48 research outputs found
Ecological study of road traffic injuries in the eastern Mediterranean region: country economic level, road user category and gender perspectives
Background: The Eastern Mediterranean region has the second highest number of road traffic injury mortality rates
after the African region based on 2013 data, with road traffic injuries accounting for 27% of the total injury mortality in
the region. Globally the number of road traffic deaths has plateaued despite an increase in motorization, but it is
uncertain whether this applies to the Region. This study investigated the regional trends in both road traffic
injury mortality and morbidity and examined country-based differences considering on income level, categories
of road users, and gender distribution.
Methods: Register-based ecological study linking data from Global Burden of Disease Study with the United
Nations Statistics Division for population and World Bank definition for country income level. Road traffic injury
mortality rates and disability-adjusted life years were compiled for all ages at country level in 1995, 2005, 2015
and combined for a regional average (n = 22) and a global average (n = 122). The data were stratified by country
economic level, road user category and gender.
Results: Road traffic injury mortality rates in the Region were higher than the global average for all three reference
years but suggest a downward trend. In 2015 mortality rates were more than twice as high in low and high income
countries compared to global income averages and motor vehicle occupants had a 3-fold greater mortality than the
global average. Severe injuries decreased by more than half for high/middle income countries but remained high for
low income countries; three times higher for males than females.
Conclusion: Despite a potential downward trend, inequalities in road traffic injury mortality and morbidity burden
remain high in the Eastern Mediterranean region. Action needs to be intensified and targeted to implement and
enforce safety measures that prevent and mitigate severe motor vehicle crashes in high income countries especially
and invest in efforts to promote public, active transport for vulnerable road users in the resource poor countries of the
Region.Institute for Social and Health Studies (ISHS
Ecological study of road traffic injuries in the eastern Mediterranean region: country economic level, road user category and gender perspectives
Background: The Eastern Mediterranean region has the second highest number of road traffic injury mortality rates
after the African region based on 2013 data, with road traffic injuries accounting for 27% of the total injury mortality in
the region. Globally the number of road traffic deaths has plateaued despite an increase in motorization, but it is
uncertain whether this applies to the Region. This study investigated the regional trends in both road traffic
injury mortality and morbidity and examined country-based differences considering on income level, categories
of road users, and gender distribution.
Methods: Register-based ecological study linking data from Global Burden of Disease Study with the United
Nations Statistics Division for population and World Bank definition for country income level. Road traffic injury
mortality rates and disability-adjusted life years were compiled for all ages at country level in 1995, 2005, 2015
and combined for a regional average (n = 22) and a global average (n = 122). The data were stratified by country
economic level, road user category and gender.
Results: Road traffic injury mortality rates in the Region were higher than the global average for all three reference
years but suggest a downward trend. In 2015 mortality rates were more than twice as high in low and high income
countries compared to global income averages and motor vehicle occupants had a 3-fold greater mortality than the
global average. Severe injuries decreased by more than half for high/middle income countries but remained high for
low income countries; three times higher for males than females.
Conclusion: Despite a potential downward trend, inequalities in road traffic injury mortality and morbidity burden
remain high in the Eastern Mediterranean region. Action needs to be intensified and targeted to implement and
enforce safety measures that prevent and mitigate severe motor vehicle crashes in high income countries especially
and invest in efforts to promote public, active transport for vulnerable road users in the resource poor countries of the
Region.Institute for Social and Health Studies (ISHS
Enablers of psychosocial recovery in pediatric burns: perspectives from the children, parents and burn recovery support staff
Abstract
Background
Pediatric burn injuries are a major cause of death and injury, occurring mainly in resource poor environments. Recovery from burns is widely reported to be constrained by physical, psychological, relationship and reintegration challenges. These challenges have been widely described, but not the enablers of psychosocial recovery. This is especially true in pediatric burn research, with few multi- perspective studies on the recovery process.
Methods
This qualitative study involved 8 focus group discussions (four with 15 children post-burn injury, four with 15 caregivers) and 12 individual interviews with staff working in pediatric burns that explored the psychosocial needs of children after a burn and the enablers of their recovery. Purposive sampling was utilized and recruitment of all three categories of participants was done primarily through the only hospital burns unit in the Western Cape, South Africa. The interviews focused on factors that supported the child’s recovery and were sequentially facilitated from the child and the family’s experiences during hospitalization, to the return home to family and friends, followed by re-entry into school. Thematic analysis was used to analyze verbatim interview transcripts.
Results
The recovery enablers that emerged included: (i) Presence and reassurance; indicating the comfort and practical help provided by family and close friends in the hospital and throughout the recovery process; (ii) Normalizing interactions and acceptance; where children were treated the same as before the injury to promote the acceptance of self and by others especially once the child returned home; and (iii) Sensitization of others and protection; signifying how persons around the child had assisted the children to deal with issues in the reintegration process including the re-entry to school.
