Maria de Fátima Militão de Albuquerque

Debate on the paper by Gilberto Câmara & Antônio Miguel Vieira Monteiro

Debate sobre o artigo de Gilberto Câmara & Antônio Miguel Vieira Monteiro

 

Núcleo de Estudos em Saúde Coletiva, Centro de Pesquisas Aggeu Magalhães, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Recife, Brasil.

 

What do public health researchers expect of geocomputation?

 

 

The article by Gilberto Câmara and Antônio Miguel Vieira Monteiro is highly interesting and objective. While it introduces the concept of geocomputation in a clear and didactic way, demonstrating its potential as a tool for analyzing spatial data, it also invites the reader to answer the question at the end with the same clarity as the authors: what do we expect from geocomputation?

Epidemiology seeks to improve the methods and techniques that allow it to describe, explain, and predict health and disease phenomena in populations, with a view towards prevention. Therefore it plays a fundamental role in public health. From this perspective, the analysis of spatial distribution of diseases has contributed to the production of knowledge in the field and should not be seen as a "second-class" replacement for studies focusing on the individual as the unit of analysis (Susser, 1994a).

Depending on the problem one wishes to solve, the ecological approach has its indications and specificities. Thus, studies can focus on mapping the geographical distribution of diseases with the identification of spatial clusters of cases and the analysis of associations between the incidence of diseases/events and environmental or contextual exposures related to the collective sphere.

How can geocomputation help improve such studies? We must first ask if we really understand what is being offered to us.

Reading the article was certainly enlightening, providing us with the scope of development of techniques and the analytical possibilities offered by the various methods. The authors facilitated an understanding of the concepts by giving a detailed development of the theme through examples of health-related and environmental situations. For example, we are left with the idea that the four types of approaches presented by the authors have different premises and objectives but can be viewed as complementary.

Thus the use of GAM (the Geographic Analysis Machine) is capable of revealing clusters of events/diseases and constructing maps when the excess rates found are statistically significant. For example, this would be a useful technique for detecting priority areas for public health interventions, and would not aim at helping explain the occurrence of phenomena.

Meanwhile, techniques for the detection of "spatial autocorrelation", measured by the Moran coefficient or through semi-variograms, would detect dependence between geographically proximate events, "explicitly considering the possible importance of their spatial arrangement in the analysis or interpretation of the results" (Bailey & Gatrell, 1995). There are thus specific indications for this type of research, for example: when one's point of departure is the hypothesis that the event at issue is generated by environmental factors that are difficult to detect at the individual level.

The other two approaches described by the authors involve more sophisticated techniques, incorporating functions aimed at contemplating the complexity of the phenomena. The authors explain that an Artificial Neural Network (ANN) can be used as an exploratory tool in data-rich environments and that it is capable of integrating different types of nature in a single geographic data base using Geographic Information Systems (GIS) technology. The information to be introduced into the model should be chosen by the researcher, which obviously presupposes the existence of an underlying theoretical basis.

Meanwhile, cellular automata move even further in the sense of incorporating dynamic elements into the models. These models "would free us from static views of space" and would be capable of representing the change in space over time as the product of human actions.

We may be closer to achieving the ambitious objective identified by Susser (1994b) (speaking of the logic of the ecological approach): to understand how the context affects the health of individuals and groups. In other words, it appears increasingly possible to develop studies that reveal the effects not only of the structural elements of space but also those of the processes, not perceptible within the sphere of studies whose unit of analysis is the individual. Hence epidemiology turned to critical geography for the concept of "socially organized space".

Finally, the authors point out that computational technology for solving health problems should always be applied keeping in mind the conceptual underpinnings of each approach. This concern has its counterpart in the health field. The conceptual basis to be considered in studies should be related to the theoretical and methodological issues of public health. This underscores the need for an interdisciplinary dialogue, where the respective challenge for the public health researcher is to guarantee the epidemiological content of the studies, allowing for better knowledge of the target phenomenon, prediction of new occurrences, and the organization of interventions aimed at prevention.

 

 

BAILEY, T. C. & GATRELL, A., 1995. Interative Spatial Data Analysis. Longman: Scientific & Technical.

SUSSER, M., 1994a. The logic in ecological I: The logic of analysis. American Journal of Public Health, 84:825-829.

SUSSER, M., 1994b. The logic in ecological II: The logic of design. American Journal of Public Health, 84:830-835.

Escola Nacional de Saúde Pública Sergio Arouca, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz Rio de Janeiro - RJ - Brazil
E-mail: cadernos@ensp.fiocruz.br