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Society for Epidemiologic Research (SER) Presidential Addresses
 

Wilcox Dispenses Encouragement and Advice in SER Presidential Address

Slightly Tongue-in-Cheek Presentation Delights the Audience

Taking a lighter tone than previous incumbents, outgoing SER president Allen Wilcox dispensed encouragement and friendly advice to his colleagues at the recent Chicago meeting. Speaking on the opening morning of the three day event, Wilcox began by pointing out some encouraging facts about the current state of epidemiology.

Recalling the “mugging” which epidemiology received at the hands of Gary Taubes in Science a couple of years ago, Wilcox described a Science article on “Spontaneous Positron Emissions” in June of this year by the same journalist which documented fumbles by physicists. Wilcox encouraged epidemiologists not to apologize for being involved in observational studies with all of their pitfalls. Comparing epidemiologists to physicists, Wilcox noted that the only difference may be that physicists tend to fumble in obscurity while epidemiologists make their mistakes in public.

Wilcox saw another positive trend in epidemiologic activity as documented by a rise in epidemiology papers identifiable with a search strategy that uses epidemiology as keyword. In 1965, approximately 3% of the papers in Medline included the term epidemiology whereas that number had climbed to approximately 6.5% in 1995. Epidemiology has not become a “dominant” science according to Wilcox, but there is evidence of its growing influence.

In the advice category, Wilcox had 5 offerings.

1. Buy log paper. Because epidemiologists think in ratios, they should display their odds ratios on log paper, especially if they are the type which needs to see the picture before they get the point.

2. Find collaborators who are smarter than you are. For most of us, according to Wilcox, this is not a problem. But smart collaborators make you look better. Choose them carefully and treat them well, he advised, because these collaborations are like professional marriages. And they may well last longer than real marriages, given the length of a typical epidemiologic study.

3. Avoid using slide formats available in the new statistical/graphics packages. [Ed. You have all seen the awful, mismatching colors!]

4. Make sure your staff members know they are building a cathedral.

Wilcox pointed out that every study, as every cathedral, needs stone masons to do some of the more tedious work. However, the skills of the persons doing the more tedious work can make or break your study. To ensure the morale of the staff, Wilcox advised helping them to understand how what they are doing is contributing to a larger purpose.

5. Do not expect to retire early. This final piece of advice was dispensed by noting that epidemiologists can do their best work well into their 70’s and 80’s. He cited the example of Richard Doll who is still publishing important papers at age 85. If fortunate, some epidemiologists will look back at that age and realize they may actually have built a cathedral!

Published July 1998 
 
 

 
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