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Epidemiologists Meet to Discuss the Future of Epidemiology (2 of 3)

Should Epidemiologists Become Social Scientists or Molecular Biologists?

Approximately 300 mostly European epidemiologists gathered in Copenhagen on January 25 to inaugurate the First International Panum Seminar and to discuss the future of epidemiology. The meeting was organized by the Danish Epidemiology Science Center, a research center established in 1994 by the Danish National Research Found-ation. Organizers sought to stimulate discussion around the future direction of epidemiologic research. In particular, organizers wanted to learn whether epidemiologists should head further “downstream” to identify the more proximate causes of illness (often referred to as risk factor epidemiology) or head “upstream” to understand broader factors responsible for illness (often referred to as public health epidemiology). To focus the presentations on this issue, many of the speakers were given a question to answer, namely, should epidemiologists become social scientists or molecular biologists?

Jorn Olsen, head of the Danish Center and moderator of the proceedings, was clearly pleased with the meeting. He told the Epi Monitor that the gathering provided a forum for different points of view to be expressed. However, participants at the Seminar seemed to be in general agreement that it would be useful for epidemiologists to work at multiple levels, ranging the full spectrum from the molecular to the individual to the population levels. In short, epidemiologists should “feel at home” or be “functional” in social science as well as in molecular biology.

David Hunter, Director of the Harvard Center for Cancer Prevention and Associate Professor in the Department of Epidemiology at the Harvard School of Public Health, agreed with Olsen and called the meeting “really good... Everyone agreed that epidemiology has a bright future, though there may be questions about priorities... The take home message from the meeting is that epidemiologists will need to think and train more broadly.”

Neal Pearce, Director of the Wellington Asthma Research Group and one of the presenters at the Seminar, also called it “very successful.” He told the Epi Monitor that the presentations were received with great interest. He added, “there is real change going on with many people recognizing that the risk factor epidemiology approach is running out of steam and that we need to rediscover the population perspective in order to revitalize the field.” Furthermore, “there is growing recognition that all of the approaches to epidemiology are important, but the population level has been neglected...” according to Pearce.

Peter Aaby, Danish social scientist who has been studying measles for many years in Guinea Bissau, was one of the members of the discussion panel at the Seminar. He agreed with Pearce that participants put epidemiology “squarely in the public health field.” Stig Wall, Professor and Head of the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health Umea University in Sweden, said the Seminar revealed some polarization of views but less than he expected. He supported the view that epidemiology has been “too little concerned with the social factors in health and disease, and has too much emphasized that we can find the explanation for disease at the individual level.” He gave the example of smoking to prove his point, citing the fact that we have known for decades that smoking causes lung cancer but have not recognized that “the interventive force” lies at the social level. Taking exception to an idea presented in a  recent paper in the Lancet by Ken Rothman, Hans-Olov Adami, and Dimitrios Trichopoulos, he said “no one believes epidemiologists should eradicate poverty, but we do in effect take a stand if we choose not to study phenomena at that level.” He added that a lesson learned has been the need for both qualitative and quantitative approaches in epidemiology, but he emphasized his view that risk factor epidemiology is not outdated as some have claimed.

“Of course,” Olsen said, “the critical aspect is the funding. We can all agree to do studies at different levels, but which level do we select when it comes to priorities for research?” Organizers of the Seminar feared that research funding is out of balance with too much money flowing to projects that are focused on risk factor epidemiology. According to Olsen, “there is a clear tendency towards this type of funding currently in the European Union. Persons are not interested in “old-fashioned” public health epidemiology with its broader scope. Proponents of public health epidemiology have expressed the need to be more outspoken about their views in order to counteract the current trend, according to Olsen, and this was a driving force in hosting the meeting. Dr. Wall agreed that there are funding problems, stating that large scale public health epidemiology projects are expensive and there is too little money for public health research.

Aaby was asked why there seems to be a disconnect between what many believe should be the public health orientation of epidemiology and the funding which appears more in support of risk factor epidemiology. According to Aaby, there may be more prestige and more potential economic benefit associated with studying the most proximal risk factors for disease. “We all want the magic bullet, the one intervention which solves the problem,” he said. He gave the example of the focus on vaccine as the solution to the control of measles rather than on other factors which could modify transmission or mortality patterns. Walter Holland, visiting professor at the London School of Economics, believes the disconnect in thinking about funding comes from the fact that money is given by government authorities and not by scientists. Also, risk factor epidemiology are easier to carry out than projects addressing broader social causes of illness and the implications of risk factor epidemiology findings may be less threatening, said Holland.

Aaby noted that Pearce made an “ingenious” suggestion at the Seminar to help reverse the favored position of risk factor epidemiology. According to the suggestion, health impact assessments should be required prior to funding interventions or studies in epidemiology. These would be modelled on the environmental impact statements that are required before undertaking activities with environmental consequences. Such a move would stimulate interest in public health evaluations and would encourage the public health orientation, according to Aaby.

While many persons may be sympathetic with the need to refocus epidemiology on population-level determinants of disease, and while the need for doing this may seem obvious to many persons, the benefits of this approach are not often easy to demonstrate. This stands in contrast to risk factor epidemiology which can point to proximate risk factors which can be modified to reduce disease. Olsen used the example of cancer of the cervix to illustrate this point. We know that human papilloma virus is the proximate cause of illness which more distally is caused by having multiple sex partners and that modifying factors include those related to susceptibility and behavior. But does knowing and understanding what drives some persons to have multiple sex partners constitute epidemiology? Or is that more sociology and psychology? To use another example, we know smoking causes cancer, according to Olsen. But is it epidemiology to understand why people smoke? Perhaps Olsen and Wall would give different answers to this question even though both seem to reside in the “public health epidemiology camp.”

Despite these questions about the broader approach to epidemiology, there seemed to be general consensus among the participants that the presentation by Mervyn Susser, Gertrude H. Sergievsky Professor Emeritus of Epidemiology at Columbia, was the highlight of the seminar. Susser answered the question posed by stating that “epidemiology, if it is to survive as a discipline with a claim to common ground, must find room for and encompass both social science and molecular epidemiology.”

Organizers of the meeting plan to publish the proceedings of the seminar in an upcoming issue of the International Journal of Epidemiology. Also, organizers of the European chapter of the International Epidemiological Association plan to host a satellite symposium on the future of epidemiology at their next meeting in Lithuania in August of 2000.

The Panum Seminar included presentations by six speakers. These presentations are summarized briefly in the accompanying article, On the Future of Epidemiology.

Published February 1999  v

 

 
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