1,481 results on '"World Health"'
Search Results
2. Global health 2050: the path to halving premature death by mid-century.
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Jamison, Dean T, Summers, Lawrence H, Chang, Angela Y, Karlsson, Omar, Mao, Wenhui, Norheim, Ole F, Ogbuoji, Osondu, Schäferhoff, Marco, Watkins, David, Adeyi, Olusoji, Alleyne, George, Alwan, Ala, Anand, Shuchi, Belachew, Ruth, Berkley, Seth F, Bertozzi, Stefano M, Bolongaita, Sarah, Bundy, Donald, Bustreo, Flavia, and Castro, Marcia C
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EARLY death , *WORLD health - Published
- 2024
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3. Germany's role in global health at a critical juncture.
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Franz, Christian, Holzscheiter, Anna, and Kickbusch, Ilona
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WORLD health , *COVID-19 pandemic , *INTERNATIONAL organization , *TRUST - Abstract
In 2017, we set out—along with a larger group of authors—to assess Germany's contribution and potential leadership role in global health. We considered the ambitions and manifold efforts of Chancellor Angela Merkel's administration to become a trusted leader in global health governance and a reliable supporter of multilateral institutions, especially WHO. Based on the recommendations of our 2017 paper, in this Review we determine whether the country has indeed lived up to its vision and ambitions expressed in the Global Health Strategy adopted by the cabinet in 2020. Also, we outline what challenges Germany is now facing in a more complex global health environment and geopolitical situation, where leadership in the field is being redefined following the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and amid broader shifts in the international order. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Global mental health and collaborative care.
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Berk, Michael, Williams, Lana J, and Stein, Dan J
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MENTAL health services , *WORLD health - Published
- 2024
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5. Shifting power in global health will require leadership by the Global South and allyship by the Global North.
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Pai, Madhukar, Bandara, Shashika, and Kyobutungi, Catherine
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WORLD health , *LEADERSHIP ,DEVELOPING countries - Published
- 2024
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6. A legal mapping of 48 WHO member states' inclusion of public health emergency of international concern, pandemic, and health emergency terminology within national emergency legislation in responding to health emergencies.
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Wenham, Clare and Stout, Liam
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WAR & emergency legislation , *COVID-19 pandemic , *WORLD health , *PANDEMICS , *PUBLIC health - Abstract
WHO has determined a public health emergency of international concern (PHEIC) seven times, and beyond this nomenclature declared COVID-19 to be a pandemic. Under the International Health Regulations (IHR), and through their operationalisation in the joint external evaluation (JEE), governments are urged to create suitable legislation to be able to enact a response to a public health emergency. Whether the pandemic declaration had a greater effect than a PHEIC in encouraging goverments to act, however, remains conjecture, as there is no systemic analysis of what each term means in practice and whether either has meaningful legal implications at the national level. We undertook a legal scoping review to assess the utilisation of PHEIC and pandemic language within national legislation in 28 WHO member states. Data were collected from national websites, JEE reviews, COVID Analysis and Mapping of Policies Tool, Natlex, and Oxford Compendium of National Legal Responses to COVID-19. We found that only 16% of countries have any reference to the PHEIC in national legislation and 37·5% of countries reference the term pandemic. This finding paints a weakened picture of the IHR and PHEIC mechanisms. Having such legalese enshrined in legislation might enhance the interaction between WHO determining a PHEIC or declaring a pandemic and resulting action to mitigate transnational spread of disease and enhance health security. Given the ongoing negotiations at WHO in relation to the amendments to the IHR and creation of the pandemic accord, both of which deal with this declaratory power of the PHEIC and pandemic language, negotiators should understand the possible implications of any changes to these proclamations at the national level and for global health security. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Improving trustworthiness in global health.
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Keating, Conrad
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TRUST , *WORLD health - Published
- 2024
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8. Chagas disease.
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de Sousa, Andréa Silvestre, Vermeij, Debbie, Ramos, Alberto Novaes, and Luquetti, Alejandro O
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CHAGAS' disease , *HEALTH services accessibility , *SOCIAL determinants of health , *COMMUNITY involvement , *WORLD health - Abstract
Chagas disease persists as a global public health problem due to the high morbidity and mortality burden. Despite the possibility of a cure and advances in transmission control, epidemiological transformations, such as urbanisation and globalisation, and the emerging importance of oral and vertical transmission mean that Chagas disease should be considered an emerging disease, with new cases occurring worldwide. Important barriers to diagnosis, treatment, and care remain, resulting in repressed numbers of reported cases, which in turn leads to inadequate public policies. The validation of new diagnostic tools and treatment options is needed, as existing tools pose serious limitations to access to health care. Integrated models of surveillance, with community and intersectional participation, embedded in the concept of One Health, are essential for control. In addition, mitigation strategies for the main social determinants of health, including difficulties imposed by migration, are important to improve access to comprehensive health care in a globalised scenario. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Time to treat the climate and nature crisis as one indivisible global health emergency.
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Abbasi, Kamran, Ali, Parveen, Barbour, Virginia, Benfield, Thomas, Bibbins-Domingo, Kirsten, Hancocks, Stephen, Horton, Richard, Laybourn-Langton, Laurie, Mash, Robert, Sahni, Peush, Sharief, Wadeia Mohammad, Yonga, Paul, and Zielinski, Chris
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CLIMATE change , *WORLD health - Published
- 2023
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10. Rethinking choice and power in global health interventions.
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Mendenhall, Emily
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WORLD health - Published
- 2024
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11. More mpox data are needed to better respond to the public health emergency of international concern.
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Wang, Liang and Gao, George F
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MONKEYPOX , *WORLD health , *PUBLIC health - Published
- 2024
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12. Increasing compliance with international pandemic law: international relations and new global health agreements.
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Kavanagh, Matthew M, Wenham, Clare, Massard da Fonseca, Elize, Helfer, Laurence R, Nyukuri, Elvin, Maleche, Allan, Halabi, Sam F, Radhakrishnan, Adi, and Waris, Attiya
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INTERNATIONAL law , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *WORLD health , *TREATIES , *HEALTH facilities - Abstract
Across multiple pandemics, global health governance institutions have struggled to secure the compliance of states with international legal and political commitments, ranging from data sharing to observing WHO guidance to sharing vaccines. In response, governments are negotiating a new pandemic treaty and revising the International Health Regulations. Achieving compliance remains challenging, but international relations and international law research in areas outside of health offers insights. This Health Policy analyses international relations research on the reasons why states comply with international law, even in the absence of sanctions. Drawing on human rights, trade, finance, tobacco, and environmental law, we categorise compliance mechanisms as police patrol, fire alarm, or community organiser models. We show that, to date, current and proposed global health law incorporates only a few of the mechanisms that have shown to be effective in other areas. We offer six specific, politically feasible mechanisms for new international agreements that, together, could create compliance pressures to shift state behaviour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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13. The Jameel Arts & Health Lab in collaboration with the WHO–Lancet Global Series on the Health Benefits of the Arts.
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Sajnani, Nisha and Fietje, Nils
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WORLD health - Published
- 2023
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14. How prepared is the world? Identifying weaknesses in existing assessment frameworks for global health security through a One Health approach.
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Traore, Tieble, Shanks, Sarah, Haider, Najmul, Ahmed, Kanza, Jain, Vageesh, Rüegg, Simon R, Razavi, Ahmed, Kock, Richard, Erondu, Ngozi, Rahman-Shepherd, Afifah, Yavlinsky, Alexei, Mboera, Leonard, Asogun, Danny, McHugh, Timothy D, Elton, Linzy, Oyebanji, Oyeronke, Okunromade, Oyeladun, Ansumana, Rashid, Djingarey, Mamoudou Harouna, and Ali Ahmed, Yahaya
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WORLD health , *ENVIRONMENTAL health , *ECOSYSTEM health , *COVID-19 pandemic , *JOINTS (Anatomy) - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed faults in the way we assess preparedness and response capacities for public health emergencies. Existing frameworks are limited in scope, and do not sufficiently consider complex social, economic, political, regulatory, and ecological factors. One Health, through its focus on the links among humans, animals, and ecosystems, is a valuable approach through which existing assessment frameworks can be analysed and new ways forward proposed. Although in the past few years advances have been made in assessment tools such as the International Health Regulations Joint External Evaluation, a rapid and radical increase in ambition is required. To sufficiently account for the range of complex systems in which health emergencies occur, assessments should consider how problems are defined across stakeholders and the wider sociopolitical environments in which structures and institutions operate. Current frameworks do little to consider anthropogenic factors in disease emergence or address the full array of health security hazards across the social–ecological system. A complex and interdependent set of challenges threaten human, animal, and ecosystem health, and we cannot afford to overlook important contextual factors, or the determinants of these shared threats. Health security assessment frameworks should therefore ensure that the process undertaken to prioritise and build capacity adheres to core One Health principles and that interventions and outcomes are assessed in terms of added value, trade-offs, and cobenefits across human, animal, and environmental health systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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15. Global and regional governance of One Health and implications for global health security.
