Carta a la editora
Medwave 2016 Dic;16(11):e6797 doi: 10.5867/medwave.2016.11.6797
Ensayos clínicos de campo y comunitarios: importancia en la salud pública
Field trials and community trials: importance in public health
Jorge Mario Piedra-Fernández, Gema Esmeralda Ganoza-Guerrero
Referencias | Descargar PDF |
Para Descargar PDF debe Abrir sesión.
Imprimir | A(+) A(-) | Lectura fácil

Dear editor:

The advance of medical research is increasing in the world, including the developing countries. An important point is the emphasis on public health, defined as the science and art of preventing disease, prolonging life and promoting health through the organized efforts of society [1], but to properly and effectively develop this concept, strong research is needed to optimize different strategies or preventive measures in the field of public health. While it is true that randomized clinical trials serve as reliable sources for public health decision-making [1], we need studies conducted in real and not ideal conditions, such as field and community studies.

Field trials are studies carried out "on the ground" or "on the field", in people not admitted to an institution but in subjects of the population, free of disease. Here we evaluate whether an intervention reduces the risk of developing a disease [2],[3]. Community trials are an extension of the field trials; and are field trials in which the totality of the community are the units of assignment.

A major impact on public health can be achieved through prevention interventions: vaccine effectiveness studies; nutritional interventions (micronutrient supplementation in children and pregnant women) [4],[5]; interventions in maternal and neonatal health (family planning, treatment of sexually transmitted infections, good prenatal control, kangaroo mother programs) [5]; education (campaigns against tobacco or in favor of exclusive breastfeeding, improvement of excreta disposal methods) [4]; vector control and disease transmitters (measures to control insects, larvae or elimination of breeding grounds); administration of drugs to prevent diseases (prophylaxis with isoniazid against tuberculosis, use of anthelmintics, use of fluoride to prevent caries); measures to prevent injuries such as  traffic accidents, the product of family violence, wars, etcetera ; therapeutic interventions: in the treatment and early detection of infectious diseases (implementation of rapid tests for the detection of malaria); some surgical treatments; control of chronic diseases; and other types of interventions such as state subsidies (demonstrating the effectiveness of government subsidies in low-income populations, improving quality of health, nutrition and education); and others.

Field and community trials provide important information for making public health decisions and optimizing national health programs. Consequently, they should be further promoted.

Notes

From the editor
The authors originally submitted this article in Spanish and English. The Journal has not copyedited this English version.

Conflicts of interest
The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Financing
The authors declare that they have not received any funding for this letter.

Licencia Creative Commons Esta obra de Medwave está bajo una licencia Creative Commons Atribución-NoComercial 3.0 Unported. Esta licencia permite el uso, distribución y reproducción del artículo en cualquier medio, siempre y cuando se otorgue el crédito correspondiente al autor del artículo y al medio en que se publica, en este caso, Medwave.

 

Autores: Jorge Mario Piedra-Fernández[1,2], Gema Esmeralda Ganoza-Guerrero[1,2]

Filiación:
[1] Escuela de Postgrado, Universidad Privada Antenor Orrego, Trujillo, Perú
[2] Departamento de Pediatría, Hospital Belén, Trujillo, Perú

E-mail: jpiedrux@hotmail.com

Correspondencia a:
[1] Urbanización Covicorti
Manzana Z
lote 27
Trujillo
La Libertad
Perú

Citación: Piedra-Fernández JM, Ganoza-Guerrero GE. Field trials and community trials: importance in public health. Medwave 2016 Dic;16(11):e6797 doi: 10.5867/medwave.2016.11.6797

Fecha de publicación: 7/12/2016

Ficha PubMed

Comentarios (0)

Nos complace que usted tenga interés en comentar uno de nuestros artículos. Su comentario será publicado inmediatamente. No obstante, Medwave se reserva el derecho a eliminarlo posteriormente si la dirección editorial considera que su comentario es: ofensivo en algún sentido, irrelevante, trivial, contiene errores de lenguaje, contiene arengas políticas, obedece a fines comerciales, contiene datos de alguna persona en particular, o sugiere cambios en el manejo de pacientes que no hayan sido publicados previamente en alguna revista con revisión por pares.

Aún no hay comentarios en este artículo.


Para comentar debe iniciar sesión

Medwave publica las vistas HTML y descargas PDF por artículo, junto con otras métricas de redes sociales.

Se puede producir un retraso de 48 horas en la actualización de las estadísticas.

  1. Fors López MM. Los ensayos clínicos y su contribución a la salud pública cubana. Rev Cub Salud Pública. 2012 Jan;38(Suppl 5):771-780. | CrossRef |
  2. dos Santos- Silva I. Cancer Epidemiology. Principles and methods. Francia. International Agency for Research on Cancer, 1999 [on line]. | Link |
  3. Smith P, Morrow R, Ross D. Field trials of health interventions: A Toolbox. 3° Ed. Reino Unido. London school of hygiene and tropical medicine. 2015. | CrossRef |
  4. Gibson R, Sazawal S, Peerson J. Design and Quality Control Issues Related to Dietary Assessment, Randomized Clinical Trials and Meta-Analysis of Field-Based Studies in Developing Countries. J Nutr. 2003;133:1569S–1573S. | Link |
  5. Handlos, L. N., Chakraborty, H. and Sen, P. K. Evaluation of cluster-randomized trials on maternal and child health research in developing countries. Tropical Medicine & International Health, 2009; 14:947-956. | CrossRef |
Fors López MM. Los ensayos clínicos y su contribución a la salud pública cubana. Rev Cub Salud Pública. 2012 Jan;38(Suppl 5):771-780. | CrossRef |

dos Santos- Silva I. Cancer Epidemiology. Principles and methods. Francia. International Agency for Research on Cancer, 1999 [on line]. | Link |

Smith P, Morrow R, Ross D. Field trials of health interventions: A Toolbox. 3° Ed. Reino Unido. London school of hygiene and tropical medicine. 2015. | CrossRef |

Gibson R, Sazawal S, Peerson J. Design and Quality Control Issues Related to Dietary Assessment, Randomized Clinical Trials and Meta-Analysis of Field-Based Studies in Developing Countries. J Nutr. 2003;133:1569S–1573S. | Link |

Handlos, L. N., Chakraborty, H. and Sen, P. K. Evaluation of cluster-randomized trials on maternal and child health research in developing countries. Tropical Medicine & International Health, 2009; 14:947-956. | CrossRef |