning the distribution and the natural history of a disease to a more demanding, activist involvement with the community and disease control services. This shift is needed to assess the potential usefulness of these new tools, to determine how best they may be applied to the populations in need, and to evaluate what the effects of their application will be on the health of the people.”

Facts of Life

In the magazine centerfold is a piece explaining what is meant by the “facts of life” theme featured on the cover of the magazine. It states:

“Each one of us is born, grows up, perhaps marries and has children, and dies as a single individual. Our health is a personal matter, and we do our best--each as an individual--to prevent our own ill-health.

But the health status of a village, a district, a city or the whole planet is a collective thing. It can only be assessed by bringing together all possible information about every individual in order to determine what patterns there may be in the distribution of disease--or indeed of good health in a given community.

This is the role of epidemiology--the study and the application of all those “facts of life” that bear on our well-being. In collating those facts and establishing the patterns that put lives at risk, or that cause certain diseases and encourage their spread, research which may seem remote and arcane is helping medical science to put together a global jigsaw of health.”

Other

Other articles of interest to epidemiologists include those on a lifestyle hazards project in Mauritius, a maternal and child project in Mali, a high-tech lab methods project in Mexico, an article on world cancer patterns by Sharon Whelan from the IARC, and finally an article on ethics and epidemiology by John Last. In this latter article, Last gives his views on ethical guidelines, stating that “Formulating ethical guidelines for epidemiological practice and research will not resolve the moral ambiguities that are encountered almost every day. Guidelines can, however, achieve several useful ends. They can draw attention to the necessity of considering the ethical implications of professional actions; they can thus lead to elevation of professional standards, not only in introducing consistently humane and caring attitudes, but also in raising the quality of the science itself.”

Published September 1989  v

 

 
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