| Literature DB >> 33617563 |
Esmaeil Mohammadi1,2, Erfan Ghasemi1, Sina Azadnajafabad1, Negar Rezaei1,3, Sahar Saeedi Moghaddam1, Sepideh Ebrahimi Meimand1, Nima Fattahi1, Zohreh Habibi4, Kourosh Karimi Yarandi5, Abbas Amirjamshidi5, Farideh Nejat4, Farzad Kompani6, Ali H Mokdad7, Bagher Larijani3, Farshad Farzadfar1,3.
Abstract
Primary brain and other central nervous system (CNS) cancers cause major burdens. In this study, we introduced a measure named the Quality of Care Index (QCI), which indirectly evaluates the quality of care given to patients with this group of cancers. Here we aimed to compare different geographic and socioeconomic patterns of CNS cancer care according to the novel measure introduced. In this regard, we acquired age-standardized primary epidemiologic measures were acquired from the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) study 1990-2017. The primary measures were combined to make four secondary indices which all of them indirectly show the quality of care given to patients. Principal Component Analysis (PCA) method was utilized to calculate the essential component named QCI. Further analyses were made based on QCI to assess the quality of care globally, regionally, and nationally (with a scale of 0-100 which higher values represent better quality of care). For 2017, the global calculated QCI was 55.0. QCI showed a desirable condition in higher socio-demographic index (SDI) quintiles. Oppositely, low SDI quintile countries (7.7) had critically worse care quality. Western Pacific Region with the highest (76.9) and African Region with the lowest QCIs (9.9) were the two WHO regions extremes. Singapore was the country with the maximum QCI of 100, followed by Japan (99.9) and South Korea (98.9). In contrast, Swaziland (2.5), Lesotho (3.5), and Vanuatu (3.9) were countries with the worse condition. While the quality of care for most regions was desirable, regions with economic constraints showed to have poor quality of care and require enforcements toward this lethal diagnosis.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33617563 PMCID: PMC7899371 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0247120
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240