SwePub
Sök i SwePub databas

  Extended search

Träfflista för sökning "WFRF:(Zhong Xuefeng) "

Search: WFRF:(Zhong Xuefeng)

  • Result 1-3 of 3
Sort/group result
   
EnumerationReferenceCoverFind
1.
  • Dekker, Joost, et al. (author)
  • Behavioral medicine in China
  • 2014
  • In: International Journal of Behavioral Medicine. - : Springer Science and Business Media LLC. - 1070-5503 .- 1532-7558. ; 21:4, s. 571-573
  • Journal article (other academic/artistic)
  •  
2.
  • Feigin, Valery L., et al. (author)
  • Global, regional, and national burden of stroke and its risk factors, 1990-2019 : a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2019
  • 2021
  • In: Lancet Neurology. - : Elsevier. - 1474-4422 .- 1474-4465. ; 20:10, s. 795-820
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Background Regularly updated data on stroke and its pathological types, including data on their incidence, prevalence, mortality, disability, risk factors, and epidemiological trends, are important for evidence-based stroke care planning and resource allocation. The Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD) aims to provide a standardised and comprehensive measurement of these metrics at global, regional, and national levels. Methods We applied GBD 2019 analytical tools to calculate stroke incidence, prevalence, mortality, disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs), and the population attributable fraction (PAF) of DALYs (with corresponding 95% uncertainty intervals [UIs]) associated with 19 risk factors, for 204 countries and territories from 1990 to 2019. These estimates were provided for ischaemic stroke, intracerebral haemorrhage, subarachnoid haemorrhage, and all strokes combined, and stratified by sex, age group, and World Bank country income level. Findings In 2019, there were 12.2 million (95% UI 11.0-13.6) incident cases of stroke, 101 million (93.2-111) prevalent cases of stroke, 143 million (133-153) DALYs due to stroke, and 6.55 million (6.00-7.02) deaths from stroke. Globally, stroke remained the second-leading cause of death (11.6% [10.8-12.2] of total deaths) and the third-leading cause of death and disability combined (5.7% [5.1-6.2] of total DALYs) in 2019. From 1990 to 2019, the absolute number of incident strokes increased by 70.0% (67.0-73.0), prevalent strokes increased by 85.0% (83.0-88.0), deaths from stroke increased by 43.0% (31.0-55.0), and DALYs due to stroke increased by 32.0% (22.0-42.0). During the same period, age-standardised rates of stroke incidence decreased by 17.0% (15.0-18.0), mortality decreased by 36.0% (31.0-42.0), prevalence decreased by 6.0% (5.0-7.0), and DALYs decreased by 36.0% (31.0-42.0). However, among people younger than 70 years, prevalence rates increased by 22.0% (21.0-24.0) and incidence rates increased by 15.0% (12.0-18.0). In 2019, the age-standardised stroke-related mortality rate was 3.6 (3.5-3.8) times higher in the World Bank low-income group than in the World Bank high-income group, and the age-standardised stroke-related DALY rate was 3.7 (3.5-3.9) times higher in the low-income group than the high-income group. Ischaemic stroke constituted 62.4% of all incident strokes in 2019 (7.63 million [6.57-8.96]), while intracerebral haemorrhage constituted 27.9% (3.41 million [2.97-3.91]) and subarachnoid haemorrhage constituted 9.7% (1.18 million [1.01-1.39]). In 2019, the five leading risk factors for stroke were high systolic blood pressure (contributing to 79.6 million [67.7-90.8] DALYs or 55.5% [48.2-62.0] of total stroke DALYs), high body-mass index (34.9 million [22.3-48.6] DALYs or 24.3% [15.7-33.2]), high fasting plasma glucose (28.9 million [19.8-41.5] DALYs or 20.2% [13.8-29.1]), ambient particulate matter pollution (28.7 million [23.4-33.4] DALYs or 20.1% [16.6-23.0]), and