Conclusions
This study indicates that the psychosocial recovery process of children hospitalized for burns is enabled by the supportive relationships from family members, close friends and burn staff, present during hospitalization, the return home, and school re-entry. Support included comfort and physical presence of trusted others and emotional support; affirmation of the child’s identity and belonging despite appearance changes; and the advocacy and protection for the re-entry back into the school, and more generally the community
Children Immunization App (CIMA) among Syrian refugees in Zaatari Camp, Jordan : Protocol for a cluster randomized controlled pilot trial intervention study
Neglected burden of injuries in Ethiopia, from 1990 to 2019: a systematic analysis of the global burden of diseases study 2019
BackgroundThe 2030 agenda for sustainable development goals has given injury prevention new attention, including halving road traffic injuries. This study compiled the best available evidence on injury from the global burden of diseases study for Ethiopia from 1990 to 2019.MethodsInjury data on incidence, prevalence, mortality, disability-adjusted life years lost, years lived with disability, and years of life lost were extracted from the 2019 global burden of diseases study for regions and chartered cities in Ethiopia from 1990 to 2019. Rates were estimated per 100,000 population.ResultsIn 2019, the age-standardized rate of incidence was 7,118 (95% UI: 6,621–7,678), prevalence was 21,735 (95% UI: 19,251–26,302), death was 72 (95% UI: 61–83), disability-adjusted life years lost was 3,265 (95% UI: 2,826–3,783), years of live lost was 2,417 (95% UI: 2,043–2,860), and years lived with disability was 848 [95% UI: (620–1,153)]. Since 1990, there has been a reduction in the age-standardized rate of incidence by 76% (95% UI: 74–78), death by 70% (95% UI: 65–75), and prevalence by 13% (95% UI: 3–18), with noticeable inter-regional variations. Transport injuries, conflict and terrorism, interpersonal violence, self-harm, falls, poisoning, and exposure to mechanical forces were the leading causes of injury-related deaths and long-term disabilities. Since 1990, there has been a decline in the prevalence of transport injuries by 32% (95% UI: 31–33), exposure to mechanical forces by 12% (95% UI: 10–14), and interpersonal violence by 7.4% (95% UI: 5–10). However, there was an increment in falls by 8.4% (95% UI: 7–11) and conflict and terrorism by 1.5% (95% UI: 38–27).ConclusionEven though the burden of injuries has steadily decreased at national and sub-national levels in Ethiopia over the past 30 years, it still remains to be an area of public health priority. Therefore, injury prevention and control strategies should consider regional disparities in the burden of injuries, promoting transportation safety, developing democratic culture and negotiation skills to solve disputes, using early security-interventions when conflict arises, ensuring workplace safety and improving psychological wellbeing of citizens
Exploring Social and Financial Hardship, Mental Health Problems and the Role of Social Support in Asylum Seekers Using Structural Equation Modelling
Asylum seekers are exposed to a range of social and financial difficulties suggested to adversely impact mental health. Uprooted social networks and living conditions during the asylum seeking process potentially predispose this population to low access to social support. The aim of this study was to examine the relationship between social and financial hardship and mental health problems, and assess the potential mediating role of social support among asylum seekers. Cross sectional survey data from a cohort of asylum seekers in Sweden (N = 455) were subjected to structural equation modelling for examining hypothesized pathways between social and financial hardship, common mental health problems (CMHPs) and social support. Fit indices showed adequate to excellent fit of the examined models with CMHPs as the outcome (all CFI ≥ 0.951, RMSEA < 0.05, SRMR < 0.056). CMHPs were positively regressed on social and financial hardship (B = 0.786, S = 0.102, p < 0.001) and negatively regressed on social support (B = −0.103, SE = 0.032, p = 0.001). Social support mediated the association between social and financial hardship and CMHPs (effect estimate = 0.075, 95% CI = 0.032–0.136). The results point to the importance of social and living conditions of asylum seekers and indicate that social support is both socially patterned and may act as a mitigating resource to inform interventions and policies
Cerebral Palsy Link to Sensorimotor System, Cognition, Emotion and Nociplastic Pain
This narrative review provides an overview of the link between the sensorimotor system, cognition, emotion and pain syndromes in persons due to deconditioning or delayed sensorimotor development, then applied to persons with cerebral palsy (CP). The brain damage that occurs before, during or even after birth pathophysiologically alters the structure and subsequent function of the sensorimotor function, which is inseparably linked to cognition, emotion, behavior and pain. This damage results in a functional developmental disorder that also affects the structure and function of the neuromatrix in a graded manner due to chronic deconditioning. It is the basis for both primary and secondary chronic degenerative diseases. This leads to an increasing prevalence of chronic pain syndromes, which may be very high in persons with CP. Thus, CP is both a disposing factor and a causal factor for nociplastic pain, defined as persistent pain arising from altered nociception without evidence of tissue or somatosensory damage. Therapy interventions are crucial to optimize movement, cognition and emotion, as well as pain reduction in persons with CP
Post-Migration Stressors and Health-Related Quality of Life in Refugees from Syria Resettled in Sweden