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Elnaiem, Azza, Mohamed-Ahmed, Olaa, Zumla, Alimuddin, Mecaskey, Jeffrey, Charron, Nora, Abakar, Mahamat Fayiz, Raji, Tajudeen, Bahalim, Ammad, Manikam, Logan, Risk, Omar, Okereke, Ebere, Squires, Neil, Nkengasong, John, Rüegg, Simon R, Abdel Hamid, Muzamil M, Osman, Abdinasir Y, Kapata, Nathan, Alders, Robyn, Heymann, David L, and Kock, Richard
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ANIMAL health , *INTERNATIONAL organization , *WORLD health , *DESERT locust , *ENVIRONMENTAL health - Abstract
The apparent failure of global health security to prevent or prepare for the COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the need for closer cooperation between human, animal (domestic and wildlife), and environmental health sectors. However, the many institutions, processes, regulatory frameworks, and legal instruments with direct and indirect roles in the global governance of One Health have led to a fragmented, global, multilateral health security architecture. We explore four challenges: first, the sectoral, professional, and institutional silos and tensions existing between human, animal, and environmental health; second, the challenge that the international legal system, state sovereignty, and existing legal instruments pose for the governance of One Health; third, the power dynamics and asymmetry in power between countries represented in multilateral institutions and their impact on priority setting; and finally, the current financing mechanisms that predominantly focus on response to crises, and the chronic underinvestment for epidemic and emergency prevention, mitigation, and preparedness activities. We illustrate the global and regional dimensions to these four challenges and how they relate to national needs and priorities through three case studies on compulsory licensing, the governance of water resources in the Lake Chad Basin, and the desert locust infestation in east Africa. Finally, we propose 12 recommendations for the global community to address these challenges. Despite its broad and holistic agenda, One Health continues to be dominated by human and domestic animal health experts. Substantial efforts should be made to address the social–ecological drivers of health emergencies including outbreaks of emerging, re-emerging, and endemic infectious diseases. These drivers include climate change, biodiversity loss, and land-use change, and therefore require effective and enforceable legislation, investment, capacity building, and integration of other sectors and professionals beyond health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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16. Health in global biodiversity governance: what is next?
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Willetts, Liz, Comeau, Liane, Vora, Neil, Horn, Ojistoh, Studer, Marie, Martin, Keith, Lem, Melissa, Pétrin-Desrosiers, Claudel, Grant, Liz, and Webb, Kinari
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WORLD health - Published
- 2023
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17. Advancing One human–animal–environment Health for global health security: what does the evidence say?
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Zinsstag, Jakob, Kaiser-Grolimund, Andrea, Heitz-Tokpa, Kathrin, Sreedharan, Rajesh, Lubroth, Juan, Caya, François, Stone, Matthew, Brown, Hannah, Bonfoh, Bassirou, Dobell, Emily, Morgan, Dilys, Homaira, Nusrat, Kock, Richard, Hattendorf, Jan, Crump, Lisa, Mauti, Stephanie, del Rio Vilas, Victor, Saikat, Sohel, Zumla, Alimuddin, and Heymann, David
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WORLD health , *ANIMAL health , *JOINTS (Anatomy) , *MEDICAL care , *FOOD safety - Abstract
In this Series paper, we review the contributions of One Health approaches (ie, at the human–animal–environment interface) to improve global health security across a range of health hazards and we summarise contemporary evidence of incremental benefits of a One Health approach. We assessed how One Health approaches were reported to the Food and Agricultural Organization of the UN, the World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH, formerly OIE), and WHO, within the monitoring and assessment frameworks, including WHO International Health Regulations (2005) and WOAH Performance of Veterinary Services. We reviewed One Health theoretical foundations, methods, and case studies. Examples from joint health services and infrastructure, surveillance–response systems, surveillance of antimicrobial resistance, food safety and security, environmental hazards, water and sanitation, and zoonoses control clearly show incremental benefits of One Health approaches. One Health approaches appear to be most effective and sustainable in the prevention, preparedness, and early detection and investigation of evolving risks and hazards; the evidence base for their application is strongest in the control of endemic and neglected tropical diseases. For benefits to be maximised and extended, improved One Health operationalisation is needed by strengthening multisectoral coordination mechanisms at national, regional, and global levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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18. Offline: Global health's arsenal of laments.
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Horton, Richard
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WORLD health , *ARSENALS - Published
- 2024
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19. The EU has a global health strategy: the challenge will be in the implementation.
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McKee, Martin, Field, Samantha, Vella, Stefano, Legido-Quigley, Helena, and Kazatchkine, Michel
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WORLD health - Published
- 2023
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20. Achieving justice in implementation: the Lancet Commission on Evidence-Based Implementation in Global Health.
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Peterson, Herbert B, Dube, Queen, Lawn, Joy E, Haidar, Joumana, Bagenal, Jessamy, and Horton, Richard
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WORLD health - Published
- 2023
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21. The 2022 report of the Lancet Countdown on health and climate change: health at the mercy of fossil fuels.
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Romanello, Marina, Di Napoli, Claudia, Drummond, Paul, Green, Carole, Kennard, Harry, Lampard, Pete, Scamman, Daniel, Arnell, Nigel, Ayeb-Karlsson, Sonja, Ford, Lea Berrang, Belesova, Kristine, Bowen, Kathryn, Cai, Wenjia, Callaghan, Max, Campbell-Lendrum, Diarmid, Chambers, Jonathan, van Daalen, Kim R, Dalin, Carole, Dasandi, Niheer, and Dasgupta, Shouro
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HEALTH policy , *REPORT writing , *PHENOMENOLOGICAL biology , *FOSSIL fuels , *WORLD health - Published
- 2022
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22. The updated International Health Regulations: good news for global health equity.
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Bloomfield, Ashley and Assiri, Abdullah
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WORLD health , *HEALTH equity - Published
- 2024
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23. Global health estimates should be more responsive to country needs.
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Strong, Kathleen, You, Danzhen, Banerjee, Anshu, and Azevedo, João Pedro
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WORLD health - Published
- 2024
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24. Towards the elimination of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a Lancet Commission.
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Stolz, Daiana, Mkorombindo, Takudzwa, Schumann, Desiree M, Agusti, Alvar, Ash, Samuel Y, Bafadhel, Mona, Bai, Chunxue, Chalmers, James D, Criner, Gerard J, Dharmage, Shyamali C, Franssen, Frits M E, Frey, Urs, Han, MeiLan, Hansel, Nadia N, Hawkins, Nathaniel M, Kalhan, Ravi, Konigshoff, Melanie, Ko, Fanny W, Parekh, Trisha M, and Powell, Pippa
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WORLD health , *OBSTRUCTIVE lung diseases - Published
- 2022
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25. The global burden of cancer attributable to risk factors, 2010-19: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2019.
