Case Studies in Forensic Epidemiology

Case Studies in Forensic Epidemiology by Sana Loue, published by Springer Science & Business Media on July 31, 2002, spans 203 pages and is presented in English. This book explores the multifaceted nature of epidemiology, emphasizing its role beyond mere methodology. It delves into how epidemiology serves as a vital link between communities and the various factors influencing health and disease, highlighting its relevance in legal contexts and public health.
Readers will find a comprehensive examination of how epidemiology connects different domains, including the courtroom and public policy. The text addresses the relationship between community health patterns and the responsibilities of lawmakers, as well as the challenges faced by marginalized populations. By framing epidemiology as a means of understanding and engaging with communities, this edition offers insights into the discipline’s broader implications in law, forensic science, and public health.
Official synopsis Publisher
Epidemiology has often been defined as the study of the distribution of disease, together with the distribution of factors that may modify that risk of disease. As such, epidemiology has often been reduced to a methodology only, providing a mechanism for the study of disease that is somehow removed, separate and apart from the populations that serve as its focus. Epidemiology, however, is much more than that. The discipline p- vides a way of perceiving and knowing the world, and of relating to the c- munities whose health and disease patterns we are trying to understand. As such, its usefulness extends past the construction of questionnaires, the detective work inherent in tracing the source of an infection or the analysis of data. Rather, epidemiology serves as a point of reference and a linkage between various domains of reality: in the courtroom, between a com- nity’s injuries and those alleged to be responsible for those violations; between the community striving to effectuate changes to improve its health and environment and the lawmakers and policymakers whose actions may dictate or control the likelihood of that change; and between “mainstream” populations and those who become or remain marginalized and stigmatized due to disease or perceived disease.
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