8 results on '"Lusyne P"'
Search Results
2. A population-based study on mortality among Belgian immigrants during the first COVID-19 wave in Belgium. Can demographic and socioeconomic indicators explain differential mortality?
- Author
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Vanthomme, Katrien, Gadeyne, Sylvie, Lusyne, Patrick, and Vandenheede, Hadewijch
- Abstract
Belgium has noted a significant excess mortality during the first COVID-19 wave. Research in other countries has shown that people with migrant origin are disproportionally affected. Belgium has an ethnically diverse and increasingly ageing population and is therefore particularly apt to study differential mortality by migrant group during this first wave of COVID-19.
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- 2021
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3. Social inequalities and long-term health impact of COVID-19 in Belgium: protocol of the HELICON population data linkage.
- Author
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De Pauw R, Van den Borre L, Baeyens Y, Cavillot L, Gadeyne S, Ghattas J, De Smedt D, Jaminé D, Khan Y, Lusyne P, Speybroeck N, Racape J, Rea A, Van Cauteren D, Vandepitte S, Vanthomme K, and Devleesschauwer B
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- Humans, Belgium epidemiology, COVID-19 Testing, SARS-CoV-2, Pandemics, Cohort Studies, COVID-19 epidemiology
- Abstract
Introduction: Data linkage systems have proven to be a powerful tool in support of combating and managing the COVID-19 pandemic. However, the interoperability and the reuse of different data sources may pose a number of technical, administrative and data security challenges., Methods and Analysis: This protocol aims to provide a case study for linking highly sensitive individual-level information. We describe the data linkages between health surveillance records and administrative data sources necessary to investigate social health inequalities and the long-term health impact of COVID-19 in Belgium. Data at the national institute for public health, Statistics Belgium and InterMutualistic Agency are used to develop a representative case-cohort study of 1.2 million randomly selected Belgians and 4.5 million Belgians with a confirmed COVID-19 diagnosis (PCR or antigen test), of which 108 211 are COVID-19 hospitalised patients (PCR or antigen test). Yearly updates are scheduled over a period of 4 years. The data set covers inpandemic and postpandemic health information between July 2020 and January 2026, as well as sociodemographic characteristics, socioeconomic indicators, healthcare use and related costs. Two main research questions will be addressed. First, can we identify socioeconomic and sociodemographic risk factors in COVID-19 testing, infection, hospitalisations and mortality? Second, what is the medium-term and long-term health impact of COVID-19 infections and hospitalisations? More specific objectives are (2a) To compare healthcare expenditure during and after a COVID-19 infection or hospitalisation; (2b) To investigate long-term health complications or premature mortality after a COVID-19 infection or hospitalisation; and (2c) To validate the administrative COVID-19 reimbursement nomenclature. The analysis plan includes the calculation of absolute and relative risks using survival analysis methods., Ethics and Dissemination: This study involves human participants and was approved by Ghent University hospital ethics committee: reference B.U.N. 1432020000371 and the Belgian Information Security Committee: reference Beraadslaging nr. 22/014 van 11 January 2022, available via https://www.ehealth.fgov.be/ehealthplatform/file/view/AX54CWc4Fbc33iE1rY5a?filename=22-014-n034-HELICON-project.pdf. Dissemination activities include peer-reviewed publications, a webinar series and a project website.The pseudonymised data are derived from administrative and health sources. Acquiring informed consent would require extra information on the subjects. The research team is prohibited from gaining additional knowledge on the study subjects by the Belgian Information Security Committee's interpretation of the Belgian privacy framework., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2023
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4. COVID-19 mortality, excess mortality, deaths per million and infection fatality ratio, Belgium, 9 March 2020 to 28 June 2020.
- Author
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Molenberghs G, Faes C, Verbeeck J, Deboosere P, Abrams S, Willem L, Aerts J, Theeten H, Devleesschauwer B, Bustos Sierra N, Renard F, Herzog S, Lusyne P, Van der Heyden J, Van Oyen H, Van Damme P, and Hens N
- Subjects
- Belgium epidemiology, Humans, Mortality, Nursing Homes, Pandemics, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19
- Abstract
BackgroundCOVID-19 mortality, excess mortality, deaths per million population (DPM), infection fatality ratio (IFR) and case fatality ratio (CFR) are reported and compared for many countries globally. These measures may appear objective, however, they should be interpreted with caution.AimWe examined reported COVID-19-related mortality in Belgium from 9 March 2020 to 28 June 2020, placing it against the background of excess mortality and compared the DPM and IFR between countries and within subgroups.MethodsThe relation between COVID-19-related mortality and excess mortality was evaluated by comparing COVID-19 mortality and the difference between observed and weekly average predictions of all-cause mortality. DPM were evaluated using demographic data of the Belgian population. The number of infections was estimated by a stochastic compartmental model. The IFR was estimated using a delay distribution between infection and death.ResultsIn the study period, 9,621 COVID-19-related deaths were reported, which is close to the excess mortality estimated using weekly averages (8,985 deaths). This translates to 837 DPM and an IFR of 1.5% in the general population. Both DPM and IFR increase with age and are substantially larger in the nursing home population.DiscussionDuring the first pandemic wave, Belgium had no discrepancy between COVID-19-related mortality and excess mortality. In light of this close agreement, it is useful to consider the DPM and IFR, which are both age, sex, and nursing home population-dependent. Comparison of COVID-19 mortality between countries should rather be based on excess mortality than on COVID-19-related mortality.