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GBD 2019 Cancer Risk Factors Collaborators
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SYSTEMATIC reviews , *WORLD health , *RISK assessment , *RESEARCH funding , *TUMORS , *SMOKING - Abstract
Background: Understanding the magnitude of cancer burden attributable to potentially modifiable risk factors is crucial for development of effective prevention and mitigation strategies. We analysed results from the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD) 2019 to inform cancer control planning efforts globally.Methods: The GBD 2019 comparative risk assessment framework was used to estimate cancer burden attributable to behavioural, environmental and occupational, and metabolic risk factors. A total of 82 risk-outcome pairs were included on the basis of the World Cancer Research Fund criteria. Estimated cancer deaths and disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) in 2019 and change in these measures between 2010 and 2019 are presented.Findings: Globally, in 2019, the risk factors included in this analysis accounted for 4·45 million (95% uncertainty interval 4·01-4·94) deaths and 105 million (95·0-116) DALYs for both sexes combined, representing 44·4% (41·3-48·4) of all cancer deaths and 42·0% (39·1-45·6) of all DALYs. There were 2·88 million (2·60-3·18) risk-attributable cancer deaths in males (50·6% [47·8-54·1] of all male cancer deaths) and 1·58 million (1·36-1·84) risk-attributable cancer deaths in females (36·3% [32·5-41·3] of all female cancer deaths). The leading risk factors at the most detailed level globally for risk-attributable cancer deaths and DALYs in 2019 for both sexes combined were smoking, followed by alcohol use and high BMI. Risk-attributable cancer burden varied by world region and Socio-demographic Index (SDI), with smoking, unsafe sex, and alcohol use being the three leading risk factors for risk-attributable cancer DALYs in low SDI locations in 2019, whereas DALYs in high SDI locations mirrored the top three global risk factor rankings. From 2010 to 2019, global risk-attributable cancer deaths increased by 20·4% (12·6-28·4) and DALYs by 16·8% (8·8-25·0), with the greatest percentage increase in metabolic risks (34·7% [27·9-42·8] and 33·3% [25·8-42·0]).Interpretation: The leading risk factors contributing to global cancer burden in 2019 were behavioural, whereas metabolic risk factors saw the largest increases between 2010 and 2019. Reducing exposure to these modifiable risk factors would decrease cancer mortality and DALY rates worldwide, and policies should be tailored appropriately to local cancer risk factor burden.Funding: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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26. International law reform for One Health notifications.
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Carlson, Colin J and Phelan, Alexandra L
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LAW reform , *INTERNATIONAL law , *HEALTH care reform , *SCIENTIFIC discoveries , *WORLD health - Abstract
Epidemic risk assessment and response relies on rapid information sharing. Using examples from the past decade, we discuss the limitations of the present system for outbreak notifications, which suffers from ambiguous obligations, fragile incentives, and an overly narrow focus on human outbreaks. We examine existing international legal frameworks, and provide clarity on what a successful One Health approach to proposed international law reforms-including a pandemic treaty and amendments to the International Health Regulations-would require. In particular, we focus on how a treaty would provide opportunities to simultaneously expand reporting obligations, accelerate the sharing of scientific discoveries, and strengthen existing legal frameworks, all while addressing the most complex issues that global health governance currently faces. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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27. Population-level risks of alcohol consumption by amount, geography, age, sex, and year: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2020.
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GBD 2020 Alcohol Collaborators
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WORLD health , *POPULATION geography , *ALCOHOL drinking , *RESEARCH funding , *QUALITY-adjusted life years - Abstract
Background: The health risks associated with moderate alcohol consumption continue to be debated. Small amounts of alcohol might lower the risk of some health outcomes but increase the risk of others, suggesting that the overall risk depends, in part, on background disease rates, which vary by region, age, sex, and year.Methods: For this analysis, we constructed burden-weighted dose-response relative risk curves across 22 health outcomes to estimate the theoretical minimum risk exposure level (TMREL) and non-drinker equivalence (NDE), the consumption level at which the health risk is equivalent to that of a non-drinker, using disease rates from the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD) 2020 for 21 regions, including 204 countries and territories, by 5-year age group, sex, and year for individuals aged 15-95 years and older from 1990 to 2020. Based on the NDE, we quantified the population consuming harmful amounts of alcohol.Findings: The burden-weighted relative risk curves for alcohol use varied by region and age. Among individuals aged 15-39 years in 2020, the TMREL varied between 0 (95% uncertainty interval 0-0) and 0·603 (0·400-1·00) standard drinks per day, and the NDE varied between 0·002 (0-0) and 1·75 (0·698-4·30) standard drinks per day. Among individuals aged 40 years and older, the burden-weighted relative risk curve was J-shaped for all regions, with a 2020 TMREL that ranged from 0·114 (0-0·403) to 1·87 (0·500-3·30) standard drinks per day and an NDE that ranged between 0·193 (0-0·900) and 6·94 (3·40-8·30) standard drinks per day. Among individuals consuming harmful amounts of alcohol in 2020, 59·1% (54·3-65·4) were aged 15-39 years and 76·9% (73·0-81·3) were male.Interpretation: There is strong evidence to support recommendations on alcohol consumption varying by age and location. Stronger interventions, particularly those tailored towards younger individuals, are needed to reduce the substantial global health loss attributable to alcohol.Funding: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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28. Towards anti-racist policies and strategies to reduce poor health outcomes in racialised communities: introducing the O'Neill–Lancet Commission on Racism, Structural Discrimination, and Global Health.
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Erondu, Ngozi A, Mofokeng, Tlaleng, Kavanagh, Matthew M, Matache, Margareta, and Bosha, Sarah L
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COMMUNITIES , *ANTI-racism , *WORLD health , *RACISM - Published
- 2023
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29. Envisioning the futures of global health: three positive disruptions.
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Sewankambo, Nelson K, Wallengren, Emma, De Angeles, Katrine Judith Chamorro, Tomson, Göran, and Weerasuriya, Krisantha
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WORLD health - Published
- 2023
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30. Offline: Breaking the conformity of global health.
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Horton, Richard
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WORLD health , *CONFORMITY - Published
- 2024
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31. Rochelle Burgess: disrupting the status quo in global mental health.
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Davies, Rachael
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WORLD health , *MENTAL health - Published
- 2024
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32. Measuring the availability of human resources for health and its relationship to universal health coverage for 204 countries and territories from 1990 to 2019: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2019.
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GBD 2019 Human Resources for Health Collaborators
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WORLD health , *OCCUPATIONS , *DRUGS - Abstract
Background: Human resources for health (HRH) include a range of occupations that aim to promote or improve human health. The UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the WHO Health Workforce 2030 strategy have drawn attention to the importance of HRH for achieving policy priorities such as universal health coverage (UHC). Although previous research has found substantial global disparities in HRH, the absence of comparable cross-national estimates of existing workforces has hindered efforts to quantify workforce requirements to meet health system goals. We aimed to use comparable and standardised data sources to estimate HRH densities globally, and to examine the relationship between a subset of HRH cadres and UHC effective coverage performance.Methods: Through the International Labour Organization and Global Health Data Exchange databases, we identified 1404 country-years of data from labour force surveys and 69 country-years of census data, with detailed microdata on health-related employment. From the WHO National Health Workforce Accounts, we identified 2950 country-years of data. We mapped data from all occupational coding systems to the International Standard Classification of Occupations 1988 (ISCO-88), allowing for standardised estimation of densities for 16 categories of health workers across the full time series. Using data from 1990 to 2019 for 196 of 204 countries and territories, covering seven Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD) super-regions and 21 regions, we applied spatiotemporal Gaussian process regression (ST-GPR) to model HRH densities from 1990 to 2019 for all countries and territories. We used stochastic frontier meta-regression to model the relationship between the UHC effective coverage index and densities for the four categories of health workers enumerated in SDG indicator 3.c.1 pertaining to HRH: physicians, nurses and midwives, dentistry personnel, and pharmaceutical personnel. We identified minimum workforce density thresholds required to meet a specified target of 80 out of 100 on the UHC effective coverage index, and quantified national shortages with respect to those minimum thresholds.Findings: We estimated that, in 2019, the world had 104·0 million (95% uncertainty interval 83·5-128·0) health workers, including 12·8 million (9·7-16·6) physicians, 29·8 million (23·3-37·7) nurses and midwives, 4·6 million (3·6-6·0) dentistry personnel, and 5·2 million (4·0-6·7) pharmaceutical personnel. We calculated a global physician density of 16·7 (12·6-21·6) per 10 000 population, and a nurse and midwife density of 38·6 (30·1-48·8) per 10 000 population. We found the GBD super-regions of sub-Saharan Africa, south Asia, and north Africa and the Middle East had the lowest HRH densities. To reach 80 out of 100 on the UHC effective coverage index, we estimated that, per 10 000 population, at least 20·7 physicians, 70·6 nurses and midwives, 8·2 dentistry personnel, and 9·4 pharmaceutical personnel would be needed. In total, the 2019 national health workforces fell short of these minimum thresholds by 6·4 million physicians, 30·6 million nurses and midwives, 3·3 million dentistry personnel, and 2·9 million pharmaceutical personnel.Interpretation: Considerable expansion of the world's health workforce is needed to achieve high levels of UHC effective coverage. The largest shortages are in low-income settings, highlighting the need for increased financing and coordination to train, employ, and retain human resources in the health sector. Actual HRH shortages might be larger than estimated because minimum thresholds for each cadre of health workers are benchmarked on health systems that most efficiently translate human resources into UHC attainment.Funding: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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33. Global, regional, and national disease burden estimates of acute lower respiratory infections due to respiratory syncytial virus in children younger than 5 years in 2019: a systematic analysis.
