Alisha Suhag
alishasuhag.bsky.social
Alisha Suhag
@alishasuhag.bsky.social
Epidemiologist at University of Bristol | Interested in Food systems • Environmental contaminants • Chronic disease prevention #CDOH
Reposted by Alisha Suhag
Shopping Data for Population Health Surveillance: Opportunities, Challenges, and Future Directions
Shopping Data for Population Health Surveillance: Opportunities, Challenges, and Future Directions
The growing ubiquity of digital footprint data presents new opportunities for behavioural epidemiology and public health research. Among these, supermarket loyalty card data—passively collected records of consumer purchases—offer objective, high-frequency insights into health-related behaviours at both individual and population levels. This article explores the potential of loyalty card data to strengthen public health surveillance across four key behavioural risk domains: diet, alcohol, tobacco, and over-the-counter medication use. Drawing on recent empirical studies, we outline how these data can complement traditional epidemiological data sources by improving exposure assessment, enabling real-time trend monitoring, and supporting intervention evaluation. We also discuss critical methodological and ethical challenges, including issues of representativeness, data integration, and privacy, as well as the need for robust validation strategies. By synthesising the current evidence base and offering practical recommendations for researchers, this paper highlights how loyalty card data can be responsibly leveraged to advance behavioural risk monitoring and support the adaptation of epidemiological practice to contemporary digital data environments.
dlvr.it
August 6, 2025 at 11:04 PM
Reposted by Alisha Suhag
As the Chemical Age dawned, environmental science adapted this language to explain its emergent understanding of ‘a new kind of fallout’, as Rachel Carson put it the 1960s. Then, during the 1990s, the phrase ‘legacy contaminants’ entered the vernacular. #ChemSky #NukeSky

[1] aeon.co/essays/how-2...
How 20th-century synthetics altered the very fabric of us all | Aeon Essays
Synthetics created in the 20th century have become an evolutionary force, altering human biology and the web of life
aeon.co
January 3, 2025 at 10:07 AM
Reposted by Alisha Suhag
The sun shone for a lovely evening of data chat.

#DigitalFootprints25
May 14, 2025 at 7:53 PM
Reposted by Alisha Suhag
Great session by @thegovlab.org at #DigitalFootprints25 on using social data for health and well-being research in population and public health, social sciences, and humanities

@digital-footprints.bsky.social
May 14, 2025 at 3:19 PM
Reposted by Alisha Suhag
Our interdisciplinary paper on improving ventilation in the hospitality sector is now online! We found that a lack of guidance + conflicting priorities were key barriers to ventilation, and examine the effectiveness/acceptability of a motivational + guidance intervention. doi.org/10.1016/j.in...
May 8, 2025 at 2:27 PM