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Search: WFRF:(Carreras Giulia)

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1.
  • Gorasso, Vanessa, et al. (author)
  • Burden of disease attributable to risk factors in European countries: a scoping literature review
  • 2023
  • In: Archives of Public Health. - 0778-7367 .- 2049-3258. ; 81:1
  • Research review (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Objectives: Within the framework of the burden of disease (BoD) approach, disease and injury burden estimates attributable to risk factors are a useful guide for policy formulation and priority setting in disease prevention. Considering the important differences in methods, and their impact on burden estimates, we conducted a scoping literature review to: (1) map the BoD assessments including risk factors performed across Europe; and (2) identify the methodological choices in comparative risk assessment (CRA) and risk assessment methods. Methods: We searched multiple literature databases, including grey literature websites and targeted public health agencies websites. Results: A total of 113 studies were included in the synthesis and further divided into independent BoD assessments (54 studies) and studies linked to the Global Burden of Disease (59 papers). Our results showed that the methods used to perform CRA varied substantially across independent European BoD studies. While there were some methodological choices that were more common than others, we did not observe patterns in terms of country, year or risk factor. Each methodological choice can affect the comparability of estimates between and within countries and/or risk factors, since they might significantly influence the quantification of the attributable burden. From our analysis we observed that the use of CRA was less common for some types of risk factors and outcomes. These included environmental and occupational risk factors, which are more likely to use bottom-up approaches for health outcomes where disease envelopes may not be available. Conclusions: Our review also highlighted misreporting, the lack of uncertainty analysis and the under-investigation of causal relationships in BoD studies. Development and use of guidelines for performing and reporting BoD studies will help understand differences, avoid misinterpretations thus improving comparability among estimates.
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2.
  • Griswold, Max G., et al. (author)
  • Alcohol use and burden for 195 countries and territories, 1990-2016 : a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2016
  • 2018
  • In: The Lancet. - : Elsevier. - 0140-6736 .- 1474-547X. ; 392:10152, s. 1015-1035
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Background: Alcohol use is a leading risk factor for death and disability, but its overall association with health remains complex given the possible protective effects of moderate alcohol consumption on some conditions. With our comprehensive approach to health accounting within the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study 2016, we generated improved estimates of alcohol use and alcohol-attributable deaths and disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) for 195 locations from 1990 to 2016, for both sexes and for 5-year age groups between the ages of 15 years and 95 years and older.Methods: Using 694 data sources of individual and population-level alcohol consumption, along with 592 prospective and retrospective studies on the risk of alcohol use, we produced estimates of the prevalence of current drinking, abstention, the distribution of alcohol consumption among current drinkers in standard drinks daily (defined as 10 g of pure ethyl alcohol), and alcohol-attributable deaths and DALYs. We made several methodological improvements compared with previous estimates: first, we adjusted alcohol sales estimates to take into account tourist and unrecorded consumption; second, we did a new meta-analysis of relative risks for 23 health outcomes associated with alcohol use; and third, we developed a new method to quantify the level of alcohol consumption that minimises the overall risk to individual health.Findings: Globally, alcohol use was the seventh leading risk factor for both deaths and DALYs in 2016, accounting for 2.2% (95% uncertainty interval [UI] 1.5-3.0) of age-standardised female deaths and 6.8% (5.8-8.0) of age-standardised male deaths. Among the population aged 15-49 years, alcohol use was the leading risk factor globally in 2016, with 3.8% (95% UI 3.2-4-3) of female deaths and 12.2% (10.8-13-6) of male deaths attributable to alcohol use. For the population aged 15-49 years, female attributable DALYs were 2.3% (95% UI 2.0-2.6) and male attributable DALYs were 8.9% (7.8-9.9). The three leading causes of attributable deaths in this age group were tuberculosis (1.4% [95% UI 1. 0-1. 7] of total deaths), road injuries (1.2% [0.7-1.9]), and self-harm (1.1% [0.6-1.5]). For populations aged 50 years and older, cancers accounted for a large proportion of total alcohol-attributable deaths in 2016, constituting 27.1% (95% UI 21.2-33.3) of total alcohol-attributable female deaths and 18.9% (15.3-22.6) of male deaths. The level of alcohol consumption that minimised harm across health outcomes was zero (95% UI 0.0-0.8) standard drinks per week.Interpretation: Alcohol use is a leading risk factor for global disease burden and causes substantial health loss. We found that the risk of all-cause mortality, and of cancers specifically, rises with increasing levels of consumption, and the level of consumption that minimises health loss is zero. These results suggest that alcohol control policies might need to be revised worldwide, refocusing on efforts to lower overall population-level consumption.
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3.
  • Pandolfi, Maurizio, et al. (author)
  • Logical reasoning alone is often not enough
  • 2015
  • In: European Journal of Internal Medicine. - : Elsevier BV. - 1879-0828 .- 0953-6205. ; 26:4, s. 6-6
  • Journal article (other academic/artistic)
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5.
  • Pandolfi, Maurizio, et al. (author)
  • Research and common sense
  • 2015
  • In: European Journal of Internal Medicine. - : Elsevier BV. - 1879-0828 .- 0953-6205. ; 26:4, s. 9-9
  • Journal article (other academic/artistic)
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6.