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Li, You, Wang, Xin, Blau, Dianna M, Caballero, Mauricio T, Feikin, Daniel R, Gill, Christopher J, Madhi, Shabir A, Omer, Saad B, Simões, Eric A F, Campbell, Harry, Pariente, Ana Bermejo, Bardach, Darmaa, Bassat, Quique, Casalegno, Jean-Sebastien, Chakhunashvili, Giorgi, Crawford, Nigel, Danilenko, Daria, Do, Lien Anh Ha, Echavarria, Marcela, and Gentile, Angela
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RESPIRATORY syncytial virus , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *RESPIRATORY infections , *WORLD health , *HOSPITAL mortality , *HOSPITAL care , *RESEARCH funding , *RESPIRATORY syncytial virus infections , *ECONOMIC aspects of diseases - Abstract
Background: Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the most common cause of acute lower respiratory infection in young children. We previously estimated that in 2015, 33·1 million episodes of RSV-associated acute lower respiratory infection occurred in children aged 0-60 months, resulting in a total of 118 200 deaths worldwide. Since then, several community surveillance studies have been done to obtain a more precise estimation of RSV associated community deaths. We aimed to update RSV-associated acute lower respiratory infection morbidity and mortality at global, regional, and national levels in children aged 0-60 months for 2019, with focus on overall mortality and narrower infant age groups that are targeted by RSV prophylactics in development.Methods: In this systematic analysis, we expanded our global RSV disease burden dataset by obtaining new data from an updated search for papers published between Jan 1, 2017, and Dec 31, 2020, from MEDLINE, Embase, Global Health, CINAHL, Web of Science, LILACS, OpenGrey, CNKI, Wanfang, and ChongqingVIP. We also included unpublished data from RSV GEN collaborators. Eligible studies reported data for children aged 0-60 months with RSV as primary infection with acute lower respiratory infection in community settings, or acute lower respiratory infection necessitating hospital admission; reported data for at least 12 consecutive months, except for in-hospital case fatality ratio (CFR) or for where RSV seasonality is well-defined; and reported incidence rate, hospital admission rate, RSV positive proportion in acute lower respiratory infection hospital admission, or in-hospital CFR. Studies were excluded if case definition was not clearly defined or not consistently applied, RSV infection was not laboratory confirmed or based on serology alone, or if the report included fewer than 50 cases of acute lower respiratory infection. We applied a generalised linear mixed-effects model (GLMM) to estimate RSV-associated acute lower respiratory infection incidence, hospital admission, and in-hospital mortality both globally and regionally (by country development status and by World Bank Income Classification) in 2019. We estimated country-level RSV-associated acute lower respiratory infection incidence through a risk-factor based model. We developed new models (through GLMM) that incorporated the latest RSV community mortality data for estimating overall RSV mortality. This review was registered in PROSPERO (CRD42021252400).Findings: In addition to 317 studies included in our previous review, we identified and included 113 new eligible studies and unpublished data from 51 studies, for a total of 481 studies. We estimated that globally in 2019, there were 33·0 million RSV-associated acute lower respiratory infection episodes (uncertainty range [UR] 25·4-44·6 million), 3·6 million RSV-associated acute lower respiratory infection hospital admissions (2·9-4·6 million), 26 300 RSV-associated acute lower respiratory infection in-hospital deaths (15 100-49 100), and 101 400 RSV-attributable overall deaths (84 500-125 200) in children aged 0-60 months. In infants aged 0-6 months, we estimated that there were 6·6 million RSV-associated acute lower respiratory infection episodes (4·6-9·7 million), 1·4 million RSV-associated acute lower respiratory infection hospital admissions (1·0-2·0 million), 13 300 RSV-associated acute lower respiratory infection in-hospital deaths (6800-28 100), and 45 700 RSV-attributable overall deaths (38 400-55 900). 2·0% of deaths in children aged 0-60 months (UR 1·6-2·4) and 3·6% of deaths in children aged 28 days to 6 months (3·0-4·4) were attributable to RSV. More than 95% of RSV-associated acute lower respiratory infection episodes and more than 97% of RSV-attributable deaths across all age bands were in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs).Interpretation: RSV contributes substantially to morbidity and mortality burden globally in children aged 0-60 months, especially during the first 6 months of life and in LMICs. We highlight the striking overall mortality burden of RSV disease worldwide, with one in every 50 deaths in children aged 0-60 months and one in every 28 deaths in children aged 28 days to 6 months attributable to RSV. For every RSV-associated acute lower respiratory infection in-hospital death, we estimate approximately three more deaths attributable to RSV in the community. RSV passive immunisation programmes targeting protection during the first 6 months of life could have a substantial effect on reducing RSV disease burden, although more data are needed to understand the implications of the potential age-shifts in peak RSV burden to older age when these are implemented.Funding: EU Innovative Medicines Initiative Respiratory Syncytial Virus Consortium in Europe (RESCEU). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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34. Framing and the formation of global health priorities.
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Shiffman, Jeremy and Shawar, Yusra Ribhi
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HEALTH policy , *PRACTICAL politics , *WORLD health , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *POLICY sciences , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *HEALTH planning - Abstract
Health issues vary in the amount of attention and resources they receive from global health organisations and national governments. How issues are framed could shape differences in levels of priority. We reviewed scholarship on global health policy making to examine the role of framing in shaping global health priorities. The review provides evidence of the influence of three framing processes-securitisation, moralisation, and technification. Securitisation refers to an issue's framing as an existential threat, moralisation as an ethical imperative, and technification as a wise investment that science can solve. These framing processes concern more than how issues are portrayed publicly. They are socio-political processes, characterised by contestation among actors in civil society, government, international organisations, foundations, and research institutions. These actors deploy various forms of power to advance particular frames as a means of securing attention and resources for the issues that concern them. The ascription of an issue as a security concern, an ethical imperative, or a wise investment is historically contingent: it is not inevitable that any given issue will be framed in one or more of these ways. A health issue's inherent characteristics-such as the lethality of a pathogen that causes it-also shape these ascriptions, but do not fully determine them. Although commonly facing resistance, global health elites often determine which frames prevail, raising questions about the legitimacy of priority-setting processes. We draw on the review to offer ideas on how to make these processes fairer than they are at present, including a call for democratic representation even as necessary space is preserved for elite expertise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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35. Progress in health among regions of Ethiopia, 1990-2019: a subnational country analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2019.
