Creating a priority list of non-communicable diseases to support health research funding decision-making

Author(s):  
Saeideh Babashahi ◽  
Paul Hansen ◽  
Trudy Sullivan
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Cedric Ballin

The focus for this research is health management in German general practitioners’ surgeries. In Germany, there are over 50,000 general practitioners’ surgeries with over 150,000 physician’s assistants as employees. One of the main objectives of health management is the reduction of absent days due to ill health and it is important to know, which activities can be identified to reach this objective. The overall aim of this research is to develop a concept to support stakeholders in promoting health supporting activities which facilitate personal health potentials and help improve the productivity of the general practitioners’ surgeries. The basis for the development of this concept was a systematic literature review, which indicated that health management in general could be improved by health promoting activities. However, the findings from the literature review reveal gaps in general practitioners’ surgeries health promotion practices. This research aims to improve the knowledge in health management at general practitioners’ surgeries in Germany with a focus on activities promoting the employees’ health potentials. The success of the proposed activities essentially depends on the acceptance by the employees. Therefore, a questionnaire about “health management” for employees of general practitioners’ surgeries has been developed which used the health-promoting measures found in the literature review. The findings of these questionnaires provide quantitative data (N=194) on which of the health promoting activities are preferred by the employees. The findings give an insight into personal preferences for health-promoting activities from the employee's point of view. The findings of the employee survey were used as indicator for the acceptance of activities; the results of the systematic literature review were used as indicator for the effectiveness. As a third indicator, the costs of the discussed activities have been incorporated into the concept. These three indicators form the basis for a multi-criteria decision analysis. Results were used to build a score for generating a priority list with ten effective activities promoting personal health potentials. The measures with the highest preferences are vaccines (94%), healthy food at work (67%), and training at home (61%). Robustness of the results was tested by means of a sensitivity analysis. Vaccination is widely ranked first in the priority list. This is of importance as the employees of general practitioner’s surgeries are exposed to substantial risk of infection. Three different strategies for implementing this concept into health management in general practitioners’ surgeries were developed. The main contribution to knowledge is seen in the contribution to the methodology. It shows how different perspectives of different stakeholders can be used in a systematic (and thus in a participatory, interaction-oriented and fair) decision-making process for health management that can be applied in other decision-making situations (e.g. hygiene or emergency management). As a theoretical contribution, the bridging of the implementation gap with the developed priority concept and its integration in an operational HRM model for German practitioners’ surgeries with the psychological contract as core are discussed.


2021 ◽  
pp. 573-582
Author(s):  
Anne Marie Thow ◽  
Raphael Lencucha ◽  
K. Srinath Reddy

Non-communicable diseases are the major cause of death and disability globally, but are largely preventable. The five major modifiable risk factors are tobacco use, alcohol use, unhealthy diets, physical inactivity, and air pollution—all of which have a strong environmental component. Implementation of policy to address non-communicable diseases (NCDs), however, has focused on individual responsibility rather than creating supportive environments for health promotion and NCD prevention, in part because of industry influence. A political economy perspective is helpful in considering how economic interests intersect with political decisions to shape the environments in which individuals live. When ‘environments of risk’ are considered from a political economy perspective, it enables us to critically assess sociopolitical factors that generate product environments characterized by health-harming products, built environments that condition physical inactivity over physical activity, and marginalization of pollution reduction. The enormous size and reach of these ‘industries of risk’ translates into significant political power. Industry actively exerts power in formal decision-making forums (‘decision-making power’), shapes the agenda in political debates (‘non-decision-making power’), and exercises ideological power in ways that are contrary to NCD prevention. Despite the power wielded by industry interests in the policy process, there has been innovation and meaningful policy change for NCD prevention. Key strategies include: assembling strong, local evidence to underpin policy; developing strong coalitions of actors with public health interests; preparing for push-back from industry; and developing specific proposals for healthier economic policy.


2020 ◽  
Vol 54 (2) ◽  
pp. 121-125
Author(s):  
Paulina Tindana ◽  
Michèle Ramsay ◽  
Kerstin Klipstein-Grobusch ◽  
Mary Amoakoh-Coleman

There has been a growing increase in the prevalence of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) globally with reports suggesting that the fastest increase in NCD deaths in the world will occur in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) over the next 5 to 15 years. Despite the projected increase in NCD-related deaths, there is little coordinated research in many West African nations, including Ghana, to quantify and study this burden and to translate the research findings into policy and practice. To address these challenges, the Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research and the Navrongo Health Research Centre, both in Ghana, with support from the Wits NCD Research Leadership Training Program organized a two-day symposium to discuss the advancement of NCD research in the West African sub-region. The aim was to propose the way forward for strengthening applied research that can inform the development of health policies and programs focused on NCDs. Participants were drawn from academia, research and health institutions, early career researchers and postdoctoral fellows. We present the key themes that emerged from the symposium and some strategies for advancing NCD research in West Africa. These include interdisciplinary collaboration between NCD researchers in the region, generation of accurate data on disease burden and strengthening stakeholder and public engagement on NCDs.Keywords: non-communicable diseases, health research, collaboration, public engagement, networkFunding: Funding for the symposium was provided by NIH Fogarty International Center–Grant numberD43TW008330, under the Wits Non-Communicable Disease Research Leadership Training Program.


