My first recommendation is a big, long-term one.
But today’s as good a day as any to start the rest of your life, right?! #RobinsonTwitterTakeover 2/n
First, I recommend choosing a population of interest and learning *a lot* about it.
After all, #Epitwitter is all about the health of populations, right? 3/n #RobinsonTwitterTakeover
I’m just not talking about the traditional risk factors deemed relevant for an exposure-disease association (by definition, those have already been identified and studied)… 4/n #RobinsonTwitterTakeover
I’m suggesting that you intentionally absorb info about the history, demographics, occupations, jokes, art, interests, political priorities, genetic flows, geographic distributions, changes over time … 5/n #RobinsonTwitterTakeover
Although I’m pretty omnivorous when it comes to populations, my chosen population is descendants of Africans who were enslaved in the United States, especially those who live in the contemporary U.S. South (#BlackEpiMatters) 6/10 #RobinsonTwitterTakeover
Your population could be any group whose interests will engage you for the longterm: all the gender-queer people who live in the Upper Midwest or Mayflower descendants in the Virginia suburbs or the global diaspora of Sikh people 7/10 #RobinsonTwitterTakeover
What matters is that you are motivated to explore and consider all aspects of this community’s life. Because, in this community, you will observe deviations from your expectations based on the dominant paradigms in your field… 8/10 #RobinsonTwitterTakeover
You will observe that the people in this community will have different concerns and priorities than your colleagues… 9/10 #RobinsonTwitterTakeover
You will even observe that the received wisdom in your field doesn’t actually seem right in some ways when applied to your population. More later on how this has manifested in my own work. 10/10 #RobinsonTwitterTakeover
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Now, what exactly is an applied epidemiologist, and why are they needed? In the late 90s- early 2000's there were a series of articles in AJPH, AJE, JECH, and IJE dedicated to answering these questions. I'll focus on Stephen Thacker's review. academic.oup.com/ije/article/30…
He states, “The applied epidemiologist is by definition an activist, moving rapidly from findings to policy, putting epi knowledge to good use. The 21st century epi must do all these things while maintaining a foundation of high-quality epi research and practice.”
Susser warns the field of what he considers “the black box paradigm… the current international focus on risk factor epidemiology.” He advocates for expanding our academic training to include socializing epis to “keep the improvement of the public’s health as a primary value”
Before we get started on our applied epi journey, I want to give honor to a great epidemiologist. Today is the second anniversary of his death, Dr. Bill Jenkins. At one point, it was said that 50% of Black US epis could track their career back to him. I'm one of those.
If Bill has had a positive impact on your career or life, I'd love to hear your #BecauseOfBill story.
Dr. Bill Jenkins started as a statistician in the United States Public Health Service in the 60s. Within 1 yr of working there, he learned of the Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis in the Negro Male. He brought it to the attention of his supervisors and was told to drop it.
even if you and your loved ones are healthy and you still have your job and your home, your stress, pain, sadness, frustration, etc. are legitimate! 1/ #epitwitter#BodnarTwitterTakeover
this is not the Olympics of suffering, where only people with the worst situation get to be the ones who are in pain. we are ALL struggling (even if people seem like they have it together)! 2/
we are collectively grieving. Grief requires a lot of energy. Therefore, our mental reserves are low, meaning that “small” stressors that you could handle without so much emotion pre-covid now feel overwhelming. why? 3/
#epitwitter#BodnarTwitterTakeover i've had a few requests to tweet on 'How to Say No." lots of people have published smart pieces on this. doing a google or a twitter search on 'saying no in academia' will help! but i'm happy to share a few things and take any questions! 1/
first, i've gotten undeserved credit for the idea of establishing a No Committee. it was originally written about by Professor Vilna Bashi Treitler at Baruch College and CUNY. i started my own No Committee after someone pointed me to her blog years ago 2/ tinyurl.com/y242d4sj
we all have had the experience of saying yes to what seem at the time like great opportunities and then realizing that we have WAY too much on our plates and becoming super overwhelmed. 3/
Anne Katherine has a couple of great books on setting boundaries. the quotes here are from her book Where to Draw the Line:
'A boundary is a limit. By the limits you set, you protect the integrity of your day, your energy and spirit, the health of your relationships,...' cont. 2/
'...Each day is shaped by your choices. When you violate your own boundaries or let another violate them, stuffing spills out of your life.'
(ok and who wants to lose their stuffing and become one of those stuffed animals with the droopy head b/c you have no neck stuffing??) 3/
Last century saw two very deadly pandemics the #GreatInfluenza of 1918 and #HIV. Is there anything we can learn from these about the future of #COVID19? The obviously parallel is the 1918 pandemic, a respiratory pathogen, though flu and #COVID19 have a lot of differences (1/5)
The #1918Pandemic tells us not to be overconfident after a receding summer wave. Pandemic flu often has a summer wave, followed by a big resurgence in the fall/winter. Is #COVID19 as seasonal as the flu? We don't know, but don't get too comfortable. (2/5) researchgate.net/figure/fig2_56…
...the data from the Southern hemisphere is mixed, and everything is muddled by control and surveillance. But even it is important to remember even if the virus isn't directly climate sensitive, behavior is, and can lead to strong seasonal effects. (3/5) covid19.who.int/?gclid=CjwKCAj…