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Public Health Research: Lost in Translation or Speaking the Wrong Language?
by
Kansagra, Susan M.
, Farley, Thomas A.
in
Air cleanliness
/ Asthma
/ Behavior
/ Biomedical Research
/ Clinical significance
/ Clinical trials
/ Commentaries
/ Data collection
/ Decision making
/ Diabetes
/ Enrollments
/ Ethics
/ Evidence-Based Practice
/ Exercise
/ Experiments
/ Firearms
/ Funding
/ Health Policy
/ Health research
/ Health Services Research
/ Health surveillance
/ Humans
/ Mathematical models
/ Medical research
/ Observational studies
/ Physicians
/ Population
/ Public health
/ Public Health Practice
/ Research methodology
/ Sodium
/ Steroids
/ Studies
/ Suicides & suicide attempts
/ Surveillance
/ United States
2011
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Public Health Research: Lost in Translation or Speaking the Wrong Language?
by
Kansagra, Susan M.
, Farley, Thomas A.
in
Air cleanliness
/ Asthma
/ Behavior
/ Biomedical Research
/ Clinical significance
/ Clinical trials
/ Commentaries
/ Data collection
/ Decision making
/ Diabetes
/ Enrollments
/ Ethics
/ Evidence-Based Practice
/ Exercise
/ Experiments
/ Firearms
/ Funding
/ Health Policy
/ Health research
/ Health Services Research
/ Health surveillance
/ Humans
/ Mathematical models
/ Medical research
/ Observational studies
/ Physicians
/ Population
/ Public health
/ Public Health Practice
/ Research methodology
/ Sodium
/ Steroids
/ Studies
/ Suicides & suicide attempts
/ Surveillance
/ United States
2011
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Do you wish to request the book?
Public Health Research: Lost in Translation or Speaking the Wrong Language?
by
Kansagra, Susan M.
, Farley, Thomas A.
in
Air cleanliness
/ Asthma
/ Behavior
/ Biomedical Research
/ Clinical significance
/ Clinical trials
/ Commentaries
/ Data collection
/ Decision making
/ Diabetes
/ Enrollments
/ Ethics
/ Evidence-Based Practice
/ Exercise
/ Experiments
/ Firearms
/ Funding
/ Health Policy
/ Health research
/ Health Services Research
/ Health surveillance
/ Humans
/ Mathematical models
/ Medical research
/ Observational studies
/ Physicians
/ Population
/ Public health
/ Public Health Practice
/ Research methodology
/ Sodium
/ Steroids
/ Studies
/ Suicides & suicide attempts
/ Surveillance
/ United States
2011
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Public Health Research: Lost in Translation or Speaking the Wrong Language?
Journal Article
Public Health Research: Lost in Translation or Speaking the Wrong Language?
2011
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Overview
Public health leaders, like physicians, need to make decisions that impact health based on strong evidence. To generate useful evidence for public health leaders, research must focus on interventions that have potential to impact population-level health. Often policy and environmental changes are the interventions with the greatest potential impact on population health, but studying these is difficult because of limitations in the methods typically used and emphasized in health research. To create useful evidence for policy and environmental interventions, other research methods are needed, including observational studies, the use of surveillance data for evaluation, and predictive mathematical modeling. More emphasis is needed on these types of study designs by researchers, funding agencies, and scientific journals.
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