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GBD 2019 Ethiopia Subnational-Level Disease Burden Initiative Collaborators
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GLOBAL burden of disease , *EARLY death , *DISEASE risk factors , *LIFE expectancy , *SYSTOLIC blood pressure , *CAUSES of death , *WORLD health , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *QUALITY-adjusted life years , *PROBABILITY theory - Abstract
Background: Previous Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD) studies have reported national health estimates for Ethiopia. Substantial regional variations in socioeconomic status, population, demography, and access to health care within Ethiopia require comparable estimates at the subnational level. The GBD 2019 Ethiopia subnational analysis aimed to measure the progress and disparities in health across nine regions and two chartered cities.Methods: We gathered 1057 distinct data sources for Ethiopia and all regions and cities that included census, demographic surveillance, household surveys, disease registry, health service use, disease notifications, and other data for this analysis. Using all available data sources, we estimated the Socio-demographic Index (SDI), total fertility rate (TFR), life expectancy, years of life lost, years lived with disability, disability-adjusted life-years, and risk-factor-attributable health loss with 95% uncertainty intervals (UIs) for Ethiopia's nine regions and two chartered cities from 1990 to 2019. Spatiotemporal Gaussian process regression, cause of death ensemble model, Bayesian meta-regression tool, DisMod-MR 2.1, and other models were used to generate fertility, mortality, cause of death, and disability rates. The risk factor attribution estimations followed the general framework established for comparative risk assessment.Findings: The SDI steadily improved in all regions and cities from 1990 to 2019, yet the disparity between the highest and lowest SDI increased by 54% during that period. The TFR declined from 6·91 (95% UI 6·59-7·20) in 1990 to 4·43 (4·01-4·92) in 2019, but the magnitude of decline also varied substantially among regions and cities. In 2019, TFR ranged from 6·41 (5·96-6·86) in Somali to 1·50 (1·26-1·80) in Addis Ababa. Life expectancy improved in Ethiopia by 21·93 years (21·79-22·07), from 46·91 years (45·71-48·11) in 1990 to 68·84 years (67·51-70·18) in 2019. Addis Ababa had the highest life expectancy at 70·86 years (68·91-72·65) in 2019; Afar and Benishangul-Gumuz had the lowest at 63·74 years (61·53-66·01) for Afar and 64.28 (61.99-66.63) for Benishangul-Gumuz. The overall increases in life expectancy were driven by declines in under-5 mortality and mortality from common infectious diseases, nutritional deficiency, and war and conflict. In 2019, the age-standardised all-cause death rate was the highest in Afar at 1353·38 per 100 000 population (1195·69-1526·19). The leading causes of premature mortality for all sexes in Ethiopia in 2019 were neonatal disorders, diarrhoeal diseases, lower respiratory infections, tuberculosis, stroke, HIV/AIDS, ischaemic heart disease, cirrhosis, congenital defects, and diabetes. With high SDIs and life expectancy for all sexes, Addis Ababa, Dire Dawa, and Harari had low rates of premature mortality from the five leading causes, whereas regions with low SDIs and life expectancy for all sexes (Afar and Somali) had high rates of premature mortality from the leading causes. In 2019, child and maternal malnutrition; unsafe water, sanitation, and handwashing; air pollution; high systolic blood pressure; alcohol use; and high fasting plasma glucose were the leading risk factors for health loss across regions and cities.Interpretation: There were substantial improvements in health over the past three decades across regions and chartered cities in Ethiopia. However, the progress, measured in SDI, life expectancy, TFR, premature mortality, disability, and risk factors, was not uniform. Federal and regional health policy makers should match strategies, resources, and interventions to disease burden and risk factors across regions and cities to achieve national and regional plans, Sustainable Development Goals, and universal health coverage targets.Funding: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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36. Reclaiming global health.
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Smeeth, Liam and Kyobutungi, Catherine
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WORLD health - Published
- 2023
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37. Time for united action on depression: a Lancet-World Psychiatric Association Commission.
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Herrman, Helen, Patel, Vikram, Kieling, Christian, Berk, Michael, Buchweitz, Claudia, Cuijpers, Pim, Furukawa, Toshiaki A, Kessler, Ronald C, Kohrt, Brandon A, Maj, Mario, McGorry, Patrick, Reynolds III, Charles F, Weissman, Myrna M, Chibanda, Dixon, Dowrick, Christopher, Howard, Louise M, Hoven, Christina W, Knapp, Martin, Mayberg, Helen S, and Penninx, Brenda W J H
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WORLD health , *MENTAL depression - Published
- 2022
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38. Global burden of bacterial antimicrobial resistance in 2019: a systematic analysis.
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Antimicrobial Resistance Collaborators
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WORLD health , *RESEARCH funding , *BACTERIAL diseases , *DRUG resistance in microorganisms , *STATISTICAL models , *ANTIBIOTICS , *PHARMACODYNAMICS - Abstract
Background: Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) poses a major threat to human health around the world. Previous publications have estimated the effect of AMR on incidence, deaths, hospital length of stay, and health-care costs for specific pathogen-drug combinations in select locations. To our knowledge, this study presents the most comprehensive estimates of AMR burden to date.Methods: We estimated deaths and disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) attributable to and associated with bacterial AMR for 23 pathogens and 88 pathogen-drug combinations in 204 countries and territories in 2019. We obtained data from systematic literature reviews, hospital systems, surveillance systems, and other sources, covering 471 million individual records or isolates and 7585 study-location-years. We used predictive statistical modelling to produce estimates of AMR burden for all locations, including for locations with no data. Our approach can be divided into five broad components: number of deaths where infection played a role, proportion of infectious deaths attributable to a given infectious syndrome, proportion of infectious syndrome deaths attributable to a given pathogen, the percentage of a given pathogen resistant to an antibiotic of interest, and the excess risk of death or duration of an infection associated with this resistance. Using these components, we estimated disease burden based on two counterfactuals: deaths attributable to AMR (based on an alternative scenario in which all drug-resistant infections were replaced by drug-susceptible infections), and deaths associated with AMR (based on an alternative scenario in which all drug-resistant infections were replaced by no infection). We generated 95% uncertainty intervals (UIs) for final estimates as the 25th and 975th ordered values across 1000 posterior draws, and models were cross-validated for out-of-sample predictive validity. We present final estimates aggregated to the global and regional level.Findings: On the basis of our predictive statistical models, there were an estimated 4·95 million (3·62-6·57) deaths associated with bacterial AMR in 2019, including 1·27 million (95% UI 0·911-1·71) deaths attributable to bacterial AMR. At the regional level, we estimated the all-age death rate attributable to resistance to be highest in western sub-Saharan Africa, at 27·3 deaths per 100 000 (20·9-35·3), and lowest in Australasia, at 6·5 deaths (4·3-9·4) per 100 000. Lower respiratory infections accounted for more than 1·5 million deaths associated with resistance in 2019, making it the most burdensome infectious syndrome. The six leading pathogens for deaths associated with resistance (Escherichia coli, followed by Staphylococcus aureus, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Acinetobacter baumannii, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa) were responsible for 929 000 (660 000-1 270 000) deaths attributable to AMR and 3·57 million (2·62-4·78) deaths associated with AMR in 2019. One pathogen-drug combination, meticillin-resistant S aureus, caused more than 100 000 deaths attributable to AMR in 2019, while six more each caused 50 000-100 000 deaths: multidrug-resistant excluding extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis, third-generation cephalosporin-resistant E coli, carbapenem-resistant A baumannii, fluoroquinolone-resistant E coli, carbapenem-resistant K pneumoniae, and third-generation cephalosporin-resistant K pneumoniae.Interpretation: To our knowledge, this study provides the first comprehensive assessment of the global burden of AMR, as well as an evaluation of the availability of data. AMR is a leading cause of death around the world, with the highest burdens in low-resource settings. Understanding the burden of AMR and the leading pathogen-drug combinations contributing to it is crucial to making informed and location-specific policy decisions, particularly about infection prevention and control programmes, access to essential antibiotics, and research and development of new vaccines and antibiotics. There are serious data gaps in many low-income settings, emphasising the need to expand microbiology laboratory capacity and data collection systems to improve our understanding of this important human health threat.Funding: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Wellcome Trust, and Department of Health and Social Care using UK aid funding managed by the Fleming Fund. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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39. Monkeypox as a PHEIC: implications for global health governance.
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Wenham, Clare and Eccleston-Turner, Mark
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MONKEYPOX , *WORLD health - Published
- 2022
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40. The need for metrics to measure progress on racial equity in global public health and medicine.
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Khan, Mishal S, Guinto, Renzo R, Boro, Ezekiel, Rahman-Shepherd, Afifah, and Erondu, Ngozi A
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RACIAL inequality , *WORLD health , *PUBLIC health - Published
- 2022
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41. The 2021 report of the Lancet Countdown on health and climate change: code red for a healthy future.
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Romanello, Marina, McGushin, Alice, Di Napoli, Claudia, Drummond, Paul, Hughes, Nick, Jamart, Louis, Kennard, Harry, Lampard, Pete, Solano Rodriguez, Baltazar, Arnell, Nigel, Ayeb-Karlsson, Sonja, Belesova, Kristine, Cai, Wenjia, Campbell-Lendrum, Diarmid, Capstick, Stuart, Chambers, Jonathan, Chu, Lingzhi, Ciampi, Luisa, Dalin, Carole, and Dasandi, Niheer
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CLIMATE change & health , *PHENOMENOLOGICAL biology , *WORLD health , *POWER resources , *FORECASTING - Published
- 2021
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42. Worldwide trends in the burden of asthma symptoms in school-aged children: Global Asthma Network Phase I cross-sectional study.
