6 results on '"Peñalver‐Argüeso, Belén"'
Search Results
2. A nation‐wide analysis of socioeconomic and geographical disparities in the prevalence of obesity and excess weight in children and adolescents in Spain: Results from the ENE‐COVID study.
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Gutiérrez‐González, Enrique, García‐Solano, Marta, Pastor‐Barriuso, Roberto, Fernández de Larrea‐Baz, Nerea, Rollán‐Gordo, Almudena, Peñalver‐Argüeso, Belén, Peña‐Rey, Isabel, Pollán, Marina, and Pérez‐Gómez, Beatriz
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STATURE ,SOCIAL determinants of health ,BODY weight ,CHILDHOOD obesity ,SELF-evaluation ,POPULATION geography ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,SEX distribution ,SURVEYS ,INCOME ,DISEASE prevalence ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SOCIAL classes ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,HEALTH equity ,BODY mass index - Abstract
Summary: Objective: To estimate national and provincial prevalence of obesity and excess weight in the child and adolescent population in Spain by sex and sociodemographic characteristics, and to explore sources of inequalities in their distribution, and their geographical patterns. Methods: ENE‐COVID is a nationwide representative seroepidemiological survey (68 287 participants) stratified by province and municipality size (April–June 2020). Participants answered a questionnaire which collected self‐reported weight and height, that allowed estimating crude and model‐based standardized prevalences of obesity and excess weight in the 10 543 child and adolescent participants aged 2–17 years. Results: Crude prevalences (WHO growth reference) were higher in boys than in girls (obesity: 13.4% vs. 7.9%; excess weight: 33.7% vs. 26.0%; severe obesity: 2.9% vs. 1.2%). These prevalences varied with age, increased with the presence of any adult with excess weight in the household, while they decreased with higher adult educational and census tract average income levels. Obesity by province ranged 1.8%–30.5% in boys and 0%–17.6% in girls; excess weight ranged 15.2%–49.9% in boys and 10.8%–40.8% in girls. The lowest prevalences of obesity and excess weight were found in provinces in the northern half of Spain. Sociodemographic characteristics only partially explained the observed geographical variability (33.6% obesity; 44.2% excess weight). Conclusions: Childhood and adolescent obesity and excess weight are highly prevalent in Spain, with relevant sex, sociodemographic and geographical differences. The geographic variability explained by sociodemographic variables indicates that there are other potentially modifiable factors on which to focus interventions at different geographic levels to fight this problem. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Smoking history and breast cancer risk by pathological subtype: MCC-Spain study.
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Peñalver-Argüeso, Belén, García-Esquinas, Esther, Castelló, Adela, Fernández de Larrea-Baz, Nerea, Castaño-Vinyals, Gemma, Amiano, Pilar, Fernández-Villa, Tania, Guevara, Marcela, Fernández-Tardón, Guillermo, Alguacil, Juan, Obón-Santacana, Mireia, Gómez-Acebo, Inés, Pinto-Carbó, Marina, Marcos-Gragera, Rafael, Aragonés, Nuria, Aizpurua, Amaia, Martín-Sánchez, Vicente, Ardanaz, Eva, Dierssen-Sotos, Trinidad, and Jiménez-Moleón, Jose Juan
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BREAST tumor risk factors , *OBESITY , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *DISEASES , *RESEARCH funding , *POSTMENOPAUSE , *SMOKING , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *ODDS ratio - Abstract
INTRODUCTION The role of cigarette smoking on breast cancer risk remains controversial, due to its dual carcinogenic-antiestrogenic action. METHODS In the population-based multi-case-control study (MCC-Spain), we collected epidemiological and clinical information for 1733 breast cancer cases and 1903 controls, including smoking exposure. The association with breast cancer, overall, by pathological subtype and menopausal status, was assessed using logistic and multinomial regression models. RESULTS Smokers had higher risk of premenopausal breast cancer, particularly if they had smoked ≥30 years (AOR=1.75; 95% CI: 1.04-2.94), although most estimates did not achieve statistical significance. In contrast, among postmenopausal women, smoking was associated with lower risk of breast cancer, mainly in overweight and obese women. The strongest risk reductions were observed among postmenopausal women who had stopped smoking ≥10 years before cancer diagnosis, particularly for HER2+ tumors (AOR=0.28; 95% CI: 0.11-0.68); p for heterogeneity = 0.040). Also, those who had smoked <10 pack-years (AOR=0.68; 95% CI: 0.47-0.98) or 10-25 pack-years (AOR=0.62; 95% CI: 0.42-0.92) during their lifetime were at a reduced risk of all breast cancer subtypes (p for heterogeneity: 0.405 and 0.475, respectively); however, women who had smoked more than 25 pack-years showed no reduced risk. CONCLUSIONS Menopausal status plays a key role in the relationship between tobacco and breast cancer for all cancer subtypes. While smoking seems to increase the risk in premenopausal woman, it might be associated to lower risk of breast cancer among postmenopausal women with excess weight. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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4. Comparative study of paper-and-pencil and electronic formats of the Snaith-Hamilton Pleasure Scale.
