What is Pracademic Solutions?

Having worked in the code enforcement arena for over a decade, I have observed the many frustrations faced by inexperienced property owners, contractors, and real estate developers.  I have also observed, first hand, the difficulties confronted by local officials when asked to develop regulations, protocols, and procedures for novel programs in their respective fields.  It is with this experience that Pracademic Solutions was born.

Pracademic Solutions was created to fill a gap in both the public and private industries.  Oftentimes solutions to common problems are addressed from just a scientific, or strictly academic, direction.  Public health and public safety codes are filled with many prescriptive requirements that result from many laws and regulations.  In the private sector, this has resulted in a heavy reliance on Registered Design Professionals (i.e., Registered Architects and Professional Engineers).  In the public sector, this results in increased reliance on boilerplate methods, or hiring of consulting practices who rely heavily upon the newest academic research, as well as attorneys and Registered Design Professionals.

The problem inherent in both of these sectors is that many of these outside consultants, or experts, have limited (or no) experience "on the ground" in their respective fields.  They can apply the most current knowledge, and have extensive experience in research methods and community engagement, but they are lacking the practice-based background that is necessary to provide their clients with a solution that is rooted in both academic knowledge and practical experience.

The team at Pracademic Solutions is comprised of subject-matter experts  in the fields of building construction, public health, urban planning, and environmental health.  The team has extensive experience working in leadership positions at the local and state levels, as well as with many of the largest professional associations in their respective fields

At Pracademic Solutions, we strive to help our clients implement practical solutions that will result in sustainable, quality, outcomes to our clients' problems that incorporate field-based experience with the most recent academic research.

Systematic review in Environmental Health policy / research

A recent issue of Environmental Health Perspectives described a new methodology for performance of systematic review for Environmental Health research and policymaking.    The EHP framework, known as the Navigation Guide, sets up a methodology for conducting systematic review in Environmental Health (found at http://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/1307175/).  Case studies, focusing on the outcomes of PFOA exposure are described in later articles in the October 2014 issue of EHP (http://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/october-2014/),

Given the potential strengths of systematic review in the identification and quantification of a public health problem, I am concerned that the understanding of the uses of systematic review -- and its associated statistical tests -- will be improperly applied as a proxy for causality.

Before widespread use of systematic review is expanded, the environmental health workforce and policymaking bodies need to obtain more education about the strengths and limitations of systematic review.  It has been well-characterized and implemented in evidence-based medicine -- where they are capable of targeting RCTs for their inclusion -- but much of the Environmental Health research is observational in nature, and lacks the consistency in controls that are integrated into the design of RCTs.  I have, personally, seen the improper application of systematic review (in my personal opinion) results in order to push specific researchers' agendas -- sometimes having these results published in such noted journals as BMJ Neurology.