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Asher, M Innes, Rutter, Charlotte E, Bissell, Karen, Chiang, Chen-Yuan, El Sony, Asma, Ellwood, Eamon, Ellwood, Philippa, García-Marcos, Luis, Marks, Guy B, Morales, Eva, Mortimer, Kevin, Pérez-Fernández, Virginia, Robertson, Steven, Silverwood, Richard J, Strachan, David P, Pearce, Neil, and Global Asthma Network Phase I Study Group
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WHEEZE , *COUGH , *ASTHMATICS , *SYMPTOMS , *ASTHMA , *SCHOOL children , *ASTHMA in children , *TEENAGERS , *CROSS-sectional method , *WORLD health , *RESEARCH funding , *ECONOMIC aspects of diseases - Abstract
Background: Asthma is the most common chronic disease in children globally. The Global Asthma Network (GAN) Phase I study aimed to determine if the worldwide burden of asthma symptoms is changing.Methods: This updated cross-sectional study used the same methods as the International study of Asthma and Allergies in Childhood (ISAAC) Phase III. Asthma symptoms were assessed from centres that completed GAN Phase I and ISAAC Phase I (1993-95), ISAAC Phase III (2001-03), or both. We included individuals from two age groups (children aged 6-7 years and adolescents aged 13-14 years) who self-completed written questionnaires at school. We estimated the 10-year rate of change in prevalence of current wheeze, severe asthma symptoms, ever having asthma, exercise wheeze, and night cough (defined by core questions in the questionnaire) for each centre, and we estimated trends across world regions and income levels using mixed-effects linear regression models with region and country income level as confounders.Findings: Overall, 119 795 participants from 27 centres in 14 countries were included: 74 361 adolescents (response rate 90%) and 45 434 children (response rate 79%). About one in ten individuals of both age groups had wheeze in the preceding year, of whom almost half had severe symptoms. Most centres showed a change in prevalence of 2 SE or more between ISAAC Phase III to GAN Phase I. Over the 27-year period (1993-2020), adolescents showed a significant decrease in percentage point prevalence per decade in severe asthma symptoms (-0·37, 95% CI -0·69 to -0·04) and an increase in ever having asthma (1·25, 0·67 to 1·83) and night cough (4·25, 3·06 to 5·44), which was also found in children (3·21, 1·80 to 4·62). The prevalence of current wheeze decreased in low-income countries (-1·37, -2·47 to -0·27], in children and -1·67, -2·70 to -0·64, in adolescents) and increased in lower-middle-income countries (1·99, 0·33 to 3·66, in children and 1·69, 0·13 to 3·25, in adolescents), but it was stable in upper-middle-income and high-income countries.Interpretation: Trends in prevalence and severity of asthma symptoms over the past three decades varied by age group, country income, region, and centre. The high worldwide burden of severe asthma symptoms would be mitigated by enabling access to effective therapies for asthma.Funding: International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease, Boehringer Ingelheim New Zealand, AstraZeneca Educational Grant, National Institute for Health Research, UK Medical Research Council, European Research Council, and Instituto de Salud Carlos III. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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43. Functioning of the International Health Regulations during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Aavitsland, Preben, Aguilera, Ximena, Al-Abri, Seif Salem, Amani, Vincent, Aramburu, Carmen C, Attia, Thouraya A, Blumberg, Lucille H, Chittaganpitch, Malinee, Le Duc, James W, Li, Dexin, Mokhtariazad, Talat, Moussif, Mohamed, Ojo, Olubunmi E, Okwo-Bele, Jean-Marie, Saito, Tomoya, Sall, Amadou Alpha, Salter, Mark W A P, Sohn, Myongsei, and Wieler, Lothar H
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COVID-19 pandemic , *WORLD health - Published
- 2021
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44. What are the obligations of pharmaceutical companies in a global health emergency?
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Emanuel, Ezekiel J, Buchanan, Allen, Chan, Shuk Ying, Fabre, Cécile, Halliday, Daniel, Heath, Joseph, Herzog, Lisa, Leland, R J, McCoy, Matthew S, Norheim, Ole F, Saenz, Carla, Schaefer, G Owen, Tan, Kok-Chor, Wellman, Christopher Heath, Wolff, Jonathan, and Persad, Govind
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WORLD health , *PHARMACEUTICAL industry - Published
- 2021
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45. Worldwide trends in hypertension prevalence and progress in treatment and control from 1990 to 2019: a pooled analysis of 1201 population-representative studies with 104 million participants.
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NCD Risk Factor Collaboration (NCD-RisC)
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HYPERTENSION , *SYSTOLIC blood pressure , *BLOOD pressure , *HIGH-income countries , *MIDDLE-income countries , *HYPERTENSION epidemiology , *ANTIHYPERTENSIVE agents , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH methodology , *WORLD health , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DISEASE prevalence , *RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Background: Hypertension can be detected at the primary health-care level and low-cost treatments can effectively control hypertension. We aimed to measure the prevalence of hypertension and progress in its detection, treatment, and control from 1990 to 2019 for 200 countries and territories.Methods: We used data from 1990 to 2019 on people aged 30-79 years from population-representative studies with measurement of blood pressure and data on blood pressure treatment. We defined hypertension as having systolic blood pressure 140 mm Hg or greater, diastolic blood pressure 90 mm Hg or greater, or taking medication for hypertension. We applied a Bayesian hierarchical model to estimate the prevalence of hypertension and the proportion of people with hypertension who had a previous diagnosis (detection), who were taking medication for hypertension (treatment), and whose hypertension was controlled to below 140/90 mm Hg (control). The model allowed for trends over time to be non-linear and to vary by age.Findings: The number of people aged 30-79 years with hypertension doubled from 1990 to 2019, from 331 (95% credible interval 306-359) million women and 317 (292-344) million men in 1990 to 626 (584-668) million women and 652 (604-698) million men in 2019, despite stable global age-standardised prevalence. In 2019, age-standardised hypertension prevalence was lowest in Canada and Peru for both men and women; in Taiwan, South Korea, Japan, and some countries in western Europe including Switzerland, Spain, and the UK for women; and in several low-income and middle-income countries such as Eritrea, Bangladesh, Ethiopia, and Solomon Islands for men. Hypertension prevalence surpassed 50% for women in two countries and men in nine countries, in central and eastern Europe, central Asia, Oceania, and Latin America. Globally, 59% (55-62) of women and 49% (46-52) of men with hypertension reported a previous diagnosis of hypertension in 2019, and 47% (43-51) of women and 38% (35-41) of men were treated. Control rates among people with hypertension in 2019 were 23% (20-27) for women and 18% (16-21) for men. In 2019, treatment and control rates were highest in South Korea, Canada, and Iceland (treatment >70%; control >50%), followed by the USA, Costa Rica, Germany, Portugal, and Taiwan. Treatment rates were less than 25% for women and less than 20% for men in Nepal, Indonesia, and some countries in sub-Saharan Africa and Oceania. Control rates were below 10% for women and men in these countries and for men in some countries in north Africa, central and south Asia, and eastern Europe. Treatment and control rates have improved in most countries since 1990, but we found little change in most countries in sub-Saharan Africa and Oceania. Improvements were largest in high-income countries, central Europe, and some upper-middle-income and recently high-income countries including Costa Rica, Taiwan, Kazakhstan, South Africa, Brazil, Chile, Turkey, and Iran.Interpretation: Improvements in the detection, treatment, and control of hypertension have varied substantially across countries, with some middle-income countries now outperforming most high-income nations. The dual approach of reducing hypertension prevalence through primary prevention and enhancing its treatment and control is achievable not only in high-income countries but also in low-income and middle-income settings.Funding: WHO. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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46. Global, regional, and national estimates and trends in stillbirths from 2000 to 2019: a systematic assessment.