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Montoro, Maria, Arrua-Duarte, Elsa, Peñalver-Argüeso, Belén, Migoya-Borja, Marta, Baca-Garcia, Enrique, and Barrigón, Maria Luisa
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STATISTICS ,ANHEDONIA ,RESEARCH evaluation ,COMPARATIVE studies ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DATA analysis ,EVALUATION - Abstract
The gold standard for measuring anhedonia is the Snaith-Hamilton Pleasure Scale (SHAPS). To date, there are no validated electronic versions of this questionnaire. We aim to study the equivalence between the traditional paper-and-pencil format and a digital version of the SHAPS. A group of 67 patients completed both SHAPS formats, and differences between formats were assessed. McNemar's test showed no significant differences between the two systems. The Kappa coefficient was over 40% for most items, and reliability was above 0.8, showing good to excellent levels of internal consistency. Thus, we have demonstrated a close equivalence between paper-and-pencil and electronic SHAPS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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5. Comparative study of paper-and-pencil and electronic formats of the Snaith-Hamilton Pleasure Scale
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Montoro, Maria, primary, Arrua-Duarte, Elsa, additional, Peñalver-Argüeso, Belén, additional, Migoya-Borja, Marta, additional, Baca-Garcia, Enrique, additional, and Barrigón, Maria Luisa, additional
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- 2020
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6. Socio-geographical disparities of obesity and excess weight in adults in Spain: insights from the ENE-COVID study.
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Gutiérrez-González E, García-Solano M, Pastor-Barriuso R, Fernández de Larrea-Baz N, Rollán-Gordo A, Peñalver-Argüeso B, Peña-Rey I, Pollán M, and Pérez-Gómez B
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- Humans, Adult, Male, Female, Socioeconomic Factors, Spain epidemiology, Obesity epidemiology, Overweight epidemiology, COVID-19 epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: In Spain, differences in the prevalence of obesity and excess weight according to sex and sociodemographic factors have been described at the national level, although current data do not allow to delve into geographical differences for these conditions. The aim was to estimate national and regional prevalences of adult obesity and excess weight in Spain by sex and sociodemographic characteristics, and to explore difference sources of inequalities in its distribution, as well as its geographical pattern., Method: ENE-COVID study was a nationwide representative seroepidemiological survey with 57,131 participants. Residents in 35,893 households were selected from municipal rolls using a two-stage random sampling stratified by province and municipality size (April-June 2020). Participants (77.0% of contacted individuals) answered a questionnaire which collected self-reported weight and height, as well as different socioeconomic variables, that allowed estimating crude and standardized prevalences of adult obesity and excess weight., Results: Crude prevalences of obesity and excess weight were higher in men (obesity: 19.3% vs. 18.0%; excess weight: 63.7% vs. 48.4%), while severe obesity was more prevalent in women (4.5% vs. 5.3%). These prevalences increased with age and disability, and decreased with education, census tract income and municipality size. Differences by educational level, relative census income, nationality or disability were clearly higher among women. Obesity by province ranged 13.3-27.4% in men and 11.4-28.1% in women; excess weight ranged 57.2-76.0% in men and 38.9-59.5% in women. The highest prevalences were located in the southern half of the country and some north-western provinces. Sociodemographic characteristics only explained a small part of the observed geographical variability (25.2% obesity)., Conclusion: Obesity and overweight have a high prevalence in Spain, with notable geographical and sex differences. Socioeconomic inequalities are stronger among women. The observed geographical variability suggests the need to implement regional and local interventions to effectively address this public health problem., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Gutiérrez-González, García-Solano, Pastor-Barriuso, Fernández de Larrea-Baz, Rollán-Gordo, Peñalver-Argüeso, Peña-Rey, Pollán, Pérez-Gómez and the ENE-COVID Study Group.)
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- 2023
- Full Text
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