1.Evaluating maternal and child health indicators for the Sustainable Development Goals in 2018: what is Iran's position?
Elham KHATOONI ; Isa AKBARZADEH ; Elham ABDALMALEKI ; Zhaleh ABDI ; Elham AHMADNEZHAD
Epidemiology and Health 2019;41(1):2019045-
OBJECTIVES: Since many Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) were not achieved, countries including Iran—despite achieving some of the MDGs—need regular planning to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030. This article examines maternal and child health indicators in the early years of the SDGs in Iran relative to several other countries.METHODS: This study was carried out through a secondary analysis of maternal and child health indicators in Iran. The results were compared with data from other countries divided into three groups: countries with upper-middle income levels, countries in the Eastern Mediterranean region, and the countries covered by the Outlook Document 1,404 (a regional classification). Then, the relationship between these indicators and the Human Development Index was investigated.RESULTS: Iran has attained better results than other countries with respect to maternal mortality, family planning, skilled birth attendance, under-5 deaths, incidence of hepatitis B, diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis vaccination coverage, and antenatal care. In contrast, Iran performed worse than other countries with respect to under-5 wasting, under-5 stunting, and care-seeking behavior for children.CONCLUSIONS: Overall, among the 11 indicators surveyed, Iran has attained better-than-average results and seems to be improving. We recommend that Iran continue interventions in the field of maternal and child health.
Child Health
;
Child
;
Conservation of Natural Resources
;
Family Planning Services
;
Growth Disorders
;
Hepatitis B
;
Human Development
;
Humans
;
Incidence
;
Iran
;
Maternal Health
;
Maternal Mortality
;
Mediterranean Region
;
Parturition
;
Vaccination
2.Comparison of five international indices of adherence to the Mediterranean diet among healthy adults: similarities and differences
Carla AOUN ; Tatiana PAPAZIAN ; Khalil HELOU ; Nada EL OSTA ; Lydia Rabbaa KHABBAZ
Nutrition Research and Practice 2019;13(4):333-343
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: To compare five indices of adherence to the Mediterranean Diet (MD) among adults living in the Mediterranean region. SUBJECTS/METHODS: A total of 100 healthy Lebanese adults aged between 18 and 65 years. Face-to-face interviews to collect sociodemographic and medical information, to take anthropometric measurements, and to fill a validated, culturally adapted, food frequency questionnaire (FFQ). The score for each item was calculated following the recommendations for each corresponding index. The five MD indices were Mediterranean Diet Scale (MDScale), Mediterranean Food Pattern (MFP), MD Score (MDS), Short Mediterranean Diet Questionnaire (SMDQ), and the MedDiet score. RESULTS: Significant correlations were detected between items with P-values < 0.001. Minimal agreement was seen between MDScale and MedDiet score and maximal agreement between MDS and MedDiet score. Univariate and multivariate analyses showed that MDS and MedDiet scores had significant correlations with fiber and olive oil intake, main components of the MD. MDScale showed a significant correlation with waist-to-hip ratio and with total energy intake but none of the five indices was correlated to body mass index (BMI). CONCLUSIONS: The indices that showed the highest correlation with variables related to the MD are the MDScale and the MedDiet score; therefore, they can be used to assess our future study populations. Based on the current results, more than half of the study population was non-adherent to the MD and adherence to this diet did not appear to protect against being overweight (BMI ≥ 30).
Adult
;
Body Mass Index
;
Diet
;
Diet, Mediterranean
;
Energy Intake
;
Humans
;
Mediterranean Region
;
Multivariate Analysis
;
Olive Oil
;
Overweight
;
Waist-Hip Ratio
3.Prevalence and Forms of Workplace Bullying Among Health-care Professionals in Cyprus: Greek Version of “Leymann Inventory of Psychological Terror” Instrument.
