5 results
Search Results
2. Taking The “Call To Action” Forward—What Can Be Achieved In Europe?
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EPILEPSY , *PUBLIC health , *MEDICAL personnel , *PROFESSIONAL employees in government - Abstract
More than 100 leaders of European professional and lay bodies, representatives of the World Health Organisation, and health experts from governments and universities came together in 1998 to discuss and adopt a European Declaration on Epilepsy. As part of the Declaration, member States were urged to support the publication of a "White Paper" as a detailed public health statement on epilepsy in Europe. Consequently, in response to the European Declaration on Epilepsy, a number of experts and professional bodies from across Europe have been drawn together to produce the "European White Paper on Epilepsy."
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- 2003
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3. Influenza surveillance in Europe: establishing epidemic thresholds by the Moving Epidemic Method.
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Vega, Tomás, Lozano, Jose Eugenio, Meerhoff, Tamara, Snacken, René, Mott, Joshua, Ortiz de Lejarazu, Raul, and Nunes, Baltazar
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INFLUENZA viruses , *EPIDEMICS , *RESPIRATORY infections , *PERFORMANCE evaluation , *SENSITIVITY analysis , *PUBLIC health - Abstract
Please cite this paper as: Vega et al. (2012) Influenza surveillance in Europe: establishing epidemic thresholds by the moving epidemic method. Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses 7(4), 546-558. Background Timely influenza surveillance is important to monitor influenza epidemics. Objectives (i) To calculate the epidemic threshold for influenza-like illness (ILI) and acute respiratory infections (ARI) in 19 countries, as well as the thresholds for different levels of intensity. (ii) To evaluate the performance of these thresholds. Methods The moving epidemic method (MEM) has been developed to determine the baseline influenza activity and an epidemic threshold. False alerts, detection lags and timeliness of the detection of epidemics were calculated. The performance was evaluated using a cross-validation procedure. Results The overall sensitivity of the MEM threshold was 71·8% and the specificity was 95·5%. The median of the timeliness was 1 week (range: 0-4·5). Conclusions The method produced a robust and specific signal to detect influenza epidemics. The good balance between the sensitivity and specificity of the epidemic threshold to detect seasonal epidemics and avoid false alerts has advantages for public health purposes. This method may serve as standard to define the start of the annual influenza epidemic in countries in Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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4. ETHICAL MODELS UNDERPINNING RESPONSES TO THREATS TO PUBLIC HEALTH: A COMPARISON OF APPROACHES TO COMMUNICABLE DISEASE CONTROL IN EUROPE.
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GAINOTTI, SABINA, MORAN, NICOLA, PETRINI, CARLO, and SHICKLE, DARREN
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PREVENTION of communicable diseases , *PUBLIC health laws , *HUMAN services , *GOVERNMENT policy , *PUBLIC health , *MEDICAL laws , *INTERNATIONAL travel - Abstract
Increases in international travel and migratory flows have enabled infectious diseases to emerge and spread more rapidly than ever before. Hence, it is increasingly easy for local infectious diseases to become global infectious diseases (GIDs). National governments must be able to react quickly and effectively to GIDs, whether naturally occurring or intentionally instigated by bioterrorism. According to the World Health Organisation, global partnerships are necessary to gather the most up-to-date information and to mobilize resources to tackle GIDs when necessary. Communicable disease control also depends upon national public health laws and policies. The containment of an infectious disease typically involves detection, notification, quarantine and isolation of actual or suspected cases; the protection and monitoring of those not infected; and possibly even treatment. Some measures are clearly contentious and raise conflicts between individual and societal interests. In Europe national policies against infectious diseases are very heterogeneous. Some countries have a more communitarian approach to public health ethics, in which the interests of individual and society are more closely intertwined and interdependent, while others take a more liberal approach and give priority to individual freedoms in communicable disease control. This paper provides an overview of the different policies around communicable disease control that exist across a select number of countries across Europe. It then proposes ethical arguments to be considered in the making of public health laws, mostly concerning their effectiveness for public health protection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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5. MASS-VACCINATION PROGRAMMES AND THE VALUE OF RESPECT FOR AUTONOMY.
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ASVELD, LOTTE
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VACCINATION , *VACCINES , *HEALTH promotion , *HEALTH policy , *PUBLIC health , *HEALTH - Abstract
Respect for autonomy is problematic in relation to public health programmes such as vaccination, as the success of such programmes depends on widespread compliance. European countries have different policies for dealing with objectors to vaccination programmes. In some countries compliance is compulsory, while in others objectors are exempted or allowed to enter the programme under specific conditions. In this paper I argue that the objectors should not be treated as a homogenous group as is done in the above-mentioned policies. Objectors have different arguments for not participating in vaccination programmes. Considering the value of respect for autonomy, some but not all of these arguments need to be accommodated by authorities. The concept of ‘narrative autonomy’ provides criteria to distinguish between tenable and untenable claims to the right to refuse vaccination. Narrative autonomy understands autonomy as essentially linked to identity, as this provides the moral framework with which we assess our first-order preferences. The above-mentioned concept of autonomy is derived from the concept of narrative identity as described by Marya Schechtman. She suggests that the application of the Articulation Constraint and the Reality Constraint enables us to establish the validity of personal narratives. Additionally, form and content features of identity, as proposed by Anthony Laden, will be used as criteria to establish the compatibility of the defectors’ arguments with shared scientific and political values. Such compatibility is essential to accommodate respect for autonomy in the context of public health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
- Full Text
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