AE Birn - Nature Medicine, 2011 - nature.com ... They track down people who have developed disease (the cases) and compare them to people who have not despite exposure to the same risks (the controls). Because this entails household-to-household work, it is known as 'shoe-leather' epidemiology. ... All 2 versions
PJ Landrigan - Medicine Science and Dreams, 2011 - Springer ... noted. He termed this “shoeleatherepidemiology,” and the symbol of the EIS became the sole of a shoe with a hole worn through it. To ... possible. Back in Texarkana, I learned the hard way to do shoeleatherepidemiology. Over ... All 2 versions
M Enserink - Science, 2011 - sciencemag.org ... So their passion for traditional shoe-leatherepidemiology has been tempered by diplomatic and strategic concerns. Indeed, prominent cholera scientists declined to discuss the issue with Science or would only speak off the record. ... Cited by 4 - Related articles - All 4 versions
TE Carpenter - Spatial and Spatio-temporal Epidemiology, 2011 - Elsevier ... Using maps, medical acumen, laboratory skills, local knowledge, shoe-leatherepidemiology and deductive reasoning, he was able to combine spatial information regarding the water supplier and cholera incidence to identify an association, which led to the closing of the Broad ...
[PDF] from ijbnpa.orgCE Foster, JR Panter… - International Journal of Behavioral …, 2011 - ijbnpa.org ... Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise 2004, 36:725-730. 17. Ogilvie D, Mitchell R, Mutrie N, Petticrew M, Platt S: Shoeleatherepidemiology: active travel and transport infrastructure in the urban Page 12. 11 landscape. ... View as HTML