2015 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Eduardo J Simoes ◽  
Adam Bouras ◽  
Juan Jose Cortez-Escalante ◽  
Deborah C Malta ◽  
Denise Lopes Porto ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Lauren Paremoer

Fisher et al have published a thought-provoking article exploring the complex relationship between universal health coverage (UHC) and equity. This commentary builds on two of the lessons they highlight: the importance of ideas in determining how exactly UHC advances equity, and the political difficulties of addressing the commercial determinants of health. I argue that equity in UHC can be advanced through interventions that address popular prejudices against public health systems, greater emphasis on structural and commercial drivers of ill-health in health professionals’ training, and by ensuring meaningful public participation in decision-making about the institutionalisation and management of UHC. These strategies are important for ensuring that the political, power-laden nature of concepts such as "universality", "health" and "care" are explicitly acknowledged and publicly debated – rather than continuing the current trend of allowing technocrats to reduce UHC to a matter of efficiently and expeditiously financing curative healthcare services.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 2587-2587
Author(s):  
Fernanda Gutierrez-Rodrigues ◽  
Carrie Diamond ◽  
Ruba Shalhoub ◽  
André Pinto ◽  
Flávia S Donaires ◽  
...  

Abstract Inherited and acquired bone marrow failure syndromes (BMF) may be difficult to distinguish due to heterogeneity and overlap of clinical phenotypes. Genomic screening has been increasingly used to identify mutations in BMF-related genes that are known to be etiologic in inherited BMF. However, genomic testing is expensive, results may not return for several seeks, and findings can be difficult to interpret as some reported variants are of unclear clinical significance. To guide the decision-making for genetic testing and results interpretation, we aimed to identify clinical and molecular parameters associated with a higher probability of patients having an inherited disease. We screened 323 BMF patients from two independent cohorts for germline mutations in BMF-related genes using a targeted next-generation sequencing (NGS) assay, and correlated the results with patients' prior diagnosis, family history, telomere length (TL), karyotype, and the presence of a paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) clones. Patients were followed at the Hematology Branch of NHLBI (NHLBI, n=179) and the Ribeirão Preto Medical School, University of São Paulo (USP, n=144). Diagnoses included were severe (SAA) and moderate aplastic anemia (MAA), isolated cytopenias, myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), hypocellular MDS (HypoMDS), dyskeratosis congenita (DC), and Diamond-Blackfan anemia (DBA). Patients were classified as suspected to have inherited BMF (phenotype suggestive for constitutional disease, short or very short telomeres, family history of hematologic, pulmonary, or liver disease, and idiopathic cytopenias), or acquired BMF (normal TL and no signs of constitutional disease) (Figure 1A). Pathogenicity of novel and rare variants was assessed using the ACMG criteria. We identified a pathogenic (or likely pathogenic) germline variant in 21 (18%) and 44 (47%) inherited BMF patients from NHLBI and USP cohorts, respectively (Figure 1B). Altogether, mutated genes were associated with telomeropathies (mostly DC and MAA), congenital cytopenias, DBA, cryptic Fanconi anemia, and myeloid malignancies (Figure 1C). In both cohorts, inherited BMF patients with DC, DBA, MAA, and isolated cytopenias were more likely to have a pathogenic variant. BMF patients suspected to have an acquired disease were rarely found with a pathogenic variant; one patient from each cohort (NHLBI, 1.5% and USP, 2%), carried the R166A RUNX1 and A202T TERT variants, respectively. Overall, patients with SAA were highly unlikely to have a pathogenic variant, regardless of the clinical suspicion for constitutional disease (Figure 1B). The presence of PNH clone and chromosomal abnormalities were poorly associated with variants' pathogenicity; only one patient from the USP cohort had a PNH clone of 6% and the pathogenic TERT D718E variant, and three patients had an abnormal karyotype (indicated by asterisks in Figure 3C). In both cohorts, we additionally screened 101 acquired BMF and 140 inherited BMF patients for somatic clones in myeloid-driver genes. These results recapitulated the clonal landscape previously observed in AA by our group; the frequency of variants in ASXL1, DNMT3A, TET2, and JAK2, but not in BCOR and BCORL1, increased with aging. In the current study, TP53, RUNX1, and Ras genes were more frequently mutated in the patients suspected to have inherited BMF (Fisher's exact test, 14% vs. 4.4%; p<0.005) whereas BCOR and BCORL1 were more commonly abnormal in patients suspected to have acquired BMF (18% vs. 3.1%; p<0.005). Somatic mutations were particularly present in 5/21 DC patients (23%, median age, 11 years) but not in DBA (1 out of 11; median age, 3) and isolated cytopenias (median age, 6). In summary, inherited BMF patients were more likely to have a pathogenic variant compared to acquired BMF (18% vs. 1.5%, p<0.001). Inherited BMF patients with MAA and isolated cytopenias without PNH clones and a normal karyotype had increased risk of having constitutional disease. Systematic analysis of clinical and genomic data may be helpful to assist physicians in identifying patients who should be first screened for inherited BMF based on the probability of finding a pathogenic germline variant. Figure. Figure. Disclosures Dunbar: National Institute of Health: Research Funding. Young:CRADA with Novartis: Research Funding; GlaxoSmithKline: Research Funding; National Institute of Health: Research Funding.


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