Gesler presents a smorgasbord of applications of spatial analysis to epidemiological and public health issues.
Areas of study:
p. 968:
""...King...discussed the ... difficulties that arise in geographical epidemiology:
p. 969:
"Medical geographers have often pointed out that spatial patterns or variable associations show striking differences at different scales of analysis. Because of this situation, disease and health care investigations should be carried out at several different geographic levels."
"The problem is a dual one: some processes can generate many spatial patterns, and the same pattern may result from many different processes.... A good example of this, applicable to disease spread, is the difficulty of distinguishing between generalized and compound point patterns."
"In the area of disease causation, Mayer [60] has pointed out that epidemiologists use few spatial techniques and geographers know very little about pathogenesis or biological processes."
p. 970:
"More use might be made of Monte Carlo simulation techniques in assessing point patterns of disease. If the population which contains disease cases is not randomly distributed over space, then it is not statistically valid to compare the distribution of cases with known theoretical distributions like the Poisson, Neyman type A or negative binomial."
"A major aim of this paper was to acquaint the reader with potential use thus make technique more accessible. Utilization of technique, however, can only come with the study of specific procedures andhow they have been employed in research."