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Public health triangulation: approach and application to synthesizing data to understand national and local HIV epidemics

BACKGROUND: Public health triangulation is a process for reviewing, synthesising and interpreting secondary data from multiple sources that bear on the same question to make public health decisions. It can be used to understand the dynamics of HIV transmission and to measure the impact of public hea...

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Autores principales: Rutherford, George W, McFarland, William, Spindler, Hilary, White, Karen, Patel, Sadhna V, Aberle-Grasse, John, Sabin, Keith, Smith, Nathan, Taché, Stephanie, Calleja-Garcia, Jesus M, Stoneburner, Rand L
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2920890/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20670448
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-10-447
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author Rutherford, George W
McFarland, William
Spindler, Hilary
White, Karen
Patel, Sadhna V
Aberle-Grasse, John
Sabin, Keith
Smith, Nathan
Taché, Stephanie
Calleja-Garcia, Jesus M
Stoneburner, Rand L
author_facet Rutherford, George W
McFarland, William
Spindler, Hilary
White, Karen
Patel, Sadhna V
Aberle-Grasse, John
Sabin, Keith
Smith, Nathan
Taché, Stephanie
Calleja-Garcia, Jesus M
Stoneburner, Rand L
author_sort Rutherford, George W
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Public health triangulation is a process for reviewing, synthesising and interpreting secondary data from multiple sources that bear on the same question to make public health decisions. It can be used to understand the dynamics of HIV transmission and to measure the impact of public health programs. While traditional intervention research and metaanalysis would be ideal sources of information for public health decision making, they are infrequently available, and often decisions can be based only on surveillance and survey data. METHODS: The process involves examination of a wide variety of data sources and both biological, behavioral and program data and seeks input from stakeholders to formulate meaningful public health questions. Finally and most importantly, it uses the results to inform public health decision-making. There are 12 discrete steps in the triangulation process, which included identification and assessment of key questions, identification of data sources, refining questions, gathering data and reports, assessing the quality of those data and reports, formulating hypotheses to explain trends in the data, corroborating or refining working hypotheses, drawing conclusions, communicating results and recommendations and taking public health action. RESULTS: Triangulation can be limited by the quality of the original data, the potentials for ecological fallacy and "data dredging" and reproducibility of results. CONCLUSIONS: Nonetheless, we believe that public health triangulation allows for the interpretation of data sets that cannot be analyzed using meta-analysis and can be a helpful adjunct to surveillance, to formal public health intervention research and to monitoring and evaluation, which in turn lead to improved national strategic planning and resource allocation.
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spelling pubmed-29208902010-08-13 Public health triangulation: approach and application to synthesizing data to understand national and local HIV epidemics Rutherford, George W McFarland, William Spindler, Hilary White, Karen Patel, Sadhna V Aberle-Grasse, John Sabin, Keith Smith, Nathan Taché, Stephanie Calleja-Garcia, Jesus M Stoneburner, Rand L BMC Public Health Correspondence BACKGROUND: Public health triangulation is a process for reviewing, synthesising and interpreting secondary data from multiple sources that bear on the same question to make public health decisions. It can be used to understand the dynamics of HIV transmission and to measure the impact of public health programs. While traditional intervention research and metaanalysis would be ideal sources of information for public health decision making, they are infrequently available, and often decisions can be based only on surveillance and survey data. METHODS: The process involves examination of a wide variety of data sources and both biological, behavioral and program data and seeks input from stakeholders to formulate meaningful public health questions. Finally and most importantly, it uses the results to inform public health decision-making. There are 12 discrete steps in the triangulation process, which included identification and assessment of key questions, identification of data sources, refining questions, gathering data and reports, assessing the quality of those data and reports, formulating hypotheses to explain trends in the data, corroborating or refining working hypotheses, drawing conclusions, communicating results and recommendations and taking public health action. RESULTS: Triangulation can be limited by the quality of the original data, the potentials for ecological fallacy and "data dredging" and reproducibility of results. CONCLUSIONS: Nonetheless, we believe that public health triangulation allows for the interpretation of data sets that cannot be analyzed using meta-analysis and can be a helpful adjunct to surveillance, to formal public health intervention research and to monitoring and evaluation, which in turn lead to improved national strategic planning and resource allocation. BioMed Central 2010-07-29 /pmc/articles/PMC2920890/ /pubmed/20670448 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-10-447 Text en Copyright ©2010 Rutherford et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Correspondence
Rutherford, George W
McFarland, William
Spindler, Hilary
White, Karen
Patel, Sadhna V
Aberle-Grasse, John
Sabin, Keith
Smith, Nathan
Taché, Stephanie
Calleja-Garcia, Jesus M
Stoneburner, Rand L
Public health triangulation: approach and application to synthesizing data to understand national and local HIV epidemics
title Public health triangulation: approach and application to synthesizing data to understand national and local HIV epidemics
title_full Public health triangulation: approach and application to synthesizing data to understand national and local HIV epidemics
title_fullStr Public health triangulation: approach and application to synthesizing data to understand national and local HIV epidemics
title_full_unstemmed Public health triangulation: approach and application to synthesizing data to understand national and local HIV epidemics
title_short Public health triangulation: approach and application to synthesizing data to understand national and local HIV epidemics
title_sort public health triangulation: approach and application to synthesizing data to understand national and local hiv epidemics
topic Correspondence
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2920890/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20670448
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-10-447
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