27 research outputs found

    MDG Targets: Misunderstood or Misconceived?

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    .Poverty, MDG

    Metas dos ODM: Mal Compreendidas ou Mal Formuladas?

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    Em um recente One Pager, intitulado ?ODM: Metas Mal Compreendidas??, Jan Vandemoortele procura corrigir um ?equívoco comum? da visão convencional sobre os ODM?. Ele observa que ?os ODM eram essencialmente uma extrapolação das tendências globais de 1970 e 1980, projetadas até 2015? Assim, medir se o progresso está no bom caminho para o cumprimento dos objetivos em 2015 só pode ser feito a nível global? É errado lamentar, por exemplo, que a África Subsaariana não cumprirá os ODM, já que as metas não foram definidas especificamente para esta região.? O mesmo se aplica necessariamente ao nível nacional. Neste One Pager, argumenta-se que, se Vandemoortele estivesse correto, os ODM não seriam apenas mal compreendidos, mas também mal formulados. (...)Metas dos ODM: Mal Compreendidas ou Mal Formuladas?

    Objetivos de los ODM: ¿Malentendidos o Malinterpretados?

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    En un reciente One Pager titulado ?ODM: ¿Objetivos malentendidos??, Jan Vandemoortele busca corregir un ?malentendido común? en la visión convencional de los ODM?. Él observa que ?los ODM son, esencialmente, una extrapolación de tendencias globales de las décadas de los setenta y de los ochenta proyectadas hacia el año 2015? Por lo tanto, la evaluación para determinar si el progreso está en ?el camino cierto? a fin de atingir las metas en el año 2015 sólo puede ser realizada a nivel global? Es incorrecto, por ejemplo, lamentar que el África Subsahariana no atingirá los ODM. Esos objetivos no fueron determinados para aquella región específicamente?. Lo mismo se aplica, a fortiori, al nivel del país. Este One pager argumenta que si Vandemoortele estuviera cierto, los ODM no son tanto malentendidos como son malinterpretados. (...)Objetivos de los ODM: ¿Malentendidos o Malinterpretados?

    Les Objectifs des OMD: Mal Compris ou Mal Conçus?

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    OMD, Les Objectifs

    The unfinished agenda of communicable diseases among children and adolescents before the COVID-19 pandemic, 1990-2019: a systematic analysis of the Global Burden of Disease Study 2019

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    BACKGROUND: Communicable disease control has long been a focus of global health policy. There have been substantial reductions in the burden and mortality of communicable diseases among children younger than 5 years, but we know less about this burden in older children and adolescents, and it is unclear whether current programmes and policies remain aligned with targets for intervention. This knowledge is especially important for policy and programmes in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. We aimed to use the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) Study 2019 to systematically characterise the burden of communicable diseases across childhood and adolescence. METHODS: In this systematic analysis of the GBD study from 1990 to 2019, all communicable diseases and their manifestations as modelled within GBD 2019 were included, categorised as 16 subgroups of common diseases or presentations. Data were reported for absolute count, prevalence, and incidence across measures of cause-specific mortality (deaths and years of life lost), disability (years lived with disability [YLDs]), and disease burden (disability-adjusted life-years [DALYs]) for children and adolescents aged 0-24 years. Data were reported across the Socio-demographic Index (SDI) and across time (1990-2019), and for 204 countries and territories. For HIV, we reported the mortality-to-incidence ratio (MIR) as a measure of health system performance. FINDINGS: In 2019, there were 3·0 million deaths and 30·0 million years of healthy life lost to disability (as measured by YLDs), corresponding to 288·4 million DALYs from communicable diseases among children and adolescents globally (57·3% of total communicable disease burden across all ages). Over time, there has been a shift in communicable disease burden from young children to older children and adolescents (largely driven by the considerable reductions in children younger than 5 years and slower progress elsewhere), although children younger than 5 years still accounted for most of the communicable disease burden in 2019. Disease burden and mortality were predominantly in low-SDI settings, with high and high-middle SDI settings also having an appreciable burden of communicable disease morbidity (4·0 million YLDs in 2019 alone). Three cause groups (enteric infections, lower-respiratory-tract infections, and malaria) accounted for 59·8% of the global communicable disease burden in children and adolescents, with tuberculosis and HIV both emerging as important causes during adolescence. HIV was the only cause for which disease burden increased over time, particularly in children and adolescents older than 5 years, and especially in females. Excess MIRs for HIV were observed for males aged 15-19 years in low-SDI settings. INTERPRETATION: Our analysis supports continued policy focus on enteric infections and lower-respiratory-tract infections, with orientation to children younger than 5 years in settings of low socioeconomic development. However, efforts should also be targeted to other conditions, particularly HIV, given its increased burden in older children and adolescents. Older children and adolescents also experience a large burden of communicable disease, further highlighting the need for efforts to extend beyond the first 5 years of life. Our analysis also identified substantial morbidity caused by communicable diseases affecting child and adolescent health across the world. FUNDING: The Australian National Health and Medical Research Council Centre for Research Excellence for Driving Investment in Global Adolescent Health and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

