The American Journal of Field Epidemiology (ISSN 2837-3405) is a quarterly academic, peer-reviewed, open-access publication disseminating the findings of the work of professionals responding to urgent public health problems, including but not limited to epidemics.

The American Field Epidemiology Association publishes the American Journal of Field Epidemiology, which is academically affiliated with ECOSUR, Mexico's College of the Southern Border. The members of the Board are faculty  of ECOSUR. The purpose of the Association, which is a domestic US non-profit corporation with 501 (c) 3 status under the United States tax code, are:

1) to foster the development and application of the science of epidemiology to disease outbreak/epidemic field investigations and other acute public health emergencies in America, 2) to support the training of professionals in field epidemiology, and 3) to disseminate their findings in the American Journal of Field Epidemiology.

        

             

                 

 

Vol. 2 No. 1 (2024)

Published: 2024-06-01

Time series analysis: climate and respiratory events in Cundinamarca, Colombia, 2009 to 2018

Fabian Camilo Salgado Escobar, Claudia Marcela Muñoz, Luis Carlos Gómez Ortega, Paola Elena León Velasco, Luis Reinaldo Barreto Pedraza, Isabel Cristina Hoyos, Milcíades Romero, Sonia Diaz, María Natalia Muñoz, Oscar Alberto Rojas, Jorge Alberto Gamarra Cuellar, Claudia Huguett Aragón, Milena Edith Borbón, Oscar Eduardo Pacheco García

10-19

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The American Field Epidemiology Association is a non-governmental not-for-profit organization, based in Little Rock, Arkansas, incorporated in the State, that obtained 501 (c) 3 tax-exempt status from the US Internal Revenue Service, instituted with the vision of increasing the recognition of the discipline of field epidemiology and with the mission of: 1)  fostering the development of the science of epidemiology applied to the investigation of
disease outbreaks and other acute public health emergencies in the Americas, 2) gaining increased recognition for the work of field epidemiologists,  3) obtaining support to sponsor
scientific meetings, and publications such as the American Journal of Field
Epidemiology, and 4)  to engage field epidemiologists in educational and training activities.