Publications by authors named "G Safadi"

We sought to assess the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of potential new public health and healthcare NCD risk reduction efforts among Palestinians in Gaza. We created a microsimulation model using: (i) a cross-sectional household survey of NCD risk factors among 4,576 Palestinian adults aged ≥40 years old in Gaza; (ii) a modified Delphi process among local public health experts to identify potentially feasible new interventions; and (iii) reviews of intervention cost and effectiveness, modified to the Gazan and refugee contexts. The survey revealed 28.

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Objective: Food environments are a major determinant of children's nutritional status. Scarce evidence on food environments exists in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC). This study aims to fill this gap by documenting the obesogenicity of food environments around schools in Greater Tunis, Tunisia - an LMIC of the Middle East and North Africa region with an ongoing nutrition transition and increasing rates of childhood obesity.

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Background And Objectives: This study constitutes the first attempt to describe the overlapping deprivations faced by Lebanese children (Lebanese) and that of the three sub-populations of refugees living in Lebanon: Palestinian refugees living in Lebanon, Palestinian refugees from Syria and Syrian refugees.

Methods: Using data from the United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund (UNICEF) Household Survey 2016 ( = 10,555 Lebanese; 7,106 Palestinian refugees living in Lebanon; 2,768 Palestinian refugees from Syria and 5,891 Syrian refugee children aged 2 to 17 years old), we report on single and overlapping deprivations (at least two concurrent deprivations) using indicators related to survival (nutrition, health, water, sanitation and overcrowding), development (education) and protection (labor, exposure to violence and early marriage). Maternal education and geographical correlates of deprivation were explored using multivariable logistic regression models clustering for children in the same households.

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Article Synopsis
  • This umbrella review examines how size at birth (birth weight and gestation) impacts the health, growth, and development of children and adolescents up to 18 years old, synthesizing evidence from systematic reviews and meta-analyses.
  • The review screened over 16,000 articles and found 302 relevant systematic reviews, highlighting that small size at birth was linked to many negative outcomes, whereas large size had fewer established associations.
  • The authors suggest that future research should address gaps in understanding large birth size effects, explore outcomes that lack comprehensive reviews, and focus on underrepresented populations to better analyze developmental consequences.
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