3,142 research outputs found

    Start With a Girl: A New Agenda for Global Health

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    Examines how social factors shape the health issues adolescent girls face in developing countries. Calls for a health agenda for girls, including focused HIV prevention and maternal health advocacy; elimination of child marriage; and secondary education

    The Emerging Global Health Crisis: Noncommunicable Diseases in Low-and Middle-Icome Countries

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    The report begins by examining NCDs (noncommunicable diseases) in developing countries and the factors driving their increasing prevalence. The analysis reveals that NCDs are rising faster, affecting younger populations, and having worse health and economic outcomes than seen in developed countries. This growing epidemic, the report says, is not merely the unfortunate byproduct of higher incomes and declining infectious disease rates. The report credits the confluence of several dramatic trends for driving the increase in NCDs: unprecedented rates of urbanization, global integration of consumer markets, and advances in longevity in still-poor countries that lack sufficient health systems to adjust. The report also assesses the case for increased U.S. focus on NCDs. That assessment includes an examination of the countries that receive significant U.S. health assistance and finds that premature burden of death and disability in many of these countries is heavily NCD-related. The Task Force concludes that deeper U.S. involvement on NCDs is needed to ensure the continued effectiveness and credibility of U.S. global health programs in these countries, to advance U.S. trade with emerging economies, and to build institutional capacity in states of U.S. strategic concern

    Non-Communicable Disease Alliance Moving Forward Follow-Up to the United Nations High-Level Meeting

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    Health burden and economic costs of smoking in Chile: The potential impact of increasing cigarettes prices

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    Background: Globally, tobacco consumption continues to cause a huge burden of preventable diseases. Chile has been leading the tobacco burden ranking in the Latin American region for the last ten years; it has currently a 33. 3% prevalence of current smokers. Methods: A microsimulation economic model was developed within the framework of a multi-country project in order to estimate the burden attributable to smoking in terms of morbidity, mortality, disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs), and direct costs of care. We also modelled the impact of increasing cigarettes' taxes on this burden. Results: In Chile, 16,472 deaths were attributable to smoking in 2017, which represent around 16% of all deaths. This burden corresponds to 416,445 DALYs per year. The country's health system spends 1.15 trillion pesos annually (in Dec 2017 CLP, approx. U$D 1.8 billion) in health care treatment of illnesses caused by smoking. If the price of tobacco cigarettes was to be raised by 50%, around 13,665 deaths and 360,476 DALYs from smoking-attributable diseases would be averted in 10 years, with subsequent savings on health care costs, and increased tax revenue collection. In Chile, the tobacco tax collection does not fully cover the direct healthcare costs attributed to smoking. Conclusion: Despite a reduction observed on smoking prevalence between 2010 (40.6%) and 2017 (33.3%), this study shows that the burden of disease, and the economic toll due to smoking, remain high. As we demonstrate, a rise in the price of cigarettes could lead to a significant reduction of this burden, averting deaths and disability, and reducing healthcare spending.Fil: Castillo Riquelme, Marianela. Universidad de Chile; ChileFil: Bardach, Ariel Esteban. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂ­ficas y TĂ©cnicas. Oficina de CoordinaciĂłn Administrativa Parque Centenario. Centro de Investigaciones en EpidemiologĂ­a y Salud PĂșblica. Instituto de Efectividad ClĂ­nica y Sanitaria. Centro de Investigaciones en EpidemiologĂ­a y Salud PĂșblica; ArgentinaFil: Palacios, Alfredo. Instituto de Efectividad ClĂ­nica y Sanitaria; ArgentinaFil: PichĂłn-riviere, Andres. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂ­ficas y TĂ©cnicas. Oficina de CoordinaciĂłn Administrativa Parque Centenario. Centro de Investigaciones en EpidemiologĂ­a y Salud PĂșblica. Instituto de Efectividad ClĂ­nica y Sanitaria. Centro de Investigaciones en EpidemiologĂ­a y Salud PĂșblica; Argentin

    Parity and diabetes risk among Hispanic women from Colombia: Cross-sectional evidence

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    Objective The association between parity and type 2 diabetes has been studied in developed countries and in Singapore and Chinese women but not in Hispanics. Herein we evaluated the association between parity (number of live births) with diabetes in a group of Hispanic postmenopausal women from Colombia. Research design and methods Herein we evaluated the association between parity and diabetes in a population of 1,795 women from Colombia. Women were divided in birth categories (0 [referent], 1 or 2, 3–5, 6 or \u3e births). Medical history of diabetes and anthropometric characteristics were recorded. Logistic regressions were performed in order to find the association between parity and diabetes in bivariable and multivariable models after controlling for age, body mass index (BMI), waist hip ratio (WHR) and diabetes family history, among other variables. Results In our study, there was an association between parity and diabetes after adjusting for age, BMI and diabetes family history in the multiparous women groups when compared to the women with no births (Referent group) [1–2 births vs. referent OR 5.2 (95 CI 1.2–22.9), 3–5 births vs. referent OR 5.5 (1.3–23.0) and ≄6 births vs. referent OR 7.5 (1.8–31.8), respectively]. The association was maintained in two of the groups in the multivariable analysis [OR 5.0 (1.1–22.9) and 5.3 (1.2–23.5)], for 1 or 2 births and 6 or \u3e births versus 0 births, respectively. Positive diabetes family history and WHR were also associated with an increased risk of diabetes [OR 4.6 (3.0–7.0) and 4.1 (2.0–8.1), respectively]. Conclusions In postmenopausal Hispanic women, multiparity, as well as a positive family history of diabetes and a high waist-hip ratio were associated with higher diabetes risk

    How did we get here? A critical analysis of WHO's World Health Reports (1995-2013)

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    M.Phil. in Global Health - ThesisINTH395AMAMD-GLO

    Inflammation and Hypertension: Are There Regional Differences?

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    Hypertension is a chronic disease with global prevalence and incidence rapidly increasing in low and medium income countries. The surveillance of cardiovascular risk factors, such as hypertension, is a global health priority in order to estimate the burden and trends, to appropriately direct resources, and to measure the effect of interventions. We propose here that the adoption of Western lifestyles in low and middle incomes countries has dramatically increased the prevalence of abdominal obesity, which is the main source of proinflammatory cytokines, and that the vascular systemic inflammation produced by adipose tissue contributes to the development of hypertension. The concentration of proinflammatory cytokines is higher in the Latin American population than that reported in developed countries, suggesting a higher susceptibility to develop systemic low-degree inflammation at a given level of abdominal obesity. These particularities are important to be considered when planning resources for health care programs. Moreover, studying these singularities may provide a better understanding of the causes of the burden of cardiovascular risk factors and the remarkable variability in the prevalence of these medical conditions within and between countries
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