Institution
Institut de veille sanitaire
Healthcare•Saint-Maurice, France•
About: Institut de veille sanitaire is a healthcare organization based out in Saint-Maurice, France. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Public health. The organization has 1055 authors who have published 1547 publications receiving 56945 citations. The organization is also known as: INVS & InVS.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: This work proposes a comprehensive HIA that explicitly accounts for both the acute effects and the long-term effects of chronic diseases, making it possible to compute the overall burden of disease attributable to air pollution.
Abstract: Public decision-makers commonly use health impact assessments (HIA) to quantify the impacts of various regulation policies. However, standard HIAs do not consider that chronic diseases (CDs) can be both caused and exacerbated by a common factor, and generally focus on exacerbations. As an illustration, exposure to near road traffic-related pollution (NRTP) may affect the onset of CDs, and general ambient or urban background air pollution (BP) may exacerbate these CDs. We propose a comprehensive HIA that explicitly accounts for both the acute effects and the long-term effects, making it possible to compute the overall burden of disease attributable to air pollution. A case study applies the two HIA methods to two CDs—asthma in children and coronary heart disease (CHD) in adults over 65—for ten European cities, totaling 1.89 million 0–17-year-old children and 1.85 million adults aged 65 and over. We compare the current health effects with those that might, hypothetically, be obtained if exposure to NRTP was equally low for those living close to busy roads as it is for those living farther away, and if annual mean concentrations of both PM10 and NO2—taken as markers of general urban air pollution—were no higher than 20 μg/m3. Returning an assessment of € 0.55 million (95 % CI 0–0.95), the HIA based on acute effects alone accounts for only about 6.2 % of the annual hospitalization burden computed with the comprehensive method [€ 8.81 million (95 % CI 3–14.4)], and for about 0.15 % of the overall economic burden of air pollution-related CDs [€ 370 million (95 % CI 106–592)]. Morbidity effects thus impact the health system more directly and strongly than previously believed. These findings may clarify the full extent of benefits from any public health or environmental policy involving CDs due to and exacerbated by a common factor.
36 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated how season and temperature modified the short-term effect of ozone on mortality by cause in nine French urban areas during the 1998-2006 period, and provided evidences of a larger impact of ozone when the temperatures are warmer for non-accidental mortality and cardiovascular mortality.
36 citations
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TL;DR: Recommendations for uniform reporting on tuberculosis cases made by a working group set up in 1994 following a meeting on tuberculosis control in low prevalence countries are summarized.
Abstract: This paper summarises recommendations for uniform reporting on tuberculosis cases made by a working group set up in 1994 following a meeting on tuberculosis control in low prevalence countries. The meeting had been organised jointly by the World Health Or
36 citations
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TL;DR: HUS paediatric incidence was associated with dairy cattle density and the ratio of calves to children <15 years and support the recommendation to limit exposure of children to dairy cattle and manure to reduce the risk of STEC infection.
Abstract: Over the past years Shiga-like toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) O157:H7 emerged as an important cause of severe gastrointestinal illnesses and haemolytic–uraemic syndrome (HUS) with up to 10% of children infected with STEC developing HUS. We conducted a geographical ecological study using the district as the statistical unit. For each district, we estimated the incidence of HUS among children <15 years for the period 1996–2001 from national HUS surveillance data and data obtained on cattle density. We used multivariate Poisson regression to quantify the relation, adjusted for covariates, between paediatric HUS incidence and exposure to cattle. In univariate analysis, a positive association was observed between several cattle-density indicators and HUS incidence. In multivariate analysis, HUS paediatric incidence was associated with dairy cattle density and the ratio of calves to children <15 years (P<0·001). Our findings are consistent with previous studies in other countries and support the recommendation to limit exposure of children to dairy cattle and manure to reduce the risk of STEC infection.
36 citations
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TL;DR: Increased awareness regarding the required vaccinations is necessary in this population of healthcare students, as well as stronger enforcement prior to initiating clinical work.
36 citations
Authors
Showing all 1055 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Serge Hercberg | 106 | 942 | 56791 |
Pilar Galan | 97 | 628 | 46782 |
Marcel Goldberg | 70 | 494 | 18659 |
Alexis Elbaz | 69 | 205 | 27260 |
Yannick Béjot | 57 | 331 | 33027 |
Emmanuelle Kesse-Guyot | 57 | 338 | 10914 |
Danielle Seilhean | 54 | 158 | 9153 |
Craig W. Hedberg | 49 | 149 | 12442 |
Jean-Claude Desenclos | 48 | 194 | 7230 |
Katia Castetbon | 46 | 236 | 12396 |
Sandrine Péneau | 44 | 158 | 5507 |
Francis Barin | 43 | 223 | 6235 |
Daniel Lévy-Bruhl | 43 | 221 | 6323 |
Véronique Vaillant | 41 | 117 | 4884 |
Pascal Guénel | 39 | 83 | 5055 |