Affiliation:
1. Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
Abstract
Abstract
Historically, AJE has played an important role in the development of social epidemiology as a field. To mark the centennial of the Journal we invited commentaries from three sets of authors in which we asked them to reflect on the role of AJE in advancing our understanding of the social determinants of population health and health disparities. Lisa Berkman, Mauricio Avendano and Emilie Courtin discuss the promises and pitfalls of using experimental data (both randomized trials and natural policy experiments) to interrogate the causal connection between social determinants and population health outcomes. Julie Palmer, Yvette Crozier and Lynn Rosenberg look back on the first twenty-five years of the Black Women’s Health Study, and the contributions of that study to our understanding of racial disparities in health. Luisa Borrell and Natalie Crawford review the AJE’s contributions to the definition and use of race and ethnicity in epidemiologic research and make recommendations for strengthening diversity and inclusion in the profession. A common thread that emerges across the invited essays is AJE’s commitment to publish articles that engage in critical self-reflection of the discipline.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Cited by
1 articles.
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