{"title":"Big Epidemiology: The Birth, Life, Death, and Resurgence of Diseases on a Global Timescale.","authors":"Nicola Luigi Bragazzi, Thorsten Lehr","doi":"10.3390/epidemiologia5040047","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Big Epidemiology represents an innovative framework that extends the interdisciplinary approach of Big History to understand disease patterns, causes, and effects across human history on a global scale. This comprehensive methodology integrates epidemiology, genetics, environmental science, sociology, history, and data science to address contemporary and future public health challenges through a broad historical and societal lens. The foundational research agenda involves mapping the historical occurrence of diseases and their impact on societies over time, utilizing archeological findings, biological data, and historical records. By analyzing skeletal remains, ancient DNA, and artifacts, researchers can trace the origins and spread of diseases, such as <i>Yersinia pestis</i> in the Black Death. Historical documents, including chronicles and medical treatises, provide contextual narratives and quantitative data on past disease outbreaks, societal responses, and disruptions. Modern genetic studies reveal the evolution and migration patterns of pathogens and human adaptations to diseases, offering insights into co-evolutionary dynamics. This integrative approach allows for temporal and spatial mapping of disease patterns, linking them to social upheavals, population changes, and economic transformations. Big Epidemiology also examines the roles of environmental changes and socioeconomic factors in disease emergence and re-emergence, incorporating climate science, urban development, and economic history to inform public health strategies. The framework reviews historical and contemporary policy responses to pandemics, aiming to enhance future global health governance. By addressing ethical, legal, and societal implications, Big Epidemiology seeks to ensure responsible and effective epidemiological research and interventions. This approach aims to profoundly impact how we understand, prevent, and respond to diseases, leveraging historical perspectives to enrich modern scientific inquiry and global public health strategies.</p>","PeriodicalId":72944,"journal":{"name":"Epidemiolgia (Basel, Switzerland)","volume":"5 4","pages":"669-691"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-11-06","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11586986/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Epidemiolgia (Basel, Switzerland)","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3390/epidemiologia5040047","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Big Epidemiology represents an innovative framework that extends the interdisciplinary approach of Big History to understand disease patterns, causes, and effects across human history on a global scale. This comprehensive methodology integrates epidemiology, genetics, environmental science, sociology, history, and data science to address contemporary and future public health challenges through a broad historical and societal lens. The foundational research agenda involves mapping the historical occurrence of diseases and their impact on societies over time, utilizing archeological findings, biological data, and historical records. By analyzing skeletal remains, ancient DNA, and artifacts, researchers can trace the origins and spread of diseases, such as Yersinia pestis in the Black Death. Historical documents, including chronicles and medical treatises, provide contextual narratives and quantitative data on past disease outbreaks, societal responses, and disruptions. Modern genetic studies reveal the evolution and migration patterns of pathogens and human adaptations to diseases, offering insights into co-evolutionary dynamics. This integrative approach allows for temporal and spatial mapping of disease patterns, linking them to social upheavals, population changes, and economic transformations. Big Epidemiology also examines the roles of environmental changes and socioeconomic factors in disease emergence and re-emergence, incorporating climate science, urban development, and economic history to inform public health strategies. The framework reviews historical and contemporary policy responses to pandemics, aiming to enhance future global health governance. By addressing ethical, legal, and societal implications, Big Epidemiology seeks to ensure responsible and effective epidemiological research and interventions. This approach aims to profoundly impact how we understand, prevent, and respond to diseases, leveraging historical perspectives to enrich modern scientific inquiry and global public health strategies.
大流行病学是一个创新框架,它扩展了大历史的跨学科方法,以了解全球范围内人类历史上的疾病模式、原因和影响。这种综合方法整合了流行病学、遗传学、环境科学、社会学、历史学和数据科学,通过广阔的历史和社会视角来应对当代和未来的公共卫生挑战。基础研究议程包括利用考古发现、生物数据和历史记录,绘制疾病的历史发生情况及其对社会的影响。通过分析骨骼遗骸、古代 DNA 和人工制品,研究人员可以追溯疾病的起源和传播,例如黑死病中的鼠疫耶尔森菌。包括编年史和医学论文在内的历史文献提供了有关过去疾病爆发、社会反应和混乱的背景叙述和定量数据。现代基因研究揭示了病原体的进化和迁移模式以及人类对疾病的适应性,提供了对共同进化动态的见解。这种综合方法可以绘制疾病模式的时空地图,将疾病与社会动荡、人口变化和经济转型联系起来。大流行病学还研究了环境变化和社会经济因素在疾病出现和再次出现中的作用,将气候科学、城市发展和经济史纳入其中,为公共卫生战略提供信息。该框架回顾了历史和当代应对大流行病的政策,旨在加强未来的全球卫生治理。通过探讨伦理、法律和社会影响,大流行病学力求确保负责任和有效的流行病学研究和干预。这种方法旨在深刻影响我们理解、预防和应对疾病的方式,利用历史视角丰富现代科学探索和全球公共卫生战略。