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Hug, Lucia, You, Danzhen, Blencowe, Hannah, Mishra, Anu, Wang, Zhengfan, Fix, Miranda J, Wakefield, Jon, Moran, Allisyn C, Gaigbe-Togbe, Victor, Suzuki, Emi, Blau, Dianna M, Cousens, Simon, Creanga, Andreea, Croft, Trevor, Hill, Kenneth, Joseph, K S, Maswime, Salome, McClure, Elizabeth M, Pattinson, Robert, and Pedersen, Jon
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STILLBIRTH , *NEONATAL mortality , *PUBLIC health , *NEWBORN infants , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH methodology , *WORLD health , *GESTATIONAL age , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *PERINATAL death , *COMPARATIVE studies , *INFANT mortality , *STATISTICAL models - Abstract
Background: Stillbirths are a major public health issue and a sensitive marker of the quality of care around pregnancy and birth. The UN Global Strategy for Women's, Children's and Adolescents' Health (2016-30) and the Every Newborn Action Plan (led by UNICEF and WHO) call for an end to preventable stillbirths. A first step to prevent stillbirths is obtaining standardised measurement of stillbirth rates across countries. We estimated stillbirth rates and their trends for 195 countries from 2000 to 2019 and assessed progress over time.Methods: For a systematic assessment, we created a dataset of 2833 country-year datapoints from 171 countries relevant to stillbirth rates, including data from registration and health information systems, household-based surveys, and population-based studies. After data quality assessment and exclusions, we used 1531 datapoints to estimate country-specific stillbirth rates for 195 countries from 2000 to 2019 using a Bayesian hierarchical temporal sparse regression model, according to a definition of stillbirth of at least 28 weeks' gestational age. Our model combined covariates with a temporal smoothing process such that estimates were informed by data for country-periods with high quality data, while being based on covariates for country-periods with little or no data on stillbirth rates. Bias and additional uncertainty associated with observations based on alternative stillbirth definitions and source types, and observations that were subject to non-sampling errors, were included in the model. We compared the estimated stillbirth rates and trends to previously reported mortality estimates in children younger than 5 years.Findings: Globally in 2019, an estimated 2·0 million babies (90% uncertainty interval [UI] 1·9-2·2) were stillborn at 28 weeks or more of gestation, with a global stillbirth rate of 13·9 stillbirths (90% UI 13·5-15·4) per 1000 total births. Stillbirth rates in 2019 varied widely across regions, from 22·8 stillbirths (19·8-27·7) per 1000 total births in west and central Africa to 2·9 (2·7-3·0) in western Europe. After west and central Africa, eastern and southern Africa and south Asia had the second and third highest stillbirth rates in 2019. The global annual rate of reduction in stillbirth rate was estimated at 2·3% (90% UI 1·7-2·7) from 2000 to 2019, which was lower than the 2·9% (2·5-3·2) annual rate of reduction in neonatal mortality rate (for neonates aged <28 days) and the 4·3% (3·8-4·7) annual rate of reduction in mortality rate among children aged 1-59 months during the same period. Based on the lower bound of the 90% UIs, 114 countries had an estimated decrease in stillbirth rate since 2000, with four countries having a decrease of at least 50·0%, 28 having a decrease of 25·0-49·9%, 50 having a decrease of 10·0-24·9%, and 32 having a decrease of less than 10·0%. For the remaining 81 countries, we found no decrease in stillbirth rate since 2000. Of these countries, 34 were in sub-Saharan Africa, 16 were in east Asia and the Pacific, and 15 were in Latin America and the Caribbean.Interpretation: Progress in reducing the rate of stillbirths has been slow compared with decreases in the mortality rate of children younger than 5 years. Accelerated improvements are most needed in the regions and countries with high stillbirth rates, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa. Future prevention of stillbirths needs increased efforts to raise public awareness, improve data collection, assess progress, and understand public health priorities locally, all of which require investment.Funding: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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47. Estimating the cause-specific relative risks of non-optimal temperature on daily mortality: a two-part modelling approach applied to the Global Burden of Disease Study.
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Burkart, Katrin G, Brauer, Michael, Aravkin, Aleksandr Y, Godwin, William W, Hay, Simon I, He, Jaiwei, Iannucci, Vincent C, Larson, Samantha L, Lim, Stephen S, Liu, Jiangmei, Murray, Christopher J L, Zheng, Peng, Zhou, Maigeng, and Stanaway, Jeffrey D
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GLOBAL burden of disease , *HEAT stroke , *NON-communicable diseases , *CAUSES of death , *OBSTRUCTIVE lung diseases , *DEATH rate , *CHRONIC kidney failure , *HEAT , *RESEARCH , *MORTALITY , *RESEARCH methodology , *WORLD health , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *METABOLIC disorders , *COMPARATIVE studies , *COLD (Temperature) , *PROBABILITY theory ,HEART disease epidemiology - Abstract
Background: Associations between high and low temperatures and increases in mortality and morbidity have been previously reported, yet no comprehensive assessment of disease burden has been done. Therefore, we aimed to estimate the global and regional burden due to non-optimal temperature exposure.Methods: In part 1 of this study, we linked deaths to daily temperature estimates from the ERA5 reanalysis dataset. We modelled the cause-specific relative risks for 176 individual causes of death along daily temperature and 23 mean temperature zones using a two-dimensional spline within a Bayesian meta-regression framework. We then calculated the cause-specific and total temperature-attributable burden for the countries for which daily mortality data were available. In part 2, we applied cause-specific relative risks from part 1 to all locations globally. We combined exposure-response curves with daily gridded temperature and calculated the cause-specific burden based on the underlying burden of disease from the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study, for the years 1990-2019. Uncertainty from all components of the modelling chain, including risks, temperature exposure, and theoretical minimum risk exposure levels, defined as the temperature of minimum mortality across all included causes, was propagated using posterior simulation of 1000 draws.Findings: We included 64·9 million individual International Classification of Diseases-coded deaths from nine different countries, occurring between Jan 1, 1980, and Dec 31, 2016. 17 causes of death met the inclusion criteria. Ischaemic heart disease, stroke, cardiomyopathy and myocarditis, hypertensive heart disease, diabetes, chronic kidney disease, lower respiratory infection, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease showed J-shaped relationships with daily temperature, whereas the risk of external causes (eg, homicide, suicide, drowning, and related to disasters, mechanical, transport, and other unintentional injuries) increased monotonically with temperature. The theoretical minimum risk exposure levels varied by location and year as a function of the underlying cause of death composition. Estimates for non-optimal temperature ranged from 7·98 deaths (95% uncertainty interval 7·10-8·85) per 100 000 and a population attributable fraction (PAF) of 1·2% (1·1-1·4) in Brazil to 35·1 deaths (29·9-40·3) per 100 000 and a PAF of 4·7% (4·3-5·1) in China. In 2019, the average cold-attributable mortality exceeded heat-attributable mortality in all countries for which data were available. Cold effects were most pronounced in China with PAFs of 4·3% (3·9-4·7) and attributable rates of 32·0 deaths (27·2-36·8) per 100 000 and in New Zealand with 3·4% (2·9-3·9) and 26·4 deaths (22·1-30·2). Heat effects were most pronounced in China with PAFs of 0·4% (0·3-0·6) and attributable rates of 3·25 deaths (2·39-4·24) per 100 000 and in Brazil with 0·4% (0·3-0·5) and 2·71 deaths (2·15-3·37). When applying our framework to all countries globally, we estimated that 1·69 million (1·52-1·83) deaths were attributable to non-optimal temperature globally in 2019. The highest heat-attributable burdens were observed in south and southeast Asia, sub-Saharan Africa, and North Africa and the Middle East, and the highest cold-attributable burdens in eastern and central Europe, and central Asia.Interpretation: Acute heat and cold exposure can increase or decrease the risk of mortality for a diverse set of causes of death. Although in most regions cold effects dominate, locations with high prevailing temperatures can exhibit substantial heat effects far exceeding cold-attributable burden. Particularly, a high burden of external causes of death contributed to strong heat impacts, but cardiorespiratory diseases and metabolic diseases could also be substantial contributors. Changes in both exposures and the composition of causes of death drove changes in risk over time. Steady increases in exposure to the risk of high temperature are of increasing concern for health.Funding: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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48. Parental education and inequalities in child mortality: a global systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Balaj, Mirza, York, Hunter Wade, Sripada, Kam, Besnier, Elodie, Vonen, Hanne Dahl, Aravkin, Aleksandr, Friedman, Joseph, Griswold, Max, Jensen, Magnus Rom, Mohammad, Talal, Mullany, Erin C, Solhaug, Solvor, Sorensen, Reed, Stonkute, Donata, Tallaksen, Andreas, Whisnant, Joanna, Zheng, Peng, Gakidou, Emmanuela, and Eikemo, Terje Andreas
