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Society for Epidemiologic Research (SER) Presidential Addresses
 

Outgoing SER President Calls for More “Consequential Epidemiology”

Colleagues Urged to Ask “So What?” and “How Much?”

“The future of epidemiology in the United States... depends on how well we adapt to the ongoing process of health care reform.” This was one of the major themes struck by Ward Cates, CDC epidemiologist and outgoing president of SER, at the group’s annual meeting in Miami in mid-June. Cates sounded an optimistic note saying that epidemiology should be on firmer ground than other disciplines because its focus on populations is “ideally suited for the ‘outcomes research’...which the consumer and provider collectives will demand.”

And what will it take for epidemiology to actualize its potential under health care reform? “The key,” says Cates, “will be our ability to market our epidemiologic skills in a way that is seen by society as making a difference”—best put 12 years ago by the Carter Center’s Bill Foege in a Frost Lecture as “consequential epidemiology.” We make our epidemiologic work consequential according to Cates by asking two questions—“so what?” i.e. do our inferences work to change people’s lives, and “how much?”—i.e. what do interventions cost for the benefits they provide? “...Given the pace and inevitability of health care reform, now is the time to reframe our science to emphasize consequential outcomes,” said Cates.

Published July 1994 

Postscript  2000

“Consequential Epidemiology” in the New Millennium

            Six years later, the term “Consequential Epidemiology” has a similar meaning as it did in 1994, namely, the application of epidemiologic methods to answering the most important public health questions and indicating appropriate interventions to improve health. The burgeoning science of “outcomes research” and the continued demand for specialists in health economics attest to the importance of the “so what?” and “how much?” questions. 

            Our understanding the processes by which our science of epidemiology is translated into public health practice is becoming more clear. Epidemiology, as a science, can be differentiated from public health as a mission. The use of scientific data to answer key questions is a necessary, but not sufficient, step along the pathway to promote public health action. Because of its mission, public health draws not only on epidemiology, but on many of the other disciplines within the broad context of “prevention sciences” (2).  By making our discipline of epidemiology more inclusive of other fields, we can better move in the direction of becoming truly “consequential.”

 

References:

1. Savitz DA, Poole C, Miller WC. Reassessing the role of epidemiology in public health.  American Journal  Public Health 1999;89:1158-1161.

2. Cates W Jr.  Prevention science:  the umbrella discipline. American Journal Preventive Medicine 1995;11:211-12.
 
 

 
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