Theodora ZACHARIADOU ; Savvas ZANNETOS ; Stella Elia CHIRA ; Sofia GREGORIOU ; Andreas PAVLAKIS
Safety and Health at Work 2018;9(3):339-346
BACKGROUND: Workplace bulling is a pervasive phenomenon with negative consequences for the health of victims and the productivity of organizations. The aim of this study was to measure the prevalence and forms of workplace bullying among employees working at the public health-care sector of Cyprus using the Greek version of Leymann Inventory of Psychological Terror (LIPT) instrument. METHODS: A translation process was followed from the French to the Greek version of LIPT questionnaire. Test–retest reliability expressed by Pearson's correlation coefficient was 0.98 indicating excellent reproducibility. Internal consistency reliability assessed by Cronbachα coefficient was 0.87 suggesting high reliability. LIPT instrument was distributed among 403 employees working at the primary health-care setting and at the largest public hospital of Cyprus with response rate of 73.4%. RESULTS: Women comprised the majority of participants (71.4%). Mean age was 43.3 years. Prevalence of workplace bulling according to Leymann's definition was 5.9%. Most common forms of bullying were“Being continuously interrupted” (17.2%) and “continuously being given new work assignments” (13.5%). Women were significantly more often exposed to at least one mobbing behavior than men within the previous year(49% vs. 35.7%, p=0.038), whereas nurses were significantly exposed to at least one mobbing behavior as compared to physicians (53.3% vs. 31.4%, p=0.004). CONCLUSION: This was the first study that examined the prevalence of workplace bullying in the public health-care sector by elaborating the Greek version of LIPT instrument. Results showed that workplace bullying is a common and complex phenomenon among health-care organizations.
Bullying*
;
Cyprus*
;
Efficiency
;
Female
;
Hospitals, Public
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Prevalence*
4.Food consumption and the risk of childhood allergy
Claudia FSADNI ; Peter FSADNI ; Stephen MONTEFORT ; Stephen FAVA
Asia Pacific Allergy 2018;8(4):e35-
BACKGROUND: The prevalence of allergic conditions is increasing in most countries. One possible explanation may be childhood nutrition. OBJECTIVE: The aim of the study was to investigate the relationship between consumption of pre-specified types of food in school-aged children and presence of respiratory and allergic symptoms. METHODS: A total of 191 students aged 9–11 years were recruited from 5 schools to geographically cover all of Malta. Data was collected between October 2011 and February 2012. This was part of a bigger study which included clinical and environmental tests besides standardized health questionnaires. For the purposes of this part of the study only the health questionnaires were used. These standardized health questionnaires based on the International Study of Asthma and Allergies in Childhood (ISAAC) were used to identify the presence of respiratory and allergic symptoms and to identify the types of foods and the frequency of consumption of various types of foods. RESULTS: We found that milk, meat, butter, olive oil, and yoghurt consumption had a negative association with allergic symptoms in children, whilst fish consumption had a detrimental effect. These relationships remained significant after correction for paternal level of education. CONCLUSION: The study highlights the fact that nutrition in early childhood may have a significant effect on the risk of allergic conditions. Our results, taken together with data in the literature, suggest that different types of fish might have had different effects. This is probably related to their different fatty acid constitution thus warranting further studies.
Asthma
;
Butter
;
Child
;
Constitution and Bylaws
;
Education
;
Humans
;
Hypersensitivity
;
Malta
;
Meat
;
Milk
;
Olive Oil
;
Prevalence
;
Yogurt
5.The Impact of the Financial Crisis on Lifestyle Health Determinants Among Older Adults Living in the Mediterranean Region: The Multinational MEDIS Study (2005-2015).
Alexandra FOSCOLOU ; Stefanos TYROVOLAS ; George SOULIS ; Anargiros MARIOLIS ; Suzanne PISCOPO ; Giuseppe VALACCHI ; Foteini ANASTASIOU ; Christos LIONIS ; Akis ZEIMBEKIS ; Josep Antoni TUR ; Vassiliki BOUNTZIOUKA ; Dimitra TYROVOLA ; Efthimios GOTSIS ; George METALLINOS ; Antonia Leda MATALAS ; Evangelos POLYCHRONOPOULOS ; Labros SIDOSSIS ; Demosthenes B. PANAGIOTAKOS
Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health 2017;50(1):1-9
OBJECTIVES: By the end of the 2000s, the economic situation in many European countries started to deteriorate, generating financial uncertainty, social insecurity and worse health status. The aim of the present study was to investigate how the recent financial crisis has affected the lifestyle health determinants and behaviours of older adults living in the Mediterranean islands. METHODS: From 2005 to 2015, a population-based, multi-stage convenience sampling method was used to voluntarily enrol 2749 older adults (50% men) from 20 Mediterranean islands and the rural area of the Mani peninsula. Lifestyle status was evaluated as the cumulative score of four components (range, 0 to 6), that is, smoking habits, diet quality (MedDietScore), depression status (Geriatric Depression Scale) and physical activity. RESULTS: Older Mediterranean people enrolled in the study from 2009 onwards showed social isolation and increased smoking, were more prone to depressive symptoms, and adopted less healthy dietary habits, as compared to their counterparts participating earlier in the study (p<0.05), irrespective of age, gender, several clinical characteristics, or socioeconomic status of the participants (an almost 50% adjusted increase in the lifestyle score from before 2009 to after 2009, p<0.001). CONCLUSIONS: A shift towards less healthy behaviours was noticeable after the economic crisis had commenced. Public health interventions should focus on older adults, particularly of lower socioeconomic levels, in order to effectively reduce the burden of cardiometabolic disease at the population level.