The link between post-migration stressors and mental ill health is well documented in refugees resettled in high-income host countries, but the consequences of these stressors on refugees’ health-related quality of life (HRQoL) are less known. This study examined the association between post-migration stressors and HRQoL among Syrian adult refugees resettled in Sweden using a preference-based value set obtained from the general Swedish population. A total of 1215 Syrian adults, ages 18–64 years, granted residency in Sweden, responded to a postal questionnaire in 2016 regarding various aspects of their resettlement. The European Quality of Life Five Dimensions Five Level (EQ–5D–5L) questionnaire was used to assess HRQoL through an EQ–5D–5L index score (range; 0=dead to 1=full health). The index score was preference weighted using a Swedish population value set. Predictors were four self-reported post-migration stressors related to daily living in the host country: financial strain, social strain, competency strain and perceived discrimination divided into low, medium and high levels of experienced stress. Multivariable linear regression models were employed to assess the association between post-migration stressors and HRQoL index score, adjusting for potentially traumatic events in the pre- and peri-migration phase as well as sociodemographic confounders/covariates (sex, age, education, civil status, immigration year). The Syrian refugees had a mean EQ–5D–5L index score of 0.863 (SD = 0.145). There was strong evidence of a negative dose-response association in both unadjusted and adjusted models between HRQoL and the post-migration stressors financial strain and social strain—i.e., there was a stepwise, and statistically significant, decrease in HRQoL when going from low to medium to high strain. Competency strain and discrimination were only associated with lower HRQoL when experienced at high levels in fully adjusted models. High exposure to potentially traumatic experiences before or during flight was also associated with lower HRQoL. Syrian refugees resettled in Sweden reported a lower HRQoL than the general Swedish population and lower than age-matched Swedish adults. The present study results point to the possible adverse effects of post-migration stressors on HRQoL
Post-migration Stressors and Subjective Well-Being in Adult Syrian Refugees Resettled in Sweden : A Gender Perspective
A number of post-migration stressors have been shown to adversely affect mental health in refugees resettled in high-income countries, including poor social integration, financial difficulties and discrimination, and recent evidence suggests that these effects are gender specific. Social support has been found to buffer against post-migration stress in some studies on refugee populations, though the evidence on this is mixed. The present study used cross-sectional survey data from a nationwide, randomly sampled group of adult refugees from Syria resettled in Sweden between 2008 and 2013 (N-sample = 4,000, n(respondents) = 1,215, response rate 30.4%) to investigate gender-specific associations between post-migration stressors and subjective well-being (SWB) and whether these associations were modified by social support. SWB was measured with the WHO-5 Well-being Index (scaled 0-100), dichotomized into high (>= 50) and low (<50) SWB. Main analyses were stratified by gender, and regressed SWB on four domains of post-migration stress (financial strain, social strain, competency strain and discrimination) using logistic regression, adjusting for sociodemographic variables and traumatic experiences. Social support was tested as an effect modifier. In fully adjusted models, main risk factors for low SWB were high financial strain, especially in males (ORhigh vs. low strain, males = 10.30 [4.91-21.6], p < 0.001 vs. ORhigh vs. low strain, females= 3.84 [1.68-8.79], p = 0.002), and high social strain, only in males (ORhigh vs. low strain, males = 9.21 [3.96-21.4], p < 0.001 vs. ORhigh vs. low strain, females = 1.03 [0.40-2.64], p = ns). There was some evidence that social support buffered the adverse association of financial strain with SWB. In conclusion, the present study found clear support of gender-specific effects of post-migration stressors on SWB. Mitigation strategies and interventions should be aware of and sensitive to these potential gendered effects, and future research exploring mental health in the context of resettlement stress should have a heightened focus on the important role of gender.</p
Psychosocial Interventions Targeting Recovery in Child and Adolescent Burns: A Systematic Review
AbstractChildren post-burn injury experience a range of psychosocial sequelae that benefit from early provision of psychosocial support. However, no systematic review exists evaluating the full range of psychological interventions.ObjectiveTo critically evaluate psychosocial interventions for children (<18 years old) with burn injuries in improving psychosocial recovery.Study designAll-language studies were identified from inception to March 2018 in six electronic databases and appraised according to PRISMA checklist and Cochrane Risk of Bias Tool for quality. Studies were stratified into three groups: distraction (virtual reality, child life therapy, imagery-based therapy, hypnosis), burn camps, and other (social skills, cognitive behavioral therapy, parent group counseling).ResultsOut of a total of 5,456 articles identified, 297 underwent full review resulting in 27 included articles published between 1986 and 2018. Sample sizes ranged from 9 to 266, comprising child and adult participants. A range of interventions and psychosocial outcome measures were found. Several studies (n = 21) reported statistically significant improvements in outcome; the majority were distraction interventions to reduce pain and anxiety. A limited number of studies showing effect was found for cognitive behavioral therapy and parent counseling. Risk of bias was high in studies of burn camps and mixed for all other interventions.ConclusionsA range of psychosocial interventions and outcome tools exist in pediatric burns. Distraction interventions prior to and/or during dressing changes or physical therapy were shown to effectively reduce pain and anxiety for a wide range of pediatric ages.</jats:sec
