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Epidemiology and Human Health (Moeller Chapter 3)

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Title: Epidemiology and Human Health (Moeller Chapter 3)


1
Epidemiology and Human Health(Moeller Chapter 3)
Geography 3432Environment and Health
  • Context
  • What is epidemiology?
  • Limits to epidemiology
  • Assessing epidemiological evidence
  • Epidemiologic study designs
  • Exposure Assessment
  • Epidemiologic successes
  • Epidemiology scare of the week

2
Definition Environmental Epidemiology
  • The study of the effect on human health of
    physical, biologic, and chemical factors in the
    external environment, broadly conceived. By
    examining specific populations or communities
    exposed to different ambient environments, it
    seeks to clarify the relationship between
    physical, biological or chemical factors and
    human health. National Research Council (1991)
    (emphasis added)

3
Context
  • Less than 1 of chemicals assessed using
    epidemiologic studies
  • Why?
  • Implications?

4
Limits Environmental Epidemiology
  • not causal, or proof
  • association, relationship, link,
    connection
  • outcomes are not toxin-specific
  • exposures are not health-impact-specific
  • Which is better for establishing connections
    between toxic exposures and human health
    outcomes toxicology or epidemiology?

spurious relationships difficult to avoid
5
Assessing Epidemiologic Evidence
  • Strength and specificity of association (RRgt 4)
  • Consistency with other studies
  • Existence of dose-response relationship
  • Biological plausibility
  • Coherence with natural history of disease
    temporal precedence
  • Supporting experimental (toxicological) evidence

6
Epidemiologic Study Designs
  • experimental
  • strictly speaking not epidemiological see below
  • observational
  • cohort
  • case-control
  • ecological

7
Question You live in a small community whose
primary industry is a pesticides manufacturing
plant. Some families in your neighbourhood begin
to notice their children suffer serious illness -
e.g. asthma, leukemia. How would you design a
study to determine if toxins from the plant are
to blame? For example What would you measure?
How would you measure it?
8
  • features
  • random assignment exposed unexposed
  • best form of control, strongest design
  • major limitations
  • unethical
  • example
  • unethical, remember?

9
  • features
  • track exposed unexposed (control) over time
  • false exposure reporting less likely
  • major limitations
  • large sample sizes to detect rare health outcomes
  • lengthy tracking
  • high risk false negative results

10
Design Limitation Issues
  • false negatives
  • negative study does not find statistically
    significant relationship between contamination
    exposure and a negative health outcome
  • false result should actually be statistically
    significant effect, but is missed because of
    some design flaw
  • false positives
  • positive study does find a statistically
    significant effect between contamination
    exposure and a negative health outcome
  • false result should actually be no effect but
    is missed because of some design flaw
  • Which is worse?
  • C depends who wants to know...

11
Cohort Case ExampleLove Canal, New York
Lasalle housing development (eventually
demolished), directly above the Love Canal proper
  • example Love Canal (Heath et al., 1984)
  • topic organic chemicals and chromosomal
    aberrations
  • description comparison near dump (exposed)
    away from the dump (unexposed)
  • finding true negative (BUT only single marker
    measured)

12
Cohort DesignHeath et al 1984 Love Canal Study
  • Lack of significant differences (i.e., pgt 0.05)
    between cases and controls

13
Cohort DesignSample size problem
  • The rarer the outcome the larger the sample
    needed to detect effects

14
  • features
  • health outcome already present (cluster
    busting)
  • track backwards health outcome (cases)
    non-health outcome (controls) to look for
    environmental suspects
  • best for rare health outcomes
  • major limitations
  • biased exposure reporting
  • high risk false positives

15
Case Control Case Example Woburn Massachusetts
  • example Woburn Mass. (Lagakos et al., 1984)
  • topic organochlorines in well water and
    childhood leukemia
  • description amount of water ingested
  • finding (false?) positive - highly publicized

16
  • features
  • large spatial areas both exposure outcome
  • cheapest, quickest, most common, geographers use
    most
  • major limitations
  • within spatial-unit differences
  • ecological fallacy
  • high risk false positives/negative

17
Ecological Fallacy
  • rates of health outcome and level of
    environmental contamination exposure are
    aggregates for a geographical (spatial) area
  • rates relate at aggregate level, but do not know
    whether people who have health outcome also
    exposed to the environmental contaminant (i.e.,
    when disaggregated)

18
Ecological Case ExampleMichigan, PBB in Milk

example Michigan (Humble and Speizer, 1984) C
topic PBBs in meat and milk and late foetal
mortality C description quarantined counties
non-quarantined counties C finding (false?)
negative - mortality lower in quart.
19
Summary of Epidemiologic Evidence
  • C inherent weaknesses in any design
  • C no definitive study to link environment and
    health
  • C understand likely biases when interpreting
    results
  • precautionary principle or prudence vs proof -
    costs of taking action
  • C epi studies only one component of
    decision-making

20
Challenges
  • exposure assessment
  • average or peak? (e.g. noise)
  • likely pathways, body entry route?
  • indoors or outdoors? (90 of time indoors)
  • eating habits, cooking facilities, water
    source(s)
  • retrospective (e.g., see case-control design)
    self-report bias, data unavailable

21
Exposure Assessment
22
Exposure Assessment
  • More on exposure assessment in risk lecture

23
Challenges
  • health outcomes
  • move beyond carcinogenesis
  • duration of effect
  • onset of effects
  • number of persons affected
  • standardized measures e.g. Ravens progressive
    matrices
  • biological markers e.g., blood lead phenols in
    urine to detect benzene exposure

24
Standardized Outcome Measures Ravens
Progressive Matrices
25
Epidemiologic Success Stories
  • fluoride in water and dental caries (cavities)
  • smoking and lung cancer
  • ionizing radiation and cancer

26
Epidemiologic Scare of the Week
  • proliferation of epidemiologic studies
  • often contradictory
  • often weak designs
  • caveat emptor see assessing epidemiologic
    evidence above

27
Review
  • You are the environmental specialist for a
    company who owns a large sour gas plant. They
    have been accused of causing, or possibly causing
    in the future, adverse health impacts in the
    local community. The president of the your
    company wants you to do a study to determine if
    any health effects can be linked to the plant.
    What study design will you choose to maximize the
    likelihood that the plant will not show an
    impact?
  • a) ecological
  • b) cohort
  • c) case-control
  • d) experimental

28
Review
  • You are an environmental consultant hired to
    advise a community on the design for a study to
    detect health effects from chemical leaks from a
    local shoe factory. If the community wants to
    maximize the likelihood of detecting positive
    cause-effect links, which design will you
    recommend?
  • a) ecological
  • b) cohort
  • c) case-control
  • d) experimental
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