56 results match your criteria: "French Institute for Demographic Studies (INED)[Affiliation]"

Article Synopsis
  • A study analyzed lung cancer cases in France during the COVID-19 pandemic by comparing 2020-2021 data with pre-pandemic years (2013-2019), focusing on diagnosis and mortality rates.
  • Findings revealed a 12% decrease in newly diagnosed lung cancer cases during the first wave of the pandemic, with a continued improvement in survival rates over time, even during the pandemic.
  • The decrease in lung cancer incidences could be linked to undiagnosed patients who died due to COVID-19 or challenges in accessing healthcare, leading to excess mortality during this period.
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Investigating the relationship between health and gender equality: What role do maternal, reproductive, and sexual health services play?

Health Policy

November 2024

Centre for research on Health and Social Care Management (CERGAS), Bocconi University, Milan, Italy. Electronic address:

Article Synopsis
  • This paper studies how better health services for women can help achieve gender equality in society.
  • It focuses on areas like maternal, sexual, and reproductive health and reviews 30 studies on how these health improvements affect women's roles in work and education.
  • The findings show that things like family planning and contraception not only help women's health but also give them more choices and control over their lives, which can lead to a fairer society.
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Exposure to bisphenol A in European women from 2007 to 2014 using human biomonitoring data - The European Joint Programme HBM4EU.

Environ Int

August 2024

Department of Environmental and Occupational Health, Santé publique France, The French Public Health Agency (SpFrance, ANSP), 12 rue du Val d'Osne, Saint-Maurice Cedex 94415, France.

Background: Bisphenol A (BPA; or 4,4'-isopropylidenediphenol) is an endocrine disrupting chemical. It was widely used in a variety of plastic-based manufactured products for several years. The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) recently reduced the Tolerable Daily Intake (TDI) for BPA by 20,000 times due to concerns about immune-toxicity.

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Response to Carl Schmertmann Commentary-Drawing Cohort Profiles From Period Data: Improvements and Risks.

Demography

August 2024

Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Rostock, Germany; Max Planck-University of Helsinki Center for Social Inequalities in Population Health, Rostock, Germany, and Helsinki, Finland; Helsinki Institute for Demography and Population Health, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.

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Article Synopsis
  • The goal of studying life expectancy is to help people live longer and reduce differences in how long different social groups live.
  • A new method was created to look at death rates and inequalities in mortality using data from France and Germany.
  • The results showed that while France is improving in both areas, Germany is facing challenges, especially for women aged 35-74, and the new approach can help scientists and policymakers understand these issues better.
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Since its emergence in December 2019, the COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in a significant increase in deaths worldwide. This article presents a detailed analysis of the mortality burden of the COVID-19 pandemic across 569 regions in 25 European countries. We produce age and sex-specific excess mortality and present our results using Age-Standardised Years of Life Lost in 2020 and 2021, as well as the cumulative impact over the two pandemic years.

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Although growing research has emphasized the critical importance of studying returns for understanding various aspects of migration processes, knowledge regarding return migrants' fertility behaviors remains limited. This study addresses this knowledge gap by comparing rates of first births and completed fertility among three groups: nonmigrants (at origin), migrants, and return migrants. Using extensive data collected both in the home regions and at destination, we analyze female migration from Martinique, Guadeloupe, French Guiana, and Réunion Island to metropolitan France (European France).

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Objective: To measure the burden of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 at the subnational level by estimating excess mortality, defined as the increase in all-cause mortality relative to an expected baseline mortality level.

Methods: Statistical and demographic analyses of regional all-cause mortality data provided by the vital statistics systems of 21 European countries for 561 regions in Central and Western Europe. Life expectancy losses at ages 0 and 60 for males and females were estimated.

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This study aims to ascertain occupations potentially at greatest risk of exposure to SARS-CoV-2 based on pre-lockdown working conditions in France. We combined two French population-based surveys documenting workplace exposures to infectious agents, face-to-face contact with the public, and working with colleagues just before the pandemic. Then, for each 87-level standard French occupational grouping, we estimated the number and percentage of the French working population reporting these occupational exposure factors, by gender, using survey weights.

