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Milk and dairy consumption and risk of cardiovascular diseases and all-cause mortality: dose-response meta-analysis of prospective cohort studies
With a growing number of prospective cohort studies, an updated dose-response meta-analysis of milk and dairy products with all-cause mortality, coronary heart disease (CHD) or cardiovascular disease (CVD) have been conducted. PubMed, Embase and Scopus were searched for articles published up to September 2016. Random-effect meta-analyses with summarised dose-response data were performed for total (high-fat/low-fat) dairy, milk, fermented dairy, cheese and yogurt. Non-linear associations were investigated using the spine models and heterogeneity by subgroup analyses. A total of 29 cohort studies were available for meta-analysis, with 938,465 participants and 93,158 mortality, 28,419 CHD and 25,416 CVD cases. No associations were found for total (high-fat/low-fat) dairy, and milk with the health outcomes of mortality, CHD or CVD. Inverse associations were found between total fermented dairy (included sour milk products, cheese or yogurt; per 20 g/day) with mortality (RR 0.98, 95% CI 0.97-0.99; I2 = 94.4%) and CVD risk (RR 0.98, 95% CI 0.97-0.99; I2 = 87.5%). Further analyses of individual fermented dairy of cheese and yogurt showed cheese to have a 2% lower risk of CVD (RR 0.98, 95% CI 0.95-1.00; I2 = 82.6%) per 10 g/day, but not yogurt. All of these marginally inverse associations of totally fermented dairy and cheese were attenuated in sensitivity analyses by removing one large Swedish study. This meta-analysis combining data from 29 prospective cohort studies demonstrated neutral associations between dairy products and cardiovascular and all-cause mortality. For future studies it is important to investigate in more detail how dairy products can be replaced by other foods
Association between dietary patterns and the risk of metabolic syndrome among Lebanese adults
Differences in musculoskeletal health due to gender in a rural multiethnic cohort: a Project FRONTIER study
Questions and Answers on the Belgian Model of Integral End-of-Life Care: Experiment? Prototype?
Padrões alimentares estimados por tĂ©cnicas multivariadas: uma revisĂŁo da literatura sobre os procedimentos adotados nas etapas analĂticas
Development of palliative care and legalisation of euthanasia: antagonism or synergy?
Debates about euthanasia often polarise opinion, but Jan Bernheim and colleagues describe how in Belgium the two camps grew up side by side to mutual benefi
Should semiautomatic defibrillators be used by emergency medical technicians in Belgium
Early external defibrillation is the single most effective intervention in patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. Literature data indicate that instructing emergency medical technicians (EMTs) to use defibrillators is beneficial, provided the local emergency medical system is well organized.
We tried to estimate the potential benefit of early defibrillation in some centres in Belgium by retrospectively analyzing the data from the Belgian Cardio-Pulmonary-Cerebral Resuscitation Registry collected between 1983 and 1987 in Belgian centres with a Mobile Intensive Care Unit (MICU).
The data show that 2310 out of 3371 patients (69%) were first attended by the EMTs; on subsequent arrival of the MICU-teams, 584 of these 2310 patients i.e. 17% of the whole study population, presented with ventricular fibrillation. Analysis of estimated time factors in these 2310 patients revealed that the median time interval between collapse and start of resuscitation by EMTs was 8 min; the median time interval between collapse and start of MICU-resuscitation attempts was 16 min. The duration of EMT-resuscitation before MICU-arrival was probably more than 5 min and 10 min in 58% and 23% of the cases respectively.
It is concluded that EMTs can be expected to reach a substantial number of ventricular fibrillation victims within a few minutes after the collapse and many minutes before arrival of the MICU. Therefore, training of EMTs in the use of semi-automatic defibrillators seems worthwhile in MICU-served regions in Belgium
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