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The Lay Epidemiologist’s Required Reading List (1 of 2)

By Karyn Pomerantz

In February, a reader of the epidemiology listserv administered from Montreal asked list members what books they would recommend to patients and others interested in health research. Many people could ask this question as they sift their way through conflicting news stories about the dangers of electromagnetic fields; the benefits of beta carotene; and the uncertainties of prostate screening. None of these stories are supported with neat, orderly evidence and conclusions. As New England Journal of Medicine editor Marcia Angell has written, “Health conscious Americans increasingly find themselves beset by contradictory advice. No sooner do they learn the results of one research study than they hear of one with the opposite message. They substitute margarine for butter, only to learn that margarine may be worse for their arteries. They are told to eat oat bran...but later learn that the bran they dutifully ate may be useless...(NEJM 1994; 331(31):189 - 190).

For some readers, these stories are merely interesting. For others who are considering participating in clinical trials, in environmental advocacy in their community, or on a health advisory panel, these stories pack a personal wallop. Epidemiologists themselves may be involved in advocacy movements or research in which they can educate the public on epidemiological principles. Issues of data sources, measurement bias, and generalizations are not only the concerns of methodologists. Consumers and policy makers also need to understand these issues which often have an impact on policy and personal health practices.

Epidemiologists can recommend the following books and articles to their friends who want to understand epidemiological studies. This is by no means a comprehensive list, and many readers may want to offer their favorites to the Epi Monitor. As noted below, these books and articles vary by content and scope, sophistication, style, and organization.

1. “Non-Trivial Pursuits,” Nutrition Action, October 1994: 1 - 7

The shortest and most visual of the articles, this piece depicts epidemiological studies (non-trivial pursuits) as a modern chutes-and-ladders board game.  “Welcome to that zany, madcap world of epidemiology, where you, the ambitious scientist, attempt to unequivocally prove your theory of diet and disease. But watch out for those nasty Pitfalls! They’re out to undermine your work at every turn!” Our ambitious scientist advances along the game board as he attempts population studies, surveys, case reports, case-control studies, and cohort studies. Along the way lurk the “Common Pitfalls” of confounding, chance, misclassification, and bias. This is a very clever and well illustrated explanation of the different types of study designs with their likely weaknesses. It is a wonderful snapshot of epidemiology for people who “feel like a ping-pong ball” in the face of contradictory health reports.

2. “How Numbers Can Trick You,” Barnett A. Tech Review, October 1994: 39 - 45

Barnett has written a short simple guide to the common “Six Deadly Sins of Statistical Misrepresentation” reported in the popular press. Covering the diverse fields of health, aviation, and criminology, he demonstrates with charts and simple calculations the problems when researchers generalize from non-random samples, report overall averages without considering confounders such as age-groups, cite odds and probabilities inconsistently and improperly, and use data sources inappropriate for the question being asked.

3. “Secondhand Smoke: Is it a Hazard?”  Consumer Reports, January 1995 26-33

While responding to the tobacco industry’s attempts to debunk EPA’s condemnation of secondhand smoke, Consumer Reports interviews Charles Hennekens, Julie Buring and other epidemiologists to explain the concepts of statistical significance, dose-response relationships, confounding factors, study design, and causality. The most important contribution in this article, however, is its attention to non-epidemiological bias, the bias inherent in studies paid for and promoted by the tobacco industry to protect its profits. Attempting to control the anti-smoking activists, the Imperial Tobacco Limited, Canada’s largest tobacco company, conducted a study in which they drafted an attack plan on the issue of secondhand smoke. “The challenge will be to find a sympathetic doctor who can be demonstrated to take a largely independent stance,” they wrote. Lisa Bero, a University of California, San Francisco health policy analyst, also relates her studies of tobacco industry organized symposia through which non-peer-reviewed articles enter the scientific literature. This is a wonderful article for demonstrating the application of epidemiological studies to a specific issue (tobacco) as well as illustrating how corporate interests can deliberately misrepresent scientific evidence to deny the risks of confirmed health hazards.

4. News and Numbers: A Guide to Reporting Statistical Claims and Controversies in Health and Other Fields

(A project of the Center for Health Communication, Harvard School of Public Health), V. Cohn, Iowa State University Press, 1989

Cohn, the health reporter for the Washington Post for many years, writes for journalists who report the news on health and medicine to the public. It is a wonderful introduction to critical appraisal skills for the public as well. Cohn helps the reader appreciate the scope of scientific endeavors, from the exploratory study to a conclusive body of evidence, as well as the details of statistical significance and power, rates, and sensitivity and specificity. As a journalist, he explains how easy it is for reporters to write stories that overestimate positive results, omit the context of a study such as its size or sponsorship, or simplify complex relationships. Throughout the book, he poses numerous questions that journalists and their readers can ask: What makes a study honest? What is the evidence? Who were the subjects? Where did the money to support the study come from? Do the conclusions make sense to me?

5. How to Lie With Statistics, D. Huff, NY: WW Norton & Co., Inc., 1954

This is certainly an oldie but goodie. The book is written in a breezy style with such chapter titles as “The Sample with the Built in Bias” and “How to Talk Back to a Statistic,” and illustrated by many irreverent cartoons. Huff writes for the general public who read statistical results in newspaper and magazine stories and advertisements. As he explains in the introduction, “This book is a sort of primer in ways to use statistics to deceive. It may seem altogether too much like a manual for swindlers. Perhaps I can justify it...the crooks already know these tricks; honest men (sic) must learn them in self-defense.” The “tricks” he covers include sampling bias, the perils of graphs and charts (the “gee-whiz graph), imprecise measurements, deceptive drug advertising, incomparable comparison groups, and faulty assumptions of causality. While these issues are covered in many other books, this book has the clearest and most engaging explanations, illustrated by numerous, commonplace examples.

6. A Mathematician Reads the Newspaper,  J. A. Paulos, NY: Basic Books, 1995

Writing for the same audience and in the same humorous style as Huff, Paulos explains the misuses and misinterpretations of statistics in the popular press. His subject range is just as broad, from economics to health, but obviously more contemporary and illustrated more by quantitative examples. Paulos structures his book like a newspaper, progressing from national news through business and lifestyle to health, science and sports. In the section on health, he cautions readers about the “availability error” in which people remember more sharply very emotional and vivid news, such as the number of annual deaths from cocaine (8,000) versus the more commonplace annual deaths from tobacco (400,000). Also covered are the statistical concepts of Type I and II errors, sampling, statistical significance and confidence intervals.

Published April 1996 

 

 
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