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Introduction: Countries without complete civil registration and vital statistics systems rely on retrospective full pregnancy history surveys (FPH) to estimate incidence of pregnancy and mortality outcomes, including stillbirth and neonatal death. Yet surveys are subject to biases that impact demographic estimates, and few studies have quantified these effects. We compare data from an FPH vs.

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Drawing cohort profiles and cohort forecasts from grids of age-period data is common practice in demography. In this research note, we (1) show how demographic measures artificially fluctuate when calculated from the diagonals of age-period rates because of timing and cohort-size bias, (2) estimate the magnitude of these biases, and (3) illustrate how prediction intervals for cohort indicators of mortality may become implausible when drawn from Lee-Carter methods and age-period grids. These biases are surprisingly large, even when the cohort profiles are created from single-age, single-year period data.

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During the pandemic period, health care systems were substantially reorganized for managing COVID-19 cases. Corresponding consequences on persons with chronic diseases remain insufficiently documented. This observational cohort study investigated the direct and indirect impact of the pandemic period on the survival of kidney transplant recipients (KTR).

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We use a unique data set from Spain and we estimate life expectancy at age 50 for males and females by place of residence and place of birth. We show that, consistent with expectations regarding the influence of early conditions on adult health and mortality, the effects of place of birth on adult mortality are very strong, irrespective of place of residence. Furthermore, we find that mortality levels observed in a place are strongly influenced by the composition of migrants by place of birth.

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Background: This study aimed to analyze the parental socio-demographic characteristics of children and adolescents aged 9 to 18 years old, as well as the living and housing conditions associated with the psychological distress in these two sub-populations during and after France's first national COVID-19-related lockdown in spring 2020.

Methods: We used data from the cross-sectional, observational, web-based study CONFEADO, which collected data on children and adolescents' living and housing conditions and socio-demographic characteristics as well as those of their parents. It also collected data on children's and adolescents' health behaviors and psychological distress.

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Introduction: In France, combination prevention tools, particularly antiretroviral treatment for HIV prevention has been available for several years. We described the knowledge of these antiretroviral treatments among immigrants from sub-Saharan Africa, who are particularly affected by HIV, and the factors associated with this knowledge.

Methods: The data come from the Makasi study, which was conducted between 2019 and 2020 among precarious immigrants from sub-Saharan Africa recruited through a community-based outreach approach in the greater Paris area (n = 601).

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Cohort-based smoothing methods for age-specific contact rates.

Biostatistics

April 2024

Interuniversity Institute for Biostatistics and Statistical Bioinformatics (I-BioStat), Data Science Institute, Hasselt University, Hasselt, Belgium and Centre for Health Economics Research and Modelling Infectious Diseases, Vaxinfectio, University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium.

The use of social contact rates is widespread in infectious disease modeling since it has been shown that they are key driving forces of important epidemiological parameters. Quantification of contact patterns is crucial to parameterize dynamic transmission models and to provide insights on the (basic) reproduction number. Information on social interactions can be obtained from population-based contact surveys, such as the European Commission project POLYMOD.

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Maternal occupational exposure to organic solvents and intrauterine growth in the ELFE cohort.

Environ Res

May 2023

CHU Rennes, Univ Rennes, Inserm, EHESP, Irset (Institut de Recherche en Santé, Environnement et Travail) - UMR_S 1085, F-35000, Rennes, France.

Article Synopsis
  • About 15% of women in developed countries are exposed to solvents at work during pregnancy, but the effects on fetal growth vary based on the type of solvent (oxygenated, petroleum, chlorinated).
  • The study aims to explore how maternal exposure to different solvent families during pregnancy impacts the risk of neonatal outcomes, such as being small for gestational age (SGA) or having low birthweight.
  • Results indicate that exposure to petroleum and oxygenated solvents is linked to a higher risk of SGA and lower birth weights and head circumferences, highlighting potential risks of specific solvent types during pregnancy.
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Article Synopsis
  • Incomplete vaccination in young children in high-income countries, particularly in France, is a significant public health concern, with nearly 46.5% of analyzed two-year-olds being incompletely vaccinated.
  • Determinants of incomplete vaccination include factors such as having older siblings, living in isolated areas, and parental attitudes towards health recommendations.
  • Understanding these determinants can help develop targeted strategies to improve vaccination rates among children.
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Though child shared physical custody arrangements after divorce are much more frequent and parents who use it more diverse in many European countries, little is known about their economic consequences for parents. By relaxing family time constraints, does shared custody help divorced mothers return to or stay on work more easily? Since lone mothers are one of the least-employed groups, and they face high unemployment rates, the type of child custody arrangement adopted after divorce is of particular interest for their employability. This article analyses to what extent the type of child custody arrangement affects mothers' labour market patterns after divorce.