    Global, regional, and national burden of disorders affecting the nervous system, 1990–2021: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2021

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    BackgroundDisorders affecting the nervous system are diverse and include neurodevelopmental disorders, late-life neurodegeneration, and newly emergent conditions, such as cognitive impairment following COVID-19. Previous publications from the Global Burden of Disease, Injuries, and Risk Factor Study estimated the burden of 15 neurological conditions in 2015 and 2016, but these analyses did not include neurodevelopmental disorders, as defined by the International Classification of Diseases (ICD)-11, or a subset of cases of congenital, neonatal, and infectious conditions that cause neurological damage. Here, we estimate nervous system health loss caused by 37 unique conditions and their associated risk factors globally, regionally, and nationally from 1990 to 2021.MethodsWe estimated mortality, prevalence, years lived with disability (YLDs), years of life lost (YLLs), and disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs), with corresponding 95% uncertainty intervals (UIs), by age and sex in 204 countries and territories, from 1990 to 2021. We included morbidity and deaths due to neurological conditions, for which health loss is directly due to damage to the CNS or peripheral nervous system. We also isolated neurological health loss from conditions for which nervous system morbidity is a consequence, but not the primary feature, including a subset of congenital conditions (ie, chromosomal anomalies and congenital birth defects), neonatal conditions (ie, jaundice, preterm birth, and sepsis), infectious diseases (ie, COVID-19, cystic echinococcosis, malaria, syphilis, and Zika virus disease), and diabetic neuropathy. By conducting a sequela-level analysis of the health outcomes for these conditions, only cases where nervous system damage occurred were included, and YLDs were recalculated to isolate the non-fatal burden directly attributable to nervous system health loss. A comorbidity correction was used to calculate total prevalence of all conditions that affect the nervous system combined.FindingsGlobally, the 37 conditions affecting the nervous system were collectively ranked as the leading group cause of DALYs in 2021 (443 million, 95% UI 378–521), affecting 3·40 billion (3·20–3·62) individuals (43·1%, 40·5–45·9 of the global population); global DALY counts attributed to these conditions increased by 18·2% (8·7–26·7) between 1990 and 2021. Age-standardised rates of deaths per 100 000 people attributed to these conditions decreased from 1990 to 2021 by 33·6% (27·6–38·8), and age-standardised rates of DALYs attributed to these conditions decreased by 27·0% (21·5–32·4). Age-standardised prevalence was almost stable, with a change of 1·5% (0·7–2·4). The ten conditions with the highest age-standardised DALYs in 2021 were stroke, neonatal encephalopathy, migraine, Alzheimer's disease and other dementias, diabetic neuropathy, meningitis, epilepsy, neurological complications due to preterm birth, autism spectrum disorder, and nervous system cancer.InterpretationAs the leading cause of overall disease burden in the world, with increasing global DALY counts, effective prevention, treatment, and rehabilitation strategies for disorders affecting the nervous system are needed

    Reforming energy subsidies: The Iran model

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    Removing fuel subsidies is a tricky business. Many governments try and fail, often having to backtrack in the face of public protest or political opposition. Bolivia and Nigeria are only the latest examples. Price increases do not have to be huge to provoke opposition. Iran had that experience a few years ago when a government decreed 20 percent increase was rolled back after a year by a parliament dominated by a rival political current. It is all the more remarkable, therefore, that in December 2010 Iran itself managed to put in place one of the most radical fuel subsidy reforms ever attempted anywhere and make it stick. Prices of various fuels and related products (electricity, water, and so on) were raised not by a paltry percentage but several-fold, overnight, and all at the same time. And that was only the first round. A second round of increases is now around the corner, to be followed by yet more in due course until domestic prices are brought into line with international prices

    The Basic Income Road to Reforming Iran's Price Subsidies

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    Iran has become the first country in the world to provide a de facto basic income to all its citizens. This article reviews the development of the main component of Irans economic reform plan the replacement of fuel and food subsidies with direct cash transfers to the population and shows how a system of universal, regular and unconditional cash transfers emerged almost by default as a by-product of an attempt to transform an inefficient and unfair system of price subsidies. The main features of the cash subsidy system are compared with those of a basic income; then some lessons from this experience are drawn that may enhance the prospects of basic income as a realistic proposition.
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