Adult*
;
Depression
;
Food Habits
;
Humans
;
Life Style*
;
Mediterranean Islands
;
Mediterranean Region*
;
Methods
;
Motor Activity
;
Public Health
;
Smoke
;
Smoking
;
Social Class
;
Social Isolation
;
Uncertainty
6.Plague in Iran: its history and current status.
Abdolrazagh HASHEMI SHAHRAKI ; Elizabeth CARNIEL ; Ehsan MOSTAFAVI
Epidemiology and Health 2016;38(1):e2016033-
OBJECTIVES: Plague remains a public health concern worldwide, particularly in old foci. Multiple epidemics of this disease have been recorded throughout the history of Iran. Despite the long-standing history of human plague in Iran, it remains difficult to obtain an accurate overview of the history and current status of plague in Iran. METHODS: In this review, available data and reports on cases and outbreaks of human plague in the past and present in Iran and in neighboring countries were collected, and information was compiled regarding when, where, and how many cases occurred. RESULTS: This paper considers the history of plague in Persia (the predecessor of today’s Iran) and has a brief review of plague in countries in the World Health Organization Eastern Mediterranean Region, including a range of countries in the Middle East and North Africa. CONCLUSIONS: Since Iran has experienced outbreaks of plague for several centuries, neighboring countries have reported the disease in recent years, the disease can be silent for decades, and the circulation of Yersinia pestis has been reported among rodents and dogs in western Iran, more attention should be paid to disease monitoring in areas with previously reported human cases and in high-risk regions with previous epizootic and enzootic activity.
Africa, Northern
;
Animals
;
Disease Outbreaks
;
Dogs
;
History of Medicine
;
Humans
;
Iran*
;
Mediterranean Region
;
Middle East
;
Persia
;
Plague*
;
Public Health
;
Rodentia
;
World Health Organization
;
Yersinia pestis
7.Malta brucellar spondylitis: a case report.
China Journal of Orthopaedics and Traumatology 2015;28(12):1129-1131
Brucellosis
;
diagnosis
;
therapy
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Malta
;
Middle Aged
;
Spondylitis
;
diagnosis
;
therapy
8.The Effect of Vitis vinifera L. Juice on Serum Levels of Inhibin B, Sperm Count in Adult Male Rats.
Mohammad Reza AFZALZADEH ; Akram AHANGARPOUR ; Ashraf AMIRZARGAR ; Mohammad Kazemi VARNAMKHASTI ; Hadi GANJALIDARANI
The World Journal of Men's Health 2015;33(2):109-116
PURPOSE: Vitis vinifera is a species of Vitis that is native to the Mediterranean region, central Europe, and southwestern Asia, and has been used as a drug in traditional medicine. Traditional medicinal plants have been used for medical purposes with increasing effectiveness. It is important to identify drugs that inhibit spermatogenesis. Therefore, the present study aimed to investigate the effect of grape juice (GJ) on serum levels of inhibin B and sperm count in normal male rats. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Thirty-five adult male rats were randomly divided into five groups, each containing seven rats. Rats in the control group received 1 mL of normal saline over the course of the study. The experimental groups received GJ (100, 200, 400, and 1,600 mg/kg, orally, for 35 days consecutively). At the end of the treatment period, fertility indices were measured, including body weight difference, sex organ weight, sperm motility and count, epididymal sperm reserve, daily sperm production (DSP), and serum inhibin B levels. RESULTS: We found that GJ reduces body weight difference, was associated with decreased sperm motility and count in all treatment groups (p< or =0.05 and p< or =0.001, respectively). Moreover, DSP was significantly decreased in all treatment groups compared to the control group (p< or =0.05), except in the group receiving 100 mg/kg of GJ. Inhibin B levels were significantly decreased in all treatment groups (p< or =0.05). CONCLUSIONS: The results of our study suggest that GJ in all doses, but especially in higher doses, may decrease fertility in male rats.