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- 2022
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5. Using linked administrative and disease-specific databases to study end-of-life care on a population level.
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Maetens A, De Schreye R, Faes K, Houttekier D, Deliens L, Gielen B, De Gendt C, Lusyne P, Annemans L, and Cohen J
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- Alzheimer Disease economics, Alzheimer Disease therapy, Belgium, Databases, Factual, Health Care Costs, Humans, Neoplasms economics, Neoplasms therapy, Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive economics, Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive therapy, Terminal Care economics, Information Storage and Retrieval methods, Quality of Health Care, Registries, Terminal Care statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: The use of full-population databases is under-explored to study the use, quality and costs of end-of-life care. Using the case of Belgium, we explored: (1) which full-population databases provide valid information about end-of-life care, (2) what procedures are there to use these databases, and (3) what is needed to integrate separate databases., Methods: Technical and privacy-related aspects of linking and accessing Belgian administrative databases and disease registries were assessed in cooperation with the database administrators and privacy commission bodies. For all relevant databases, we followed procedures in cooperation with database administrators to link the databases and to access the data., Results: We identified several databases as fitting for end-of-life care research in Belgium: the InterMutualistic Agency's national registry of health care claims data, the Belgian Cancer Registry including data on incidence of cancer, and databases administrated by Statistics Belgium including data from the death certificate database, the socio-economic survey and fiscal data. To obtain access to the data, approval was required from all database administrators, supervisory bodies and two separate national privacy bodies. Two Trusted Third Parties linked the databases via a deterministic matching procedure using multiple encrypted social security numbers., Conclusion: In this article we describe how various routinely collected population-level databases and disease registries can be accessed and linked to study patterns in the use, quality and costs of end-of-life care in the full population and in specific diagnostic groups.
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- 2016
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6. Partner selection and divorce in ethnic minorities: distinguishing between two types of ethnic homogamous marriages.
- Author
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Eeckhaut MC, Lievens J, Van de Putte B, and Lusyne P
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- Cross-Cultural Comparison, Family ethnology, Family history, Family psychology, Family Characteristics history, History, 20th Century, History, 21st Century, Humans, Divorce economics, Divorce ethnology, Divorce history, Divorce legislation & jurisprudence, Divorce psychology, Ethnicity education, Ethnicity ethnology, Ethnicity history, Ethnicity legislation & jurisprudence, Ethnicity psychology, Marriage ethnology, Marriage history, Marriage legislation & jurisprudence, Marriage psychology, Social Conditions economics, Social Conditions history, Social Conditions legislation & jurisprudence, Spouses education, Spouses ethnology, Spouses history, Spouses legislation & jurisprudence, Spouses psychology
- Abstract
This article compares divorce risks according to marriage type. The common dichotomy between ethnic homogamous and ethnic heterogamous marriages is further elaborated by differentiating a third marriage type; ethnic homogamous marriages between individuals from an ethnic minority group and a partner from the country of origin. Based on the analysis of data concerning the Turkish and Moroccan minorities in Belgium, it has been confirmed that the divorce risk associated with these marriages is higher than that of other ethnic homogamous marriages. However, specific divorce patterns according to marriage type also indicate the importance of differences between the minority groups.
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- 2011
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7. The impact of children on a parent's risk of suicide following death of a spouse, Belgium 1991-96.
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Lusyne P and Page H
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Belgium epidemiology, Case-Control Studies, Child, Female, Humans, Life Change Events, Male, Middle Aged, Suicide statistics & numerical data, Widowhood statistics & numerical data, Bereavement, Parent-Child Relations, Parents psychology, Suicide psychology, Widowhood psychology
- Abstract
Since Durkheim's work on suicide, the family has widely been seen as providing partial protection against the development of tendencies to suicide. This study assesses the impact of parenthood (both number of children and age of youngest child) on suicide following the death of a spouse. Using data for Belgium in the 5 years following the 1991 census, the study adopts a nested case-control design with information on 3,800 suicides and 75,673 matched controls. The analysis takes into account several social-economic variables. The findings show that the impact of children on the elevated suicide levels found among widows and widowers relative to the still married can be positive or negative, and differs by both age and sex of the parent, age of the child or children, and time since bereavement.
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- 2008
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8. Mortality following conjugal bereavement, Belgium 1991-96: the unexpected effect of education.
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Lusyne P, Page H, and Lievens J
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- Belgium, History, 20th Century, Bereavement, Education history, Marriage history, Mortality trends
- Abstract
This paper examines excess mortality following spousal bereavement by time since bereavement, sex, age, and education. The main hypothesis challenged is that higher education buffers the harmful effects of spousal loss. Using a log-rate model, death-rate ratios (widowed/married) are estimated for 49,849 and 126,746 Belgian widowers and widows and an equal number of non-bereaved controls matched to the bereaved on their socio-demographic characteristics. The hypothesis that the more educated suffer less excess mortality is not supported. Although higher educational levels are associated with lower mortality in general, they do not alleviate the effects of bereavement. On the contrary, in the period immediately following spousal loss, the more highly educated seem to have more, rather than less, excess mortality. Three possible arguments are suggested to account for this: education-related differences in the partner-relationship, structural differences in the availability of appropriate social support, and cultural differences in potential support networks.
- Published
- 2001
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