42 research outputs found
Stages of development and injury patterns in the early years: a population-based analysis
BACKGROUND: In Canada, there are many formal public health programs under development that aim to prevent injuries in the early years (e.g. 0–6). There are paradoxically no population-based studies that have examined patterns of injury by developmental stage among these young children. This represents a gap in the Canadian biomedical literature. The current population-based analysis explores external causes and consequences of injuries experienced by young children who present to the emergency department for assessment and treatment. This provides objective evidence about prevention priorities to be considered in anticipatory counseling and public health planning. METHODS: Four complete years of data (1999–2002; n = 5876 cases) were reviewed from the Kingston sites of the Canadian Hospitals Injury Reporting and Prevention Program (CHIRPP), an ongoing injury surveillance initiative. Epidemiological analyses were used to characterize injury patterns within and across age groups (0–6 years) that corresponded to normative developmental stages. RESULTS: The average annual rate of emergency department-attended childhood injury was 107 per 1000 (95% CI 91–123), with boys experiencing higher annual rates of injury than girls (122 vs. 91 per 1000; p < 0.05). External causes of injury changed substantially by developmental stage. This lead to the identification of four prevention priorities surrounding 1) the optimization of supervision; 2) limiting access to hazards; 3) protection from heights; and 4) anticipation of risks. CONCLUSION: This population-based injury surveillance analysis provides a strong evidence-base to inform and enhance anticipatory counseling and other public health efforts aimed at the prevention of childhood injury during the early years
The benefit of the doubt or doubts over benefits? A systematic literature review of perceived risks of vaccines in European populations
Costs associated with measles in healthcare personnel during the 2017–2018 epidemic in Greece: a real-world data cost-of-illness analysis
Costs associated with measles in healthcare personnel during the 2017–2018 epidemic in Greece: a real-world data cost-of-illness analysis
Measles represents an occupational risk for healthcare personnel (HCP). A total of 117 cases of measles among HCP were notified in Greece during 2017–2018. We were able to contact 46 of them. Most of those contacted had a serious clinical course with complications, necessitating hospitalization in 67% of cases. All HCP reported absenteeism, for a mean duration of 21.2 working days (range: 3–60 days); 54.3% of HCP reported being at work while symptomatic for a mean duration of 2.3 working days (range: 1–7 days). The average total cost-of-illness was €4,739 per HCP. The total direct and indirect costs of the 117 notified cases among HCP amount to €554,494, which is likely to be an underestimate of the true cost. © 2019 The Healthcare Infection Societ
Attitudes towards vaccination against seasonal influenza of health-care workers in primary health-care settings in Greece
Injuries in public and private playgrounds: the relative contribution of structural, equipment and human factors
The aim of this case-control Study was to identify and quantify risk
factors of injuries in playgrounds, where children spend an increasing
amount of time in developed Countries. The study took place in Greater
Athens during 1999. A continuous Emergency Departments Injury
Surveillance System (EDISS) of hospitals that cover about 30% of the
children’s time at risk in Greater Athens identified 777 injuries in
public and private playgrounds out of a total of 17 497 injuries. Public
playgrounds differ from private ones, because the former generally have
more equipment. usually of greater height, with less resilient surfaces.
and supervision relies mainly on parents or guardians. Patterns of type
of playground use were assessed in a sample of 294 children from the
same study base who served as a control group in a hierarchical
case-control design. The annual incidence of playground injuries in
Greater Athens vas about 7 in 1000 among boys and 4 in 1000 among girls,
with a 2.2 times higher risk for an injury in public than in private
playgrounds (95% confidence interval 1.61-3.07). Children in public vs
private playgrounds had a statistically significant eight times higher
odds for concussion and six times higher for open wounds, whereas the
odds for long bone fractures were four and for other fractures two;
swings, slides and seesaws were the types of equipment most frequently
associated with injuries. It was further shown that supervision of
children was suboptimal (<60%) in both public and private playgrounds.
and children in private playgrounds sustained an unduly high frequency
of sprain/ dislocation injuries (odds ratio 1.75) because they were
encouraged to play bare-footed.
Conclusion: Close to 50%, of playground injuries could be prevented by
structural and equipment changes. while further reduction could be
accomplished through simple measures including closer supervision and
encouraging children to wear proper shoes and use, whenever necessary
A comparative online survey on the intention to get COVID-19 vaccine between Greek and Cypriot healthcare personnel: is the country a predictor?
A comparative online survey on the intention to get COVID-19 vaccine between Greek and Cypriot healthcare personnel: is the country a predictor?
Vaccine hesitancy amongst healthcare personnel (HCP) is a critical issue. The aim was to explore the factors that determine the intention to opt for COVID-19 vaccine among HCP from two southern European countries. An anonymous online self-administered survey using Google Forms has been conducted between December 1st to December 15th, 2020 among the HCP in Greece and the Republic of Cyprus. A total of 2,238 HCPs participated in the study (1,220/54.5% from Republic of Cyprus and 1,018 from Greece). Overall 1,082 (48.3%) stressed their intention to get vaccinated (64.4% for Greece and 34.9% for Republic of Cyprus). The main reasons for those who intend to get the COVID-19 vaccine include self (94.2%), family (98.7%), and patients protection (95.2%) as well as mitigation of COVID-19 pandemic (95.4%). The multivariate logistic regression that was performed for the total sample revealed that the following variables were significantly associated with an increased probability to get vaccinated against COVID-19: being a physician, a member of the nursing personnel, paramedical staff, working in Greece, age, the belief that influenza vaccination should be mandatory for HCP, and the rating of the overall management of COVID-19 pandemic in the country and from the public hospitals. Physicians were more likely to get vaccinated against COVID-19 than other HCP. The age was a predictor of COVID-19 uptake intention in the Republic of Cyprus. The belief that there was a successful management of the COVID-19 pandemic contributed to the intention to COVID-19 vaccination uptake
