Multidimensional perspectives of geo-epidemiology: from interdisciplinary learning and research to cost-benefit oriented decision-making.

IF 3 3区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Frontiers in Public Health Pub Date : 2024-12-30 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fpubh.2024.1492426
S D Smith, E M Geraghty, A L Rivas, F O Fasina, M Kosoy, L Malania, A L Hoogesteijn, J M Fair
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Abstract

Research typically promotes two types of outcomes (inventions and discoveries), which induce a virtuous cycle: something suspected or desired (not previously demonstrated) may become known or feasible once a new tool or procedure is invented and, later, the use of this invention may discover new knowledge. Research also promotes the opposite sequence-from new knowledge to new inventions. This bidirectional process is observed in geo-referenced epidemiology-a field that relates to but may also differ from spatial epidemiology. Geo-epidemiology encompasses several theories and technologies that promote inter/transdisciplinary knowledge integration, education, and research in population health. Based on visual examples derived from geo-referenced studies on epidemics and epizootics, this report demonstrates that this field may extract more (geographically related) information than simple spatial analyses, which then supports more effective and/or less costly interventions. Actual (not simulated) bio-geo-temporal interactions (never captured before the emergence of technologies that analyze geo-referenced data, such as geographical information systems) can now address research questions that relate to several fields, such as Network Theory. Thus, a new opportunity arises before us, which exceeds research: it also demands knowledge integration across disciplines as well as novel educational programs which, to be biomedically and socially justified, should demonstrate cost-effectiveness. Grounded on many bio-temporal-georeferenced examples, this report reviews the literature that supports this hypothesis: novel educational programs that focus on geo-referenced epidemic data may help generate cost-effective policies that prevent or control disease dissemination.

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研究通常会促进两种类型的成果(发明和发现),从而形成良性循环:一旦发明了一种新的工具或程序,一些怀疑的或想要的东西(以前没有证明过)可能会变得已知或可行,随后,使用这项发明可能会发现新的知识。研究也会促进相反的顺序--从新知识到新发明。这种双向过程可以在地理参考流行病学中观察到,该领域与空间流行病学既有联系又有区别。地理流行病学包含多种理论和技术,可促进人口健康领域跨学科知识的整合、教育和研究。本报告根据对流行病和流行病的地理参照研究得出的直观实例,说明这一领域可以提取比简单的空间分析更多的信息(地理相关信息),从而支持更有效和/或成本更低的干预措施。实际的(而非模拟的)生物-地理-时间相互作用(在地理信息系统等分析地理参考数据的技术出现之前从未捕捉到)现在可以解决与网络理论等多个领域相关的研究问题。因此,我们面前出现了一个超越研究的新机遇:它还要求跨学科的知识整合以及新颖的教育计划,这些计划要在生物医学和社会学上证明是合理的,就必须体现出成本效益。本报告以许多生物-时间-地理参照实例为基础,回顾了支持这一假设的文献:以地理参照流行病数据为重点的新型教育计划可能有助于制定具有成本效益的政策,预防或控制疾病传播。
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来源期刊
Frontiers in Public Health
Frontiers in Public Health Medicine-Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
7.70%
发文量
4469
审稿时长
14 weeks
期刊介绍: Frontiers in Public Health is a multidisciplinary open-access journal which publishes rigorously peer-reviewed research and is at the forefront of disseminating and communicating scientific knowledge and impactful discoveries to researchers, academics, clinicians, policy makers and the public worldwide. The journal aims at overcoming current fragmentation in research and publication, promoting consistency in pursuing relevant scientific themes, and supporting finding dissemination and translation into practice. Frontiers in Public Health is organized into Specialty Sections that cover different areas of research in the field. Please refer to the author guidelines for details on article types and the submission process.
期刊最新文献
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