Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Epidemiological Association © The Author 2007; all rights reserved.
Commentary: Ways of asking and ways of living: reflections on the 50th anniversary of Morris ever-useful Uses of Epidemiology
Department of Society, Human Development and Health, Harvard School of Public Health, Kresge 717, 677 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02115, USA. E-mail: nkrieger@hsph.harvard.edu
Keywords Epidemiologic theory, social epidemiology, population health
Accepted 7 September 2007
| The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
Epidemiology is the only way of asking some questions in medicine, one way of asking others (and no way at all to ask many).To be of use. To Jeremy Morris (b. 1910), writing a half-century ago in his now classic text, Uses of Epidemiology,1 the promise—and responsibility—of epidemiology was clear: to generate scientific knowledge about the presence, nature and distribution of health and disease among the population (p. 96),1 ultimately in order to abolish the clinical picture(p. 98).1 Committed to improving the health of the community (p. 96),1Morris argued that one of the most urgent social needs of the day that epidemiology could address was identifying harmful ways of living and rules of healthy living (p. 98).1 Uniquely equipping epidemiology to carry out this task was, in his view, its population and historical perspective andJeremy M. Morris
Uses of Epidemiology (1957, p. 96)1
| Epidemiology is an historical science |
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| Epidemiology is a population science |
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| Epidemiology is a causally pragmatic and contextual science |
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| Conclusion: the importance of ways of asking for knowledge for healthy ways of living |
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