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Publication Called a “Ticket to the Mystery and Drama of Epidemiology”

Epidemiologists Called “Illness Tamers”

“The most intriguing magazine you’ve never heard of is printed in black and white, lacks photographs, measures a scant 6 1/2 by 8 inches and contains about as many numbers as words. Even its title...promises less than it delivers.”

Can you guess which  publication the Baltimore Sun writer is referring to? (Hint: It’s a CDC publication.) Give up?

You should have guessed by now that it’s the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

According to an October 14, 1997 story in the Sun, the MMWR is the “chronicle of the nation’s ills” and while it lacks flair, “is consistently the first with articles about outbreaks and oddities that bear watching.”

The many interesting articles in the MMWR over the years have included the first report of AIDS cases, Legionnaire’s disease, toxic shock syndrome and hanta virus, the article said.

Always interesting for epidemiologists to read are the definitions of epidemiology constructed by the media. In this article, epidemiology is defined as that branch of medicine “that deals with the causes, spread and taming of illness.” Epidemiologists as tamers. Not bad.

Also interesting was the concept of the MMWR presented in the story as a key link in the process by which public health problems are observed, investigated and solved. To support this concept, MMWR editor Rick Goodman gave the example of L-tryptophan which began with doctors reporting mysterious findings to the health department in New Mexico which shared them with CDC. These, in turn, were published and alerted doctors in other parts of the country who soon realized that L-trytophan was the common element in the cases being seen. FDA recalled the dietary supplement and the outbreak ended.

According to Goodman who is quoted in the Sun story, “All the pieces were put together. It’s a beautiful story of the way public health works in this country, a real collaboration between several state health departments and the CDC and the FDA.”

Published November 1997  v 

 

 
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