19 research outputs found

    The burden of breast, cervical, and colon and rectum cancer in the Balkan countries, 1990–2019 and forecast to 2030.

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    Background Despite effective prevention and control strategies, in countries of the Balkan region, cancers are the second leading cause of mortality, closely following circulatory system diseases. Objective To describe trends in the burden of breast, cervical, and colon and rectum cancer in the Balkan region and per country between 1990 and 2019, including a forecast to 2030. Methods We described the 2019 Global Burden of Disease (GBD) estimates for breast, cervical, and colon and rectum cancers in eleven Balkan countries over the period 1990–2019, including incidence, years lived with disability (YLD), years of life lost (YLL), and disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) rates per 100,000 population and accompanied 95% uncertainty interval. With the Autoregressive Integrated Moving Average, we forecasted these rates per country up to 2030. Results In the Balkan region, the highest incidence and DALYs rates in the study period were for colon and rectum, and breast cancers. Over the study period, the DALYs rates for breast cancer per 100,000 population were the highest in Serbia (reaching 670.84 in 2019) but the lowest in Albania (reaching 271.24 in 2019). In 2019, the highest incidence of breast cancer (85 /100,000) and highest YLD rate (64 /100,000) were observed in Greece. Romania had the highest incidence rates, YLD rates, DALY rates, and YLL rates of cervical cancer, with respective 20.59%, 23.39% 4.00%, and 3.47% increases for the 1990/2019 period, and the highest forecasted burden for cervical cancer in 2030. The highest incidence rates, YLD rates and DALY rates of colon and rectum cancers were continuously recorded in Croatia (an increase of 130.75%, 48.23%, and 63.28%, respectively), while the highest YLL rates were in Bulgaria (an increase of 63.85%). The YLL rates due to colon and rectum cancers are forecasted to progress by 2030 in all Balkan countries. Conclusion As most of the DALYs burden for breast, cervical, and colon and rectum cancer is due to premature mortality, the numerous country-specific barriers to cancer early detection and quality and care continuum should be a public priority of multi-stakeholder collaboration in the Balkan region

    Burden of non-communicable disease studies in Europe: a systematic review of data sources and methodological choices

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    Background: Assessment of disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) resulting from non-communicable diseases (NCDs) requires specific calculation methods and input data. The aims of this study were to (i) identify existing NCD burden of disease (BoD) activities in Europe; (ii) collate information on data sources for mortality and morbidity; and (iii) provide an overview of NCD-specific methods for calculating NCD DALYs. Methods: NCD BoD studies were systematically searched in international electronic literature databases and in grey literature. We included all BoD studies that used the DALY metric to quantify the health impact of one or more NCDs in countries belonging to the European Region. Results: A total of 163 BoD studies were retained: 96 (59%) were single-country or sub-national studies and 67 (41%) considered more than one country. Of the single-country studies, 29 (30%) consisted of secondary analyses using existing Global Burden of Disease (GBD) results. Mortality data were mainly derived (49%) from vital statistics. Morbidity data were frequently (40%) drawn from routine administrative and survey datasets, including disease registries and hospital discharge databases. The majority (60%) of national BoD studies reported mortality corrections. Multimorbidity adjustments were performed in 18% of national BoD studies. Conclusion: The number of national NCD BoD assessments across Europe increased over time, driven by an increase in BoD studies that consisted of secondary data analysis of GBD study findings. Ambiguity in reporting the use of NCD-specific BoD methods underlines the need for reporting guidelines of BoD studies to enhance the transparency of NCD BoD estimates across Europe

    Statistiche culturali. Anno 1998

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    Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche - Biblioteca Centrale - P.le Aldo Moro, 7 , Rome / CNR - Consiglio Nazionale delle RichercheSIGLEITItal

    Pain management in eras® approach for abdominal surgery: a narrative review

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    Greater fear or distress prior to surgery is associated with a slower and more complicated postoperative recovery. The main objective of this study is to examine the best evidence of the perioperative pain management in patients candidated for abdominal surgery comparing the clinical outcomes achieved with the ERAS® protocol to those achieved with traditional perioperative management. The studies showed that perioperative analgesia was more effective with ERAS® protocol than with traditional treatments. The key element of the ERAS® protocol is to minimize the psychophysical stress related to the surgical intervention, through a multimodal and multidisciplinary approach

    Pain management in ERAS approach for abdominal surgery: A narrative review

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    Tra tutte le fasi dell’intervento chirurgico, la fase preoperatoria è generalmente vissuta dal paziente con maggiore ansia. Studi in merito dimostrano che una maggiore percezione dell’ansia o paura nella fase preoperatoria sia scientificamente correlata a un decorso postoperatorio prolungato. Il dolore è annoverato tra le principali cause che recano ansia al paziente. L’obiettivo della presente revisione della letteratura è quello di esaminare la letteratura in merito alla gestione del dolore preoperatorio nei pazienti candidati alla chirurgia addominale, confrontando gli outcome clinici dei pazienti sottoposti a metodologia ERAS® con quelli ottenuti con una gestione perioperatoria tradizionale. Gli studi hanno dimostrato che l’analgesia perioperatoria è più efficace con il protocollo ERAS® rispetto ai trattamenti tradizionali. L’elemento chiave del protocollo ERAS® è la minimizzazione dello stress psicofisico legato all’intervento chirurgico, attraverso un approccio multimodale e multidisciplinare.Greater fear or distress prior to surgery is associated with a slower and more complicated postoperative recovery. The main objective of this study is to examine the best evidence of the perioperative pain management in patients candidated for abdominal surgery comparing the clinical outcomes achieved with the ERAS® protocol to those achieved with traditional perioperative management. The studies showed that perioperative analgesia was more effective with ERAS® protocol than with traditional treatments. The key element of the ERAS® protocol is to minimize the psychophysical stress related to the surgical intervention, through a multimodal and multidisciplinary approach

    Methodological considerations in injury burden of disease studies across Europe: a systematic literature review

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    Background: Calculating the disease burden due to injury is complex, as it requires many methodological choices. Until now, an overview of the methodological design choices that have been made in burden of disease (BoD) studies in injury populations is not available. The aim of this systematic literature review was to identify existing injury BoD studies undertaken across Europe and to comprehensively review the methodological design choices and assumption parameters that have been made to calculate years of life lost (YLL) and years lived with disability (YLD) in these studies. Methods: We searched EMBASE, MEDLINE, Cochrane Central, Google Scholar, and Web of Science, and the grey literature supplemented by handsearching, for BoD studies. We included injury BoD studies that quantified the BoD expressed in YLL, YLD, and disability-adjusted life years (DALY) in countries within the European Region between early-1990 and mid-2021. Results: We retrieved 2,914 results of which 48 performed an injury-specific BoD assessment. Single-country independent and Global Burden of Disease (GBD)-linked injury BoD studies were performed in 11 European countries. Approximately 79% of injury BoD studies reported the BoD by external cause-of-injury. Most independent studies used the incidence-based approach to calculate YLDs. About half of the injury disease burden studies applied disability weights (DWs) developed by the GBD study. Almost all independent injury studies have determined YLL using national life tables. Conclusions: Considerable methodological variation across independent injury BoD assessments was observed; differences were mainly apparent in the design choices and assumption parameters towards injury YLD calculations, implementation of DWs, and the choice of life table for YLL calculations. Development and use of guidelines for performing and reporting of injury BoD studies is crucial to enhance transparency and comparability of injury BoD estimates across Europe and beyond
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