Adult*
;
Animals
;
Asia
;
Body Weight
;
Europe
;
Fertility
;
Humans
;
Inhibins*
;
Male*
;
Medicine, Traditional
;
Mediterranean Region
;
Organ Size
;
Plants, Medicinal
;
Rats*
;
Sex Characteristics
;
Sperm Count*
;
Sperm Motility
;
Spermatogenesis
;
Spermatozoa*
;
Vitis*
9.Multiple Symmetric Lipomatosis (Madelung's Disease) of the Neck and Pharynx.
Yewon KIM ; Sang Yeon LEE ; Soon Hyun AHN ; Woo Jin JEONG
Korean Journal of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery 2014;57(12):865-869
Multiple symmetric lipomatosis (Madelung's disease) is an infrequent disease of unknown etiology. The typical characteristic of the disease is bulging, symmetric masses of fat tissue on the neck, upper extremities, and upper parts of the trunk. The disease strongly affects middle-aged men, people from Mediterranean regions and with alcohol abuse history. We report three cases of middle to old age males with long-standing multi-lobulated bulging of the neck, which gradually enlarged over many years. Of peculiar interest is one patient who presented with snoring and apnea together with typical findings of Madelung's disease. The case had involvement of the hypopharynx, which was successfully managed with microscopic laryngeal surgery with CO2 laser. The authors elucidate three cases of Madelung's disease found in the pharynx and neck, and report a review of the literature.
Alcoholism
;
Apnea
;
Humans
;
Hypopharynx
;
Lasers, Gas
;
Lipomatosis, Multiple Symmetrical*
;
Male
;
Mediterranean Region
;
Neck*
;
Pharynx*
;
Snoring
;
Upper Extremity
10.Chemical composition, antimicrobial, insecticidal, phytotoxic and antioxidant activities of Mediterranean Pinus brutia and Pinus pinea resin essential oils.
Zeynep ULUKANLI ; Salih KARABÖRKLÜ ; Fuat BOZOK ; Burhan ATES ; Selim ERDOGAN ; Menderes CENET ; Merve Göksin KARAASLAN
Chinese Journal of Natural Medicines (English Ed.) 2014;12(12):901-910
Essential oils of the resins of Pinus brutia and Pinus pinea were evaluated for their biological potential. Essential oils were characterized using GC-MS and GC/FID. in vitro antimicrobial, phytotoxic, antioxidant, and insecticidal activities were carried out using the direct contact and the fumigant assays, respectively. The chemical profile of the essential oils of the resins of P. pinea and P. brutia included mainly α-pinene (21.39% and 25.40%), β-pinene (9.68% and 9.69%), and caryophyllene (9.12% and 4.81%). The essential oils of P. pinea and P. brutia exerted notable antimicrobial activities on Micrococcus luteus and Bacillus subtilis, insecticidal activities on Ephestia kuehniella eggs, phytotoxic activities on Lactuca sativa, Lepidium sativum, and Portulaca oleracea, as well as antioxidant potential. Indications of the biological activities of the essential oils suggest their use in the formulation of ecofriendly and biocompatible pharmaceuticals.
Animals
;
Anti-Infective Agents
;
analysis
;
pharmacology
;
Antioxidants
;
analysis
;
pharmacology
;
Bacillus subtilis
;
drug effects
;
Bicyclic Monoterpenes
;
Bridged Bicyclo Compounds
;
analysis
;
pharmacology
;
Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry
;
Insecta
;
drug effects
;
Insecticides
;
analysis
;
pharmacology
;
Lepidium
;
drug effects
;
Lettuce
;
drug effects
;
Mediterranean Region
;
Micrococcus luteus
;
drug effects
;
Monoterpenes
;
analysis
;
pharmacology
;
Oils, Volatile
;
chemistry
;
pharmacology
;
Pinus
;
chemistry
;
Plant Extracts
;
chemistry
;
pharmacology
;
Plant Oils
;
chemistry
;
pharmacology
;
Polycyclic Sesquiterpenes
;
Portulaca
;
drug effects
;
Resins, Plant
;
chemistry
;
Sesquiterpenes
;
analysis
;
pharmacology
;
Terpenes
;
analysis
;
pharmacology

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