| Literature DB >> 16269084 |
John W Powles1, Witold Zatonski, Stephen Vander Hoorn, Majid Ezzati.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The East/West gradient in health across Europe has been described often, but not using metrics as comprehensive and comparable as those of the Global Burden of Disease 2000 and Comparative Risk Assessment studies.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2005 PMID: 16269084 PMCID: PMC1298310 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-5-116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Global Burden of Disease sub-regions in Europe
| A | Very low child; very low adult | Andorra, Austria, Belgium, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Luxembourg, Malta, Monaco, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, San Marino, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom |
| B | Low child, low adult | Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Tajikistan, The Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Yugoslavia |
| C | Low child, high adult | Belarus, Estonia, Hungary, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Republic of Moldova, Russian Federation, Ukraine |
10 leading risk factors for the European region, exposure variables, theoretical minima, and contributions to total disease burden in the European region (source: Table 1 and Figure 1 in Ezzati et al. 1). See Table 1 in Ezzati et al. 1 for disease outcomes and data sources.
| High blood pressure | Level of systolic blood pressure | 115 SD 6 mmHg | 12.8% |
| Tobacco | Current levels of smoking impact ratio (indirect indicator of accumulated smoking risk based on excess lung cancer mortality); oral tobacco use prevalence | No tobacco use | 12.3% |
| Alcohol | Current alcohol consumption volumes and patterns | No alcohol use b | 10.1% |
| High cholesterol | Level of total blood cholesterol | 3.8 SD 1 mmol/l (147 SD 39 mg/dl) | 8.7% |
| High body mass index (BMI) | Body mass index, BMI (height over weight squared) | 21 SD 1 kg/m2 | 7.8% |
| Low fruit and vegetable intake | Fruit and vegetable intake per day | 600 g (SD 50 g) intake per day for adults | 4.4% |
| Physical inactivity | Three categories of inactive, insufficiently active (<2.5 hours per week of moderate-intensity activity, or less than 4000 KJ/week), and sufficiently active. Activity in discretionary-time, work, and transport considered | All having at least 2.5 hours per week of moderate-intensity activity or equivalent (400 KJ/week) | 3.5% |
| Illicit drugs | Use of amphetamine, cocaine, heroin or other opioids and intravenous drug use | No illicit drug use | 1.6% |
| Lead | Current blood lead levels | 0.016 μg/dl blood lead levels c | 0.8% |
| Unsafe sex | Sex with an infected partner without any measures to prevent infection (represented as parameters of an HIV model) | No unsafe sex | 0.7% |
a The resulting haemoglobin levels vary across regions and age-sex groups (from 11.66 g/dl in under-5 children in SEAR-D to >14.5 g/dl in adult males in developed countries) because the other risks for anaemia (e.g. malaria) vary.
b Theoretical minimum for alcohol is zero, the global theoretical minimum. Specific sub-groups may have a non-zero theoretical minimum.
c Theoretical minimum for lead is the blood lead levels expected at background exposure levels. Health effects were quantified for blood lead levels above 5 μg/dl where epidemiological studies have quantified hazards.
Figure 1Probability of death within age intervals from 6 groups of causes by sex: Europe A, B and C, 2000.
Figure 2Burden of disease due to 15 leading diseases or disease clusters in 2000: crude rates of DALYs per thousand population for Europe A, B and C, ordered by ranking for the combined European region. Other cardiac diseases are those not classified as rheumatic, hypertensive, ischaemic or inflammatory. Other digestive diseases are those not classified as peptic ulcer, cirrhosis of the liver or appendicitis. Other unintentional injuries are those not classified as motor vehicle accidents, poisonings, falls, fires or drownings.
Figure 3Burden of disease due to 10 leading risk factors: DALYs per thousand total population for Europe A, B and C, by sex and age group*. * DALYs are assigned to the age of death or of incidence (and not to the age at which the lost healthy life would have been lived)