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Definitions

epidemiology

[ep-i-dee-mee-ol-uh-jee, -dem-ee-] / ˌɛp ɪˌdi miˈɒl ə dʒi, -ˌdɛm i- /
NOUN
public health
Synonyms


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Witnesses said school closures were counterproductive in terms of epidemiology.

From Washington Times

A CDC program for state epidemiology and laboratory efforts was seriously underfunded before the pandemic, and the lack of clarity on new wastewater-specific money has led some states to hold off on monitoring.

From Scientific American

“Nationally, we have about 85 to 90 percent coverage now,” Víctor Hugo Álvarez Castaño, former director of epidemiology at Colombia’s Ministry of Health, told me.

From New York Times

Witnesses said closures were counterproductive in terms of epidemiology, heightening the risk of spread because children started to interact with kids from multiple locales instead of their typical cohorts at school.

From Washington Times

The results are “not surprising,” said Gill Reeves, a co-author of the study and professor of statistical epidemiology at the University of Oxford, in an interview.

From Washington Post