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Society for Epidemiologic Research (SER) Presidential Addresses
 

SER President Stresses Value of Teamwork at 25th Annual Meeting

Epidemiologists should strive to work closely with a variety of groups and disciplines to maximize their effectiveness and promote advancements in knowledge, said Charles H. Hennekens, president of the Society for Epidemiologic Research (SER), at the 25th annual meeting in Minneapolis recently.

“Within our discipline, we must remain cognizant that epidemiology is not an individual effort like tennis or squash, but a team effort like baseball, basketball, or football,” Hennekens said. He applied this metaphor to the research team which he said is likely to include not only epidemiologists, but statisticians, clinicians, other public health professionals, project directors, coordinators, administrators, systems analysts, programmers, research assistants, medical editors and the secretarial staff, but the metaphor applies to his address in general. He said other groups epidemiologists should work with as a team include colleagues from other disciplines, the media, and he called for more collaboration between the epidemiology societies.

Working With Other Disciplines

According to Hennekens, while different disciplines may sometimes seem adversarial, they are actually crucial for achieving advancement in knowledge. Each discipline addresses a different set of issues, and it is the sum of the findings which expands our body of information, he said. Each component provides relevant and complimentary information to the totality of evidence upon which rational clinical decision making, as well as public health policy, can be based, said Hennekens.

Communicating With the Press

Because epidemiology has such direct relevance to the lives of human beings, Hennekens said he feels epidemiologists have a special responsibility to communicate their findings to the public. He said teamwork with the lay press is one good way to do this, and he provided some advice:

• Don’t contribute to existing misperceptions. Hennekens said each finding must be viewed “in the context of the totality of evidence,” and epidemiologists must be vigilant in their efforts to avoid giving the impression that their field is prone to contradictory findings. To do this, he said, “we must first ourselves believe firmly in the principle that no one epidemiological study, whether case control, observational cohort or randomized trial can definitively answer a given research question.” He said to stress to the media representatives that they need to try to see the “big picture.”

• Seek headlines for the right reasons. He said epidemiologists need to avoid collusion with the media and remain focused on the primary issue—the health of the general public—instead of using the media as a mechanism to try to secure further research dollars. Avoid self-defeating sensationalism in the short run. Sincere and whole-hearted efforts to educate the media and the public should be the aim of the epidemiologist who is called upon by the press to elaborate on research findings, according to Hennekens. “This type of teamwork will only serve to enhance our profession in the long run,” he said.

Teamwork and Epi Societies

Hennekens said it is the common dedication to excellence in epidemiology that needs to be stressed among the large number of epidemiological societies in existence now. As an example of teamwork among the groups, Hennekens mentioned the activities regarding a set of common ethical guidelines. He said efforts in this direction will establish an important precedent for other issues of common concern.

In closing Hennekens remarked: “I strongly believe we must all hang together, or else we run the risk of all hanging separately.”

Published July 1992 

Postscript  2000

It seems like only yesterday but over eight years have passed since I delivered my l992 SER Presidential Address at the 25th Annual Meeting in June l992.

In May 1991, I had an experience that crystallized my thoughts about my Presidential Address. Dr. Robert Bazell, the chief medical correspondent for NBC News invited me to appear on the Today show to comment upon statements by several prominent epidemiologists about whether drinking coffee did or did not cause myocardial infarction or pancreatic cancer.

I looked forward to this opportunity to comment upon the crucial role epidemiology plays in advancing medical knowledge. Specifically, I believe that advances in medical knowledge proceed upon several fronts, optimally simultaneously. Basic researchers provide biologic mechanisms to answer the crucial question of why an exposure causes or prevents premature death. Health care providers are conferring enormous benefits to their patients by their applications of advances in diagnosis and treatment and are formulating hypotheses from their own clinical experience, that is, their case reports and case series.  Clinical investigators are testing the potential relevance of basic research findings to healthy individuals and individual patients. Epidemiologists and biostatisticians are formulating hypotheses from descriptive studies and testing hypotheses in appropriate analytic studies, whether case-control, observational cohort, or where necessary to detect reliably small to moderate effects, randomized trials. Thus, epidemiologists answer the crucial, unique, and complementary question of whether an exposure causes or prevents premature death. In my view, all these disciplines and, indeed, each strategy within a discipline, contributes importantly relevant and complementary information to a totality of evidence. Reliance on the totality of evidence allows for the most rational individual clinical decisions for patients and policy decisions for the health of the general public.

On the Today show, Dr. Bazell asked me why one day epidemiologists say that coffee drinking causes myocardial infarction or pancreatic cancer and another day equally reputable epidemiologists say that coffee drinking has no adverse health effects. I replied that we, the academic researchers, and they, the media, often seem to be in collusion to confuse the general public. He then asked me how this situation occurs and I replied that researchers often overstate the findings from their single study and that the media likewise exaggerates the conclusions. I added that the simple solution is to never rely on the results of any single study but instead, rely on the totality of evidence.

If so, no single study ever changes our minds completely about a relationship between an exposure and disease but merely may shift our thinking in one or the other direction. Dr. Bazell was a most gracious host and thanked me for my valuable public service.

My subsequent uncontrolled clinical observation was that I was not invited back for seven years. On a more serious note, however, I stated in my 1992 SER Presidential Address that I believed the words of Benjamin Franklin on July 4, 1776 at his signing of the Declaration of Independence, were as relevant to epidemiologists today. He stated “We must all hang together or assuredly we shall all hang separately.” Unfortunately, during the last eight years my uncontrolled clinical observations are that epidemiologists seem to prefer to hang separately than together. But as I would also caution, such descriptive studies are useful only to formulate not test hypotheses. Thus, I eagerly and anxiously await the analytic studies that would provide the reassuring data necessary to forecast a brighter future for our crucial discipline that has provided so much satisfaction and joy to me during the last 31 years.
 
 

 
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