And he applies the relative risk criteria to other areas, not just epidemiology.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Epidemiology of autism spectrum disorders in adults in the community in England.
From the forbes.com
The funds will be used to create a distinguished professorship in epidemiology.
From the post-gazette.com
As a newly identified pathogen, the epidemiology of SBV is not yet fully known.
From the nature.com
Epidemiology of sudden death in young competitive athletes due to blunt trauma.
From the nature.com
He has a PhD in epidemiology and has published more than 400 scientific papers.
From the newscientist.com
Epidemiology and clinical aspects of stray bullet shootings in the United States.
From the sciencedaily.com
As I've said before, it's so cute when antivaxers try to discuss epidemiology.
From the scienceblogs.com
Richard Garibaldi who was a leader in the field of epidemiology and public health.
From the orlandosentinel.com
More examples
The branch of medical science dealing with the transmission and control of disease
(epidemiological) epidemiologic: of or relating to epidemiology; "epidemiological studies"
(epidemiologist) a medical scientist who studies the transmission and control of epidemic diseases
Epidemiology is the study of patterns of health and illness and associated factors at the population level. ...
The branch of a science dealing with the spread and control of diseases, computer viruses, concepts etc. throughout populations or systems; The epidemiological body of knowledge about a particular thing
(Epidemiological) The branch of medicine dealing with the incidence and prevalence of disease in large populations and with detection of the source and cause of epidemics of infectious disease.
(epidemiological) used to refer to studies that look at the distribution, incidence and cause of disease in specific populations.
(Epidemiologist) specializes in the study of outbreaks of disease - epidemi/ologist
(epidemiologist) The specialist whose function is to gather data from many sources, often apparently unrelated, and use them to form explanations for the onset and development of diseases