20th Anniversary Edition
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Epidemiology on the Internet
E-mail forumsAs in most other fields, the World Wide Web (WWW) and other internet facilities have rapidly emerged as a major resource for epidemiologists. The following list has been compiled from various sources, including a resource list prepared by Jean Blackwell of the UNC Health Sciences Library. Epidemiology discussion forum - you can subscribe to an Epidemiology List where epidemiologists send questions, announcements, and other messages to each other in an open, public forum. Participation is international and uneven (some people send lots of messages, most probably send none; some institutions are well-represented, most apparently not at all). Joining the list can be an excellent way to ask questions, read or participate in discussions on methodologic topics, pick up useful tips and information, ask for help and references, and "feel connected" - as long as you manage your subscription so you don't overload your disk space! To subscribe to this list, send a message to: listproc@cc.umontreal.ca with a single line message SUBSCRIBE EPIDEMIO-L <your name>, e.g.: MAIL sendTo: listproc@cc.umontreal.ca Subj: How I subscribed to the Epidemiology List SUBSCRIBE EPIDEMIO-L Victor Schoenbach The list is maintained by Dr. Pierre Phillippe at the University of Montreal. Similar lists exist for almost every other area you can imagine. Another list of relevance for epidemiologists is STAT-L. To subscribe, send the message subscribe stat-L with your first and last name to listserv@vm1.mcgill.ca. Note to Internet neophytes: lists such as the
ones mentioned here are automated. Epidemio-L and Stat-L are
unmoderated, which means that messages are posted automatically.
The Minority-health list is moderated, in which case the list owner
reviews messages and then posts them. LISTPROC, LISTSERV, and MAJORDOMO are
the names of software packages that handle e-mail list functions. You will
receive information about other commands after you subscribe. Save this
information so that you'll know how to unsubscribe and/or suspend your
subscription when you go on vacation. Commands must be sent to the
computer program (e.g., listproc, listserv, minhlth-request). In
contrast, messages intended for subscribers are sent to the list
address (which appears as the heading of messages you receive from
the list - often the computer does not show the originator's address,
so if you want subscribers to know who sent the message and how to contact you, be sure to include your name and e-mail address). To send a
message to the epidemiology list, you send it to: There are many, many lists. For example, the Division of Reproductive Health at the CDC has a list for persons interested in perinatal, pediatric, and reproductive epidemiology. This list is moderated, and anonymous or long postings are not distributed. For information about subscribing to this and other CDC lists, send a message consisting of the word "help" (without the quotation marks) to lists@list.cdc.gov. The primary access method for electronic information for epidemiologists is the Web, which includes the capability for audio, graphics, and video. Many epidemiology-related organizations have "webpages", with more coming on line every day. Web sites
Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) (www.paho.org) (españól/English)
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) (www.cdc.gov) CDC also has a Spanish language site, CDC en español.
Partners in Information Access for Public Health Professionals (www.nnlm.nlm.nih.gov/partners)
Population Reference Bureau (PRB) (www.prb.org) has data, charts, and links to demographic data for all countries of the world Minority Health Resource Center (www.omhrc.gov) Minority Health Project (MHP) (www.minority.unc.edu) World Resources Institute (WRI) (www.wri.org) Program for Monitoring Emerging Diseases (ProMED) (www.fas.org/promed)
International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) - www.iarc.fr U.S. Department of Health and Human Services - www.os.dhhs.gov National Institutes of Health (NIH) - www.nih.gov National Cancer Institute (NCI) - www.nci.nih.gov National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) - www.niehs.nih.gov National Library of Medicine - www.nlm.nih.gov National Health Information Center - http://nhic-nt.health.org Office of Research Integrity - http://ori.dhhs.gov Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) - www.ahcpr.gov (formerly Agency for Health Care Policy and Research) U.S. Health Care Financing Administration - www.ssa.gov/hcfa/hcfahp2.html Government information via the UNC Institute of Government - ncinfo.iog.unc.edu State of North Carolina - Public Information - www.sips.state.nc.us/nchome.html North Carolina State Center for Health Statistics (SCHS) (www.schs.state.nc.us/SCHS)
North Carolina county profiles - www.ospl.state.nc.us/ospl/cnty-indx.html Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) (www.igc.apc.org/nrdc)Office of Research Integrity - http://ori.dhhs.gov Environmental Research Foundation - www.rachel.org (vea Fundación para Investigaciones Ambientales, debajo)
