1.Introduction Abdulrahman M. El-Sayed SECTION 1: Simplicity,
complexity and population health 2. Reductionism at the dawn of
population health
Kristin Heitman 3. Wrong answers: when simple interpretations
create complex problems
David S. Fink, Katherine M. Keyes 4. Complexity: the evolution
towards 21st century science
Anton Palma, David W. Lounsbury 5. Systems thinking in population
health research and policy
Stephen Mooney SECTION 2: Methods in systems population health 6.
Generation of systems maps: mapping complex systems of population
health
Helen de Pinho 7. Systems dynamics models
Eric Lofgren 8. Agent-based modeling
Brandon Marshall 9. Microsimulation
Sanjay Basu 10. Social network analysis: the ubiquity of social
networks and their importance for population health
Douglas A. Luke, Amar Dhand, Bobbi J. Carothers SECTION 3: Systems
science towards a consequential population health 11. Machine
learning
James H. Faghmous 12. Systems science and the social determinants
of population health
David S. Fink, Katherine M. Keyes, Magdalena Cerdá 13. Systems
approaches to understanding how the environment influences
population health and population health interventions
Melissa Tracy 14. Systems of behavior and population health
Mark Orr, Kathryn Ziemer, Daniel Chen 15. Systems under your
skin
Karina Standahl Olsen, Hege Bøvelstad, Eiliv Lund 16. Frontiers in
health modeling
Nathaniel Osgood 17. Systems science and population health
Abdulrahman M. El-Sayed, Sandro Galea
Abdulrahman M. El-Sayed, MD, DPhil, is a public health physician
and epidemiologist. He serves the City of Detroit as the Executive
Director of the Detroit Health Department and Health Officer. Under
his leadership, the Detroit Health Department has emerged as a
state and national leader in promoting healthy air quality, lead
elimination, and public health innovation. Dr. El-Sayed's research
explores urban health policy, the social determinants of health,
and
health inequalities. Previously, he was a professor in the
Department of Epidemiology at Columbia University. Sandro Galea,
MD, DrPH, is a physician and an epidemiologist interested in the
social production of health of urban populations. His work explores
innovative cells-to-society approaches to population health
questions. He is interested in advancing a consequentialist
approach to population health scholarship. He currently serves as
Robert A. Knox Professor and Dean of the School of Public Health at
Boston University. He is a past president of the Society for
Epidemiologic Research, and an
elected member of the National Academy of Medicine. Together they
have been engaged in systems science scholarship and education for
more than 15 years.
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