smoking (25.3 million [22.6-28.2] DALYs or 17.6% [16.4-19.0]). Interpretation The annual number of strokes and deaths due to stroke increased substantially from 1990 to 2019, despite substantial reductions in age-standardised rates, particularly among people older than 70 years. The highest age-standardised stroke-related mortality and DALY rates were in the World Bank low-income group. The fastest-growing risk factor for stroke between 1990 and 2019 was high body-mass index. Without urgent implementation of effective primary prevention strategies, the stroke burden will probably continue to grow across the world, particularly in low-income countries.
  •  
3.
  • Kristan, Matej, et al. (author)
  • The first visual object tracking segmentation VOTS2023 challenge results
  • 2023
  • In: 2023 IEEE/CVF International conference on computer vision workshops (ICCVW). - : Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.. - 9798350307443 - 9798350307450 ; , s. 1788-1810
  • Conference paper (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The Visual Object Tracking Segmentation VOTS2023 challenge is the eleventh annual tracker benchmarking activity of the VOT initiative. This challenge is the first to merge short-term and long-term as well as single-target and multiple-target tracking with segmentation masks as the only target location specification. A new dataset was created; the ground truth has been withheld to prevent overfitting. New performance measures and evaluation protocols have been created along with a new toolkit and an evaluation server. Results of the presented 47 trackers indicate that modern tracking frameworks are well-suited to deal with convergence of short-term and long-term tracking and that multiple and single target tracking can be considered a single problem. A leaderboard, with participating trackers details, the source code, the datasets, and the evaluation kit are publicly available at the challenge website1
  •  
Skapa referenser, mejla, bekava och länka
  • Result 1-3 of 3
Type of publication
journal article (2)
conference paper (1)
Type of content
peer-reviewed (2)
other academic/artistic (1)
Author/Editor
Ärnlöv, Johan, 1970- (1)
Rahmani, Amir Masoud (1)
Hankey, Graeme J. (1)
Wijeratne, Tissa (1)
Sahebkar, Amirhossei ... (1)
Romoli, Michele (1)
show more...
Sacco, Simona (1)
Dalal, Koustuv (1)
Wang, Fei (1)
Mayer, Christoph (1)
Wang, Dong (1)
Jacob, Louis (1)
Koyanagi, Ai (1)
Brenner, Hermann (1)
Dhimal, Meghnath (1)
Sheikh, Aziz (1)
Hay, Simon I. (1)
Alahdab, Fares (1)
Bensenor, Isabela M. (1)
Carrero, Juan J. (1)
Dandona, Lalit (1)
Dandona, Rakhi (1)
Farzadfar, Farshad (1)
Feigin, Valery L. (1)
Goulart, Alessandra ... (1)
Hamidi, Samer (1)
Hassen, Hamid Yimam (1)
Jonas, Jost B. (1)
Khader, Yousef Saleh (1)
Kumar, G. Anil (1)
Lallukka, Tea (1)
Lorkowski, Stefan (1)
Malekzadeh, Reza (1)
Mokdad, Ali H. (1)
Naghavi, Mohsen (1)
Roth, Gregory A. (1)
Schutte, Aletta Elis ... (1)
Sepanlou, Sadaf G. (1)
Thrift, Amanda G. (1)
Tran, Bach Xuan (1)
Vasankari, Tommi Juh ... (1)
Vu, Giang Thu (1)
Vu, Linh Gia (1)
Wu, Jason H. (1)
Yonemoto, Naohiro (1)
Yu, Chuanhua (1)
Murray, Christopher ... (1)
Reitsma, Marissa B. (1)
Bennett, Derrick A. (1)
Duncan, Bruce B. (1)
show less...
University
Karolinska Institutet (2)
Umeå University (1)
Stockholm University (1)
Linköping University (1)
Mid Sweden University (1)
Högskolan Dalarna (1)
Language
English (3)
Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Medical and Health Sciences (2)
Natural sciences (1)

Year

Kungliga biblioteket hanterar dina personuppgifter i enlighet med EU:s dataskyddsförordning (2018), GDPR. Läs mer om hur det funkar här.
Så här hanterar KB dina uppgifter vid användning av denna tjänst.

 
pil uppåt Close

Copy and save the link in order to return to this view