Geographic Information Systems (GIS): new perspectives in understanding human health and environmental relationships
Charles M. Croner
Croner et al. 1996. Geographic Information Systems (GIS): New
Perspectives in Understanding Human Health and Environmental Relationships.
Statistics in Medicine 15:1961-1977.
- Abstract:
- Geographic information systems (GIS) and digital computer technology
will advance the mission of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) and Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) to
protect public health. Geographic positioning, topology, and planar and
surface measurements are basic GIS properties which enable highly precise
locational referencing of spatial phenomena. The growing uses of remotely
sensed imagery and satellite facilitated global positioning systems are
contributing to unprecedented surveillance of the environment and greater
understanding of known and suspected environmental disease associations with
human and animal health. Earch science and public health monitoring GIS
databases offer new analytic opportunities for disease assessment and
prevention.
p. 1963:
"GIS use in public health is in a formative stage. The growing need for
reliable environmental geospatial databases is a fundamental
concern. Accurate and statistically representative locational information
along with standardized quality-controlled measurements of environmental
exposures, over time, are essential ingredients necessary to perform robust
spatial statistical analyses of supspected associations between the
environment and human and animal diseases."
Croner's
glossary.
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