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Sustainable Control of Water-Related Infectious Diseases: A Review and Proposal for Interdisciplinary Health-Based Systems Research
Authors:Stuart Batterman  Joseph Eisenberg  Rebecca Hardin  Margaret E Kruk  Maria Carmen Lemos  Anna M Michalak  Bhramar Mukherjee  Elisha Renne  Howard Stein  Cristy Watkins  Mark L Wilson
Institution:1. Department of Environmental Health Sciences;2. Department of Epidemiology;3. School of Natural Resources and the Environment;4. Department of Health Management and Policy;5. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering;6. Department of Biostatistics;7. Department of Environmental Engineering;8. Center for African American Studies and;9. School of Natural Resources and Environment, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
Abstract:

Objective

Even when initially successful, many interventions aimed at reducing the toll of water-related infectious disease have not been sustainable over longer periods of time. Here we review historical practices in water-related infectious disease research and propose an interdisciplinary public health oriented systems approach to research and intervention design.

Data sources

On the basis of the literature and the authors’ experiences, we summarize contributions from key disciplines and identify common problems and trends. Practices in developing countries, where the disease burden is the most severe, are emphasized.

Data extraction

We define waterborne and water-associated vectorborne diseases and identify disciplinary themes and conceptual needs by drawing from ecologic, anthropologic, engineering, political/economic, and public health fields. A case study examines one of the classes of water-related infectious disease.

Data synthesis

The limited success in designing sustainable interventions is attributable to factors that include the complexity and interactions among the social, ecologic, engineering, political/economic, and public health domains; incomplete data; a lack of relevant indicators; and most important, an inadequate understanding of the proximal and distal factors that cause water-related infectious disease. Fundamental change is needed for research on water-related infectious diseases, and we advocate a systems approach framework using an ongoing evidence-based health outcomes focus with an extended time horizon. The examples and case study in the review show many opportunities for interdisciplinary collaborations, data fusion techniques, and other advances.

Conclusions

The proposed framework will facilitate research by addressing the complexity and divergent scales of problems and by engaging scientists in the disciplines needed to tackle these difficult problems. Such research can enhance the prevention and control of water-related infectious diseases in a manner that is sustainable and focused on public health outcomes.
Keywords:infectious disease  interdisciplinary  malaria  research  systems approach  water
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