China Education and Research Network (CERNET) - www.cernet.edu.cn Some sites have emerged as especially comprehensive nodes for epidemiologists. Several of these are: The web site of the University of California at San Francisco Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics (www.epibiostat.ucsf.edu/epidem/epidem.html) has been characterized by Pierre Phillippe (list manager for EPIDEMIO-L) as "a fantastic compendium of all what one would have always wanted to know of information available in epidemiology". www.epimonitor.net, sponsored by the Epidemiology Monitor (see Journals) is a new site whose vision is to be "the online home and community for epidemiologists". www.ph.ucla.edu/epi/snow.html Maintained by Ralph Frerichs at the University of California at Los Angeles Department of Epidemiology, this site is devoted to the life and times of Dr. John Snow (1813-1858), a legendary figure in the history of public health, epidemiology, and anesthesiology". The U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Comprehensive Epidemiology Data Resource Program (CEDR) makes available analytic data sets, working data sets, and associated documentation files from the Health and Mortality Study of the DOE work force and related studies conducted during the past 30 years. As the CEDR Program matures, other types of data useful for epidemiologic and health surveillance activities will be added, including data from Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory's (LBL's) Socio-Economic Environmental Demographic Information System (SEEDIS), such as census data, geographic base map files, mortality and cancer incidence data, and ecologic summary data. In addition, the CEDR website has links to a vast array of other epidemiology resources, including the tables of contents for the Epidemiology Monitor and some epidemiology journals. Try going to the Comprehensive Epidemiologic Data Resource Reference Desk at: cedr.lbl.gov/CEDRReferenceDesk.html The Global Health Council - membership alliance dedicated to improving health worldwide. The Global Health Network at the University of Pittsburgh (www.pitt.edu/HOME/GHNet/GHNet.html - case matters!) is attempting to provide referrals to EVERYTHING in international and public health. (Be sure to use upper and lower case as shown.) Information is available in Japanese, Portuguese, Spanish, German, Chinese, Turkish & Taiwanese. National Library of Medicine MEDLINE plus Health Information (www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus) provides access to extensive information about specific diseases and conditions and also has links to consumer health information from the National Institutes of Health, dictionaries, lists of hospitals and physicians, health information in Spanish and other languages, and clinical trials. The New York Academy of Medicine (www.nyam.org) has a many links to sources of medical including links to PubMed (and how to use it), other national databases, electronic journals, and much more. A key page is at http://www.nyam.org/library/medinfo.html Medical History on the Internet (www.anes.uab.edu/medhist.htm), maintained by A.J. Wright, MLS at the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Medicine, has an extensive collection of bibliographic references and internet links. The Cochrane Collaboration (www.cochrane.org) is an "international organisation that prepares, maintains and promotes the accessibility of systematic reviews of the effects of healthcare interventions. Evidence-based Medicine Resource Center (www.ebmny.org), maintained jointly by the New York Academy of Medicine Library and the American College of Physicians, NY ChapterThe Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) (www.icpsr.umich.edu), located within the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan, has the world's largest archive of computerized social science data. The catalog, including abstracts and codebooks, is open to the public. Member institutions can also gain access to the data. If you're designing a questionnaire, this is probably a good place to look. Resources for Methods in Evaluation and Social Research lists FREE resources for methods in evaluation and social research. The focus is on "how-to" do evaluation research and the methods used: surveys, focus groups, sampling, interviews, and other methods. Most of these links are to resources that can be read over the web. Survey data analysis software (www.fas.harvard.edu/~stats/survey-soft/survey-soft.html) describes available software packages for analyzing data from surveys using complex sampling designs and has online reviews of the issues and the packages. Instructions to authors in the health sciences for hundreds of journals (maintained by the Raymon H. Mulford Library / Medical College). In addition, most journals have websites, generally including instructions for authors, tables of contents, sometimes abstracts from recent issues, and in some cases full text of articles. The Department of Plant Sciences, University of Cambridge (UK) has an On-line dictionary of epidemiology with a focus on quantitative methods in infectious disease epidemiology. http://www.ceid.ox.ac.uk/course/course-glossary.htm Victor_Schoenbach@unc.edu, 11/2/2000, 1/4/2000, 2/28/2001, 4/15/2001, 5/25/2001 |