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CHILD mortality , *HEALTH equity , *EDUCATIONAL equalization , *PARENTING education , *DEMOGRAPHIC surveys , *MOTHERS , *CINAHL database , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *ONLINE information services , *META-analysis , *MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *WORLD health , *FATHERS , *SOCIAL classes , *MEDLINE , *PARENTS , *EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
Background: The educational attainment of parents, particularly mothers, has been associated with lower levels of child mortality, yet there is no consensus on the magnitude of this relationship globally. We aimed to estimate the total reductions in under-5 mortality that are associated with increased maternal and paternal education, during distinct age intervals.Methods: This study is a comprehensive global systematic review and meta-analysis of all existing studies of the effects of parental education on neonatal, infant, and under-5 child mortality, combined with primary analyses of Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) data. The literature search of seven databases (CINAHL, Embase, MEDLINE, PsycINFO, PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science) was done between Jan 23 and Feb 8, 2019, and updated on Jan 7, 2021, with no language or publication date restrictions. Teams of independent reviewers assessed each record for its inclusion of individual-level data on parental education and child mortality and excluded articles on the basis of study design and availability of relevant statistics. Full-text screening was done in 15 languages. Data extracted from these studies were combined with primary microdata from the DHS for meta-analyses relating maternal or paternal education with mortality at six age intervals: 0-27 days, 1-11 months, 1-4 years, 0-4 years, 0-11 months, and 1 month to 4 years. Novel mixed-effects meta-regression models were implemented to address heterogeneity in referent and exposure measures among the studies and to adjust for study-level covariates (wealth or income, partner's years of schooling, and sex of the child). This study was registered with PROSPERO (CRD42020141731).Findings: The systematic review returned 5339 unique records, yielding 186 included studies after exclusions. DHS data were compiled from 114 unique surveys, capturing 3 112 474 livebirths. Data extracted from the systematic review were synthesized together with primary DHS data, for meta-analysis on a total of 300 studies from 92 countries. Both increased maternal and paternal education showed a dose-response relationship linked to reduced under-5 mortality, with maternal education emerging as a stronger predictor. We observed a reduction in under-5 mortality of 31·0% (95% CI 29·0-32·6) for children born to mothers with 12 years of education (ie, completed secondary education) and 17·3% (15·0-18·8) for children born to fathers with 12 years of education, compared with those born to a parent with no education. We also showed that a single additional year of schooling was, on average, associated with a reduction in under-5 mortality of 3·04% (2·82-3·23) for maternal education and 1·57% (1·35-1·72) for paternal education. The association between higher parental education and lower child mortality was significant for both parents at all ages studied and was largest after the first month of life. The meta-analysis framework incorporated uncertainty associated with each individual effect size into the model fitting process, in an effort to decrease the risk of bias introduced by study design and quality.Interpretation: To our knowledge, this study is the first effort to systematically quantify the transgenerational importance of education for child survival at the global level. The results showed that lower maternal and paternal education are both risk factors for child mortality, even after controlling for other markers of family socioeconomic status. This study provides robust evidence for universal quality education as a mechanism to achieve the Sustainable Development Goal target 3.2 of reducing neonatal and child mortality.Funding: Research Council of Norway, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and Rockefeller Foundation-Boston University Commission on Social Determinants, Data, and Decision Making (3-D Commission). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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49. Measuring routine childhood vaccination coverage in 204 countries and territories, 1980-2019: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2020, Release 1.
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GBD 2020, Release 1, Vaccine Coverage Collaborators
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GLOBAL burden of disease , *GLOBAL analysis (Mathematics) , *KRIGING , *VACCINATION , *SPATIOTEMPORAL processes , *POLIOMYELITIS vaccines , *RESEARCH , *DPT vaccines , *TIME , *RESEARCH methodology , *WORLD health , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *COMPARATIVE studies , *MEASLES vaccines - Abstract
Background: Measuring routine childhood vaccination is crucial to inform global vaccine policies and programme implementation, and to track progress towards targets set by the Global Vaccine Action Plan (GVAP) and Immunization Agenda 2030. Robust estimates of routine vaccine coverage are needed to identify past successes and persistent vulnerabilities. Drawing from the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD) 2020, Release 1, we did a systematic analysis of global, regional, and national vaccine coverage trends using a statistical framework, by vaccine and over time.Methods: For this analysis we collated 55 326 country-specific, cohort-specific, year-specific, vaccine-specific, and dose-specific observations of routine childhood vaccination coverage between 1980 and 2019. Using spatiotemporal Gaussian process regression, we produced location-specific and year-specific estimates of 11 routine childhood vaccine coverage indicators for 204 countries and territories from 1980 to 2019, adjusting for biases in country-reported data and reflecting reported stockouts and supply disruptions. We analysed global and regional trends in coverage and numbers of zero-dose children (defined as those who never received a diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis [DTP] vaccine dose), progress towards GVAP targets, and the relationship between vaccine coverage and sociodemographic development.Findings: By 2019, global coverage of third-dose DTP (DTP3; 81·6% [95% uncertainty interval 80·4-82·7]) more than doubled from levels estimated in 1980 (39·9% [37·5-42·1]), as did global coverage of the first-dose measles-containing vaccine (MCV1; from 38·5% [35·4-41·3] in 1980 to 83·6% [82·3-84·8] in 2019). Third-dose polio vaccine (Pol3) coverage also increased, from 42·6% (41·4-44·1) in 1980 to 79·8% (78·4-81·1) in 2019, and global coverage of newer vaccines increased rapidly between 2000 and 2019. The global number of zero-dose children fell by nearly 75% between 1980 and 2019, from 56·8 million (52·6-60·9) to 14·5 million (13·4-15·9). However, over the past decade, global vaccine coverage broadly plateaued; 94 countries and territories recorded decreasing DTP3 coverage since 2010. Only 11 countries and territories were estimated to have reached the national GVAP target of at least 90% coverage for all assessed vaccines in 2019.Interpretation: After achieving large gains in childhood vaccine coverage worldwide, in much of the world this progress was stalled or reversed from 2010 to 2019. These findings underscore the importance of revisiting routine immunisation strategies and programmatic approaches, recentring service delivery around equity and underserved populations. Strengthening vaccine data and monitoring systems is crucial to these pursuits, now and through to 2030, to ensure that all children have access to, and can benefit from, lifesaving vaccines.Funding: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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50. Physical activity behaviours in adolescence: current evidence and opportunities for intervention.
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van Sluijs, Esther M F, Ekelund, Ulf, Crochemore-Silva, Inacio, Guthold, Regina, Ha, Amy, Lubans, David, Oyeyemi, Adewale L, Ding, Ding, and Katzmarzyk, Peter T
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PHYSICAL activity , *TEENAGERS , *ADOLESCENCE , *SEDENTARY behavior , *HIGH-income countries , *WORLD health , *EXERCISE , *SCHOOLS - Abstract
Young people aged 10-24 years constitute 24% of the world's population; investing in their health could yield a triple benefit-eg, today, into adulthood, and for the next generation. However, in physical activity research, this life stage is poorly understood, with the evidence dominated by research in younger adolescents (aged 10-14 years), school settings, and high-income countries. Globally, 80% of adolescents are insufficiently active, and many adolescents engage in 2 h or more daily recreational screen time. In this Series paper, we present the most up-to-date global evidence on adolescent physical activity and discuss directions for identifying potential solutions to enhance physical activity in the adolescent population. Adolescent physical inactivity probably contributes to key global health problems, including cardiometabolic and mental health disorders, but the evidence is methodologically weak. Evidence-based solutions focus on three key components of the adolescent physical activity system: supportive schools, the social and digital environment, and multipurpose urban environments. Despite an increasing volume of research focused on adolescents, there are still important knowledge gaps, and efforts to improve adolescent physical activity surveillance, research, intervention implementation, and policy development are urgently needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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