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Intervention during the Perinatal Period: Synthesis of the Clinical Practice Guidelines from the French National College of Midwives.

J Midwifery Womens Health

November 2022

Univ Rennes, CHU Rennes, Inserm, EHESP, Irset (Institut de recherche en santé, environnement et travail) - UMR_S 1085, Rennes, F-35000, France.

These clinical practice guidelines from the French National College of Midwives (CNSF) are intended to define the messages and the preventive interventions to be provided to women and co-parents by the different professionals providing care to women or their children during the perinatal period. These guidelines are divided into 10 sections, corresponding to 4 themes: 1/ the adaptation of maternal behaviors (physical activity, psychoactive agents); 2/ dietary behaviors; 3/ household exposure to toxic substances (household uses, cosmetics); 4/ promotion of child health (breastfeeding, attachment and bonding, screen use, sudden unexplained infant death, and shaken baby syndrome). We suggest a ranking to prioritize the different preventive messages for each period, to take into account professionals' time constraints.

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Socioeconomic inequalities in childhood Body Mass Index (BMI) are becoming increasingly more pronounced across the world. Although countries differ in the direction and strength of these inequalities, cross-national comparative research on this topic is rare. This paper draws on harmonized longitudinal cohort data from four wealthy countries-Germany, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom (UK), and the United States (US)-to 1) map cross-country differences in the magnitude of socioeconomic inequalities in childhood BMI, and 2) to examine cross-country differences in the role of three energy-balance-related behaviors-physical activity, screen time, and breakfast consumption-in explaining these inequalities.

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Association of greenness with COVID-19 deaths in India: An ecological study at district level.

Environ Res

January 2023

French Institute for Demographic Studies (INED), Aubervilliers-Paris, France; Aix-Marseille University, IRD, LPED, Marseille, France.

Background: The world has witnessed a colossal death toll due to the novel coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19). A few environmental epidemiology studies have identified association of environmental factors (air pollution, greenness, temperature, etc.) with COVID-19 incidence and mortality, particularly in developed countries.

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Mortality impact of the Covid-19 epidemic on immigrant populations in Spain.

SSM Popul Health

December 2022

Institute of Economy, Geography and Demography (IEGD), CSIC-CCHS, Madrid, Spain.

Immigrant populations have been shown to display a disproportionately high mortality burden during the Covid-19 epidemic in some high-income countries. Individual civil registration data from Spain, one of the countries with the highest Covid-19 mortality in Europe, was used in order to characterize mortality during the Covid-19 epidemic for different immigrant groups. Individuals born in South America, Sub-Saharan Africa and Asia are shown to have suffered higher mortality impact than the native-born, particularly at working ages (40-59 years old), which could be due to higher proportions of immigrants from these regions among key workers.

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Article Synopsis
  • A significant drop in hospitalizations for acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (AECOPD) was noted in France during the first two years of the COVID-19 pandemic, with monthly admissions decreasing from 8,899 to 6,032.
  • The study found that in-hospital mortality for AECOPD increased from 6.2% to 7.6%, indicating worse outcomes for patients hospitalized during the pandemic.
  • The data suggest that only a small percentage of AECOPD hospital stays were linked to COVID-19, but those with COVID-19 had nearly three times the mortality rate compared to those without it.
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The concept of empowerment in sexual health is widely used in health promotion. This scoping review aims to identify how it is defined and measured. PubMed, Sage Journals, PsycInfo and the Web of Science are data sources.

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