A FEW WORDS
ABOUT ME
I am an epidemiologist. I work at the intersection of data science and population health in Precision Prevention.
Problem | Opportunity | Vision | Qualifications
Why I Do What I Do
It is an exciting time to be a health researcher. There is an explosion of health-and-related data and corresponding number of analytic tools. Machine learning/AI have enabled data scientists and epidemiologists alike to rethink and refocus, with particular emphases on obtaining genomic profiles and on personalizing health and health care. We have been lured by gathering genomic profiles and by the notion of eliminating diseases by developing cures. The field of precision medicine is based on obtaining vast amounts of information on each person (genomic-, epigenomic-, proteomic-, metabolomic-, behavioromic-, and so on) to deliver personalized health care once a disease is diagnosed or, once known precursors to diseases are detected. However, under this best-case scenario of having a cure for every disease, we would still need constant medical care to address the next precursor, to cure the next disease and so on.
This is an endless cycle.
This is because in curing a disease, we would have done nothing to address the underlying constellation causes of the disease process, which likely leads to multiple disorders and diseases in the first place.
Just because a disease is cured, it does not mean that the damages the disease process has caused are cured.
We urgently need prevention: To prevent the disease process from starting at all. Prevention of multiple disorders and diseases is the key to eliminating diseases.
Relative to health care, we devote very few resources to prevention. Prevention has been individualized and privatized, left to individuals to navigate their community, information, coordinate their own wellness and engage in their own self-care. Under this model, prevention has become less science-based. Additionally, prevention is a collective activity. Improvements in population health and in the health of communities lead to healthier individuals.
What if we all work together to collectively harness the breakthroughs in science and medicine and direct our efforts toward prevention?
Precision Prevention: Data science for population health through prevention.