Title of article :
Rethinking John Snowʹs South London study: A Bayesian evaluation and recalculation
Author/Authors :
Thomas Koch، نويسنده , , Kenneth Denike، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages :
13
From page :
271
To page :
283
Abstract :
Famously, John Snow attempted to convince a critical professional audience that public water supplied to South London residents by private companies was a principal vector for the transmission of cholera. The result has been called the sine qua non of the “epidemiological imagination,” a landmark study still taught today. In fact, Snow twice attempted to prove public water supplies spread cholera to the South London population. His first, published in 1855, suffered from an incomplete data set that limited its descriptive and predictive import. In 1856, armed with new data, Snow published a more definitive study. This paper describes a previously unacknowledged methodological and conceptual problem in Snowʹs 1856 argument. We review the context of the South London study, identify the problem and then correct it with an empirical Bayes estimation (EBE) approach. The result hopefully revitalizes Snowʹs research as a teaching case through the application of a contemporary statistical approach.
Keywords :
Modifiable area unit problem , Small area unit problem , John Snow , empirical Bayes estimation , medical history , cholera
Journal title :
Social Science and Medicine
Serial Year :
2006
Journal title :
Social Science and Medicine
Record number :
602933
Link To Document :
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