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Susser Discusses “Ecologism” as New Paradigm

Dawning of a New Era in Epidemiology is Described

Brazilians Said to Be Most Likely to Lead New Thinking

“The ‘Black Box’ is faltering as the dominant paradigm in epidemiology,” according to Columbia University epidemiologist Mervyn Susser, “and we are on the verge of a new era.” Speaking as the keynoter in the packed closing session of the recent Brazilian Congress on epidemiology, Susser would not predict which new paradigm will emerge to guide epidemiologists. However, he did express his preference for thinking about disease in a broader context than is customary for North American epidemiologists.

Invited initially to speak on the future of epidemiology, Susser was not willing to predict the future. Instead he redefined his task—if we could choose, what future would we choose, he asked. To present the options, he reviewed the status of epidemiology today and how we got to where we are.

According to Susser, epidemiology has passed through three eras, each one with its accompanying paradigm. In the first era of “undifferentiated sanitary statistics” which coincided with the sanitary movement at the beginning of the 19th century, the miasma theory of disease dominated thinking. Though incomplete as a theory, there were public health successes with sanitary reform.

In the second microbiological era, a germ theory emerged to displace the miasma theory. During this period, epidemiology was lab-driven, and the public health drive declined.

“Black Box” Dominates Third Era

In the more recent third era following World War II, chronic diseases have garnered the attention, and there have been major public health drives to control or reduce illnesses. The “Black Box” paradigm—connecting exposure with outcome based on the probability of the relationship without the necessity of explaining the connecting links—has governed more and more of the thinking in epidemiology. In this era, epidemiologists are very invested in analytic techniques. There have been notable early successes with smoking and lung cancer, CHD and peptic ulcer, for example, but epidemiologists have strayed from their earlier more intense commitment to public health concerns evident in the immediate post World War II period.

The new era before us is driven by two major forces, he continued. The first is molecular biology which is giving our understanding of disease a new depth and precision, and the second is the network of information systems which are changing the breadth and sophistication of large scale analyses which could be done in epidemiology with proper data collection. In short, we are on the verge of a “global epidemiology” according to Susser, and the paradigm should be “ecologism,” that is, bringing our techniques and concepts together to study disease in the full context of all the macro and micro-level factors that contribute to disease occurrence. “Ecologism” recognizes that there is a hierarchy of organizational levels from molecule to cell, tissue, organ system, individual organism, couple, family, nation, continent and globe. Ecologism does not allow us to ignore that each level brings a new set of variables, and that each level influences and interacts with the others. This broad view is very compatible with the larger social orientation taken by much of Latin American epidemiology, which seeks to understand the more macro-level causes of disease attributable to social factors and public policies.

According to University of Michigan epidemiologist Jim Koopman, “the Brazilians are searching for a new paradigm in epidemiology that goes beyond the search for risk factors acting on individuals and encompasses causal issues relating to the conformation of society and how individuals interact with each other. Susser has outlined a new epoch of “ecologism” into which epidemiology is moving.

Brazilians Will Lead Movement

“I think there are several reasons why the Brazilians and not the Americans will lead this movement,” Koopman continues. First is that Brazilian public health has emerged so rapidly that it has fewer established interests to constrain it. Second is that some of the best work in integrating dynamic systems analysis into epidemiology is being done in Brazil. To emerge into this new era, epidemiology needs to forge new collaborations with systems analysts in the same way that we forged relationships with biostatisticians in the past.”

Susser refused to predict whether the driving force of molecular biology with its micro-level orientation will become the dominant paradigm driving epidemiology back into the laboratory where it resided during the microbiological era, or whether the more macro-level concerns would prevail to encourage epidemiology to take an even broader orientation. If we go towards “ecologism,” it will have to be an active choice, according to Susser, because the attraction of the countervailing molecular paradigm will be enough to drive us into the lab. Our choice will depend on the values we deploy. If improving the public’s health is really our ultimate purpose, then we may actively choose to work with a more contextual analysis. If given a choice, Susser stated he would choose the option of studying disease in broader context. 

Published June 1995  v

 

 
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