  • Pandolfi, Maurizio, et al. (author)
  • The faulty statistics of complementary alternative medicine (CAM)
  • 2014
  • In: European Journal of Internal Medicine. - : Elsevier BV. - 1879-0828 .- 0953-6205. ; 25:7, s. 607-609
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The authors illustrate the difficulties involved in obtaining a valid statistical significance in clinical studies especially when the prior probability of the hypothesis under scrutiny is low. Since the prior probability of a research hypothesis is directly related to its scientific plausibility, the commonly used frequentist statistics, which does not take into account this probability, is particularly unsuitable for studies exploring matters in various degree disconnected from science such as complementary alternative medicine (CAM) interventions. Any statistical significance obtained in this field should be considered with great caution and may be better applied to more plausible hypotheses (like placebo effect) than that examined - which usually is the specific efficacy of the intervention. Since achieving meaningful statistical significance is an essential step in the validation of medical interventions, CAM practices, producing only outcomes inherently resistant to statistical validation, appear not to belong to modern evidence-based medicine. (C) 2014 European Federation of Internal Medicine. Published by Elsevier B. V. All rights reserved.
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7.
  • Pandolfi, Maurizio, et al. (author)
  • Why current statistics of complementary alternative medicine clinical trials is invalid
  • 2018
  • In: Journal of Clinical Medicine. - : MDPI AG. - 2077-0383. ; 7:6
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • It is not sufficiently known that frequentist statistics cannot provide direct information on the probability that the research hypothesis tested is correct. The error resulting from this misunderstanding is compounded when the hypotheses under scrutiny have precarious scientific bases, which, generally, those of complementary alternative medicine (CAM) are. In such cases, it is mandatory to use inferential statistics, considering the prior probability that the hypothesis tested is true, such as the Bayesian statistics. The authors show that, under such circumstances, no real statistical significance can be achieved in CAM clinical trials. In this respect, CAM trials involving human material are also hardly defensible from an ethical viewpoint.
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8.
  • Stanaway, Jeffrey D., et al. (author)
  • Global, regional, and national comparative risk assessment of 84 behavioural, environmental and occupational, and metabolic risks or clusters of risks for 195 countries and territories, 1990-2017: A systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2017
  • 2018
  • In: The Lancet. - 1474-547X .- 0140-6736. ; 392:10159, s. 1923-1994
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Background The Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD) 2017 comparative risk assessment (CRA) is a comprehensive approach to risk factor quantification that offers a useful tool for synthesising evidence on risks and risk-outcome associations. With each annual GBD study, we update the GBD CRA to incorporate improved methods, new risks and risk-outcome pairs, and new data on risk exposure levels and risk- outcome associations. Methods We used the CRA framework developed for previous iterations of GBD to estimate levels and trends in exposure, attributable deaths, and attributable disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs), by age group, sex, year, and location for 84 behavioural, environmental and occupational, and metabolic risks or groups of risks from 1990 to 2017. This study included 476 risk-outcome pairs that met the GBD study criteria for convincing or probable evidence of causation. We extracted relative risk and exposure estimates from 46 749 randomised controlled trials, cohort studies, household surveys, census data, satellite data, and other sources. We used statistical models to pool data, adjust for bias, and incorporate covariates. Using the counterfactual scenario of theoretical minimum risk exposure level (TMREL), we estimated the portion of deaths and DALYs that could be attributed to a given risk. We explored the relationship between development and risk exposure by modelling the relationship between the Socio-demographic Index (SDI) and risk-weighted exposure prevalence and estimated expected levels of exposure and risk-attributable burden by SDI. Finally, we explored temporal changes in risk-attributable DALYs by decomposing those changes into six main component drivers of change as follows: (1) population growth; (2) changes in population age structures; (3) changes in exposure to environmental and occupational risks; (4) changes in exposure to behavioural risks; (5) changes in exposure to metabolic risks; and (6) changes due to all other factors, approximated as the risk-deleted death and DALY rates, where the risk-deleted rate is the rate that would be observed had we reduced the exposure levels to the TMREL for all risk factors included in GBD 2017.
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9.
  • Abbafati, Cristiana, et al. (author)
  • 2020
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)
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  • Result 1-9 of 9
Type of publication
journal article (8)
research review (1)
Type of content
peer-reviewed (7)
other academic/artistic (2)
Author/Editor
McKee, Martin (3)
Madotto, Fabiana (3)
Koul, Parvaiz A. (3)
Brenner, Hermann (3)
Abbafati, Cristiana (3)
Bensenor, Isabela M. (3)
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Bernabe, Eduardo (3)
Esteghamati, Alireza (3)
Grosso, Giuseppe (3)
Kimokoti, Ruth W. (3)
Lallukka, Tea (3)
Lotufo, Paulo A. (3)
Mendoza, Walter (3)
Tran, Bach Xuan (3)
Uthman, Olalekan A. (3)
Werdecker, Andrea (3)
Xu, Gelin (3)
Alkerwi, Ala'a (3)
Bennett, Derrick A. (3)
Gona, Philimon N. (3)
Kim, Daniel (3)
Kosen, Soewarta (3)
Majeed, Azeem (3)
Shiri, Rahman (3)
Yano, Yuichiro (3)
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Alijanzadeh, Mehran (3)
Carvalho, Félix (3)
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Musa, Kamarul Imran (3)
Fernandes, Eduarda (3)
Morawska, Lidia (3)
Gallus, Silvano (3)
Fischer, Florian (3)
Haagsma, Juanita A (3)
Fullman, Nancy (3)
Soriano, Joan B. (3)
Farioli, Andrea (3)
Agarwal, Gina (3)
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Arabloo, Jalal (3)
Bijani, Ali (3)
Daryani, Ahmad (3)
Doku, David Teye (3)
Dubljanin, Eleonora (3)
Faro, Andre (3)
Gill, Paramjit Singh (3)
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University
Lund University (6)
Karolinska Institutet (3)
Högskolan Dalarna (3)
Uppsala University (2)
Chalmers University of Technology (2)
University of Gothenburg (1)
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Language
English (9)
Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Medical and Health Sciences (9)
Natural sciences (1)

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