Epidemiological shift of hepatitis A in EAGLE countries - a projection.

IF 1 Q4 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEALTH CARE QUALITY ASSURANCE Pub Date : 2019-12-23 DOI:10.1108/IJHCQA-05-2019-0097
Nidhi Ghildayal
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Abstract

Purpose: Many world regions are developing quickly and experiencing increasing levels of sanitation, causing an epidemiological shift of hepatitis A in these areas. The shift occurs when children avoid being infected with the disease until a later age due to cleaner water sources, food, and hygiene practices in their environment; but if they are infected at later age, the disease is much more severe and lost productivity costs are higher. The purpose of this paper is to examine what could occur if an epidemiological shift of the disease continues in these regions, and what type of future burden hepatitis A may have in a hypothetical rapidly developing country.

Design/methodology/approach: Initially, annual hepatitis A mortality was regressed on the Human Development Index (HDI) for each country classified as an emerging and growth-leading economy (EAGLE) to provide an overview of how economic development and hepatitis A mortality related. Data from the various EAGLE countries were also fit to a model of hepatitis A mortality rates in relation to HDI, which were both weighted by each country's 1995-2010 population of available data, in order to create a model for a hypothetical emerging market country. A second regression model was fit for the weighted average annual hepatitis A mortality rate of all EAGLE countries from the years 1995 to 2010. Additionally, hepatitis A mortality rate was regressed on year.

Findings: Regression results show a constant decline of mortality as HDI increased. For each increase of one in HDI value in this hypothetical country, mortality rate declined by 2.3016 deaths per 100,000 people. The hypothetical country showed the HDI value increasing by 0.0073 each year. Also, results displayed a decrease in hepatitis A mortality rate of 0.0168 per 100,000 people per year. Finally, the mortality rate for hepatitis A in this hypothetical country is projected to be down to 0.11299 deaths per 100,000 people by 2030 and its economic status will fall just below the HDI criteria for a developed country by 2025.

Originality/value: The hypothetical country as a prototype model was created from the results of regressed data from EAGLE countries. It is aimed to display an example of the health and economic changes occurring in these rapidly developing regions in order to help understand potential hepatitis A trends, while underscoring the importance of informed and regular policy updates in the coming years. The author believes this regression provides insight into the patterns of hepatitis A mortality and HDI as these EAGLE countries undergo rapid development.

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甲型肝炎在EAGLE国家的流行病学转变-预测。
目的:世界上许多地区正在迅速发展,卫生水平不断提高,导致这些地区甲型肝炎的流行病学转变。当儿童由于其环境中的水源、食物和卫生习惯更为清洁,直至较晚的年龄才感染该病时,这种转变就发生了;但如果他们在较晚的年龄感染,疾病会严重得多,生产力损失也会更高。本文的目的是研究如果该疾病在这些地区继续发生流行病学转变可能发生的情况,以及在一个假设的快速发展中国家,甲型肝炎未来可能造成何种类型的负担。设计/方法/方法:最初,对每个被归类为新兴和增长领先经济体(EAGLE)的国家的年度甲型肝炎死亡率进行人类发展指数(HDI)回归,以提供经济发展与甲型肝炎死亡率之间关系的概述。来自EAGLE各国的数据也符合与人类发展指数相关的甲型肝炎死亡率模型,该模型均按每个国家1995-2010年可获得数据的人口进行加权,以便为假设的新兴市场国家创建一个模型。第二个回归模型拟合所有EAGLE国家1995 - 2010年甲型肝炎加权平均年死亡率。此外,甲型肝炎死亡率逐年回归。结果:回归结果显示,随着HDI的增加,死亡率不断下降。在这个假设的国家,人类发展指数每增加1,死亡率每10万人减少2.3016人。假设国家的HDI值每年增加0.0073。此外,结果显示,每年每10万人中有0.0168人的甲型肝炎死亡率下降。最后,到2030年,这个假设国家的甲型肝炎死亡率预计将降至每10万人0.11299例死亡,到2025年,其经济地位将降至略低于发达国家的人类发展指数标准。原创性/价值:假设国家作为原型模型是根据EAGLE国家的回归数据结果创建的。它旨在展示这些快速发展区域发生的卫生和经济变化的一个例子,以帮助了解潜在的甲型肝炎趋势,同时强调在未来几年知情和定期更新政策的重要性。作者认为,这种回归提供了洞察模式甲型肝炎死亡率和人类发展指数,因为这些鹰国家经历快速发展。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
6.70%
发文量
6
期刊介绍: ■Successful quality/continuous improvement projects ■The use of quality tools and models in leadership management development such as the EFQM Excellence Model, Balanced Scorecard, Quality Standards, Managed Care ■Issues relating to process control such as Six Sigma, Leadership, Managing Change and Process Mapping ■Improving patient care through quality related programmes and/or research Articles that use quantitative and qualitative methods are encouraged.
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