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Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on eating disorders diagnoses among adolescents and young adults in Catalonia: A population-based cohort study

B. RAVENTOS, A. ABELLAN, A. PISTILLO, C. REYES, E. BURN and T. DUARTE-SALLES
2023 Jan 1; . doi:10.1002/eat.23848; PMID:36352763

  • Ans: 01/01/2023
  • FI: 4.7

Objective To describe the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on trends in incidence rates (IR) of diagnoses of eating disorders (ED) among adolescents and young adults. Methods Population-based cohort study using primary care records of people aged 10-24 years between January, 2016 and December, 2021 in Catalonia, Spain. IRs were calculated monthly and grouped by the different stages of the COVID-19 pandemic in Catalonia: (1) the pre-lockdown (January, 2016-February, 2020), (2) lockdown (March-June, 2020) and, (3) post-lockdown (July, 2020-December, 2021) periods. Incidence rate ratios (IRR) relative to the corresponding periods in 2018-2019 were calculated. Results A total of 1,179,009 individuals were included. The IR was 9.2 per 100,000 person-months (95% confidence intervals [CI]: 8.9-9.5) during the pre-lockdown period. It decreased during the lockdown period (6.3 per 100,000 person-months [5.5-7.3]), but substantially increased during the following period (19.4. per 100,000 person-months [18.7-20.1]). While large reductions in IRs were observed for both sexes during the lockdown period (IRR 95% CI: 0.65 [0.54-0.78] in females and 0.46 [0.29-0.71] in males), substantial increases during the post-lockdown period were limited to females, and were particularly pronounced among those aged 10-14 and 15-19 years (2.50 [2.23-2.80] and 2.29 [2.07-2.54], respectively). Discussion The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in a substantial increase in ED diagnoses, primarily driven by higher rates among adolescent females. Public Significance This population-based cohort study demonstrated a substantial increase in incidence rates of eating disorders in primary care following the end of lockdown in Catalonia, Spain, with adolescent girls seen to be most affected.

Transforming the Information System for Research in Primary Care (SIDIAP) in Catalonia to the OMOP Common Data Model and Its Use for COVID-19 Research

B. RAVENTOS, S. FERNANDEZ-BERTOLIN, M. ARAGON, E. VOSS, C. BLACKETER, L. MENDEZ-BOO, M. RECALDE, E. ROEL, A. PISTILLO, C. REYES, S. VAN SANDIJK, L. HALVORSEN, P. RIJNBEEK, E. BURN and T. DUARTE-SALLES
2023 Jan 1; . doi:10.2147/CLEP.S419481; PMID:37724311

  • Ans: 01/01/2023
  • FI: 3.4

Purpose: The primary aim of this work was to convert the Information System for Research in Primary Care (SIDIAP) from Catalonia, Spain, to the Observational Medical Outcomes Partnership (OMOP) Common Data Model (CDM). Our second aim was to provide a descriptive analysis of COVID-19-related outcomes among the general population. Patients and Methods: We mapped patient-level data from SIDIAP to the OMOP CDM and we performed more than 3,400 data quality checks to assess its readiness for research. We established a general population cohort as of the 1st March 2020 and identified outpatient COVID-19 diagnoses or tested positive for, hospitalised with, admitted to intensive care units (ICU) with, died with, or vaccinated against COVID-19 up to 30th June 2022.Results: After verifying the high quality of the transformed dataset, we included 5,870,274 individuals in the general population cohort. Of those, 604,472 had either an outpatient COVID-19 diagnosis or positive test result, 58,991 had a hospitalisation, 5,642 had an ICU admission, and 11,233 died with COVID-19. A total of 4,584,515 received a COVID-19 vaccine. People who were hospitalised or died were more commonly older, male, and with more comorbidities. Those admitted to ICU with COVID-19 were generally younger and more often male than those hospitalised and those who died.Conclusion: We successfully transformed SIDIAP to the OMOP CDM. From this dataset, a general population cohort of 5.9 million individuals was identified and their COVID-19-related outcomes over time were described. The transformed SIDIAP database is a valuable resource that can enable distributed network research in COVID-19 and beyond.

Gender-based differences in the meanings and uses of housing for health and everyday life: An intersectional approach

Vásquez-Vera C., Fernández A., Sánchez-Ledesma E., Bennett M. and Borrell C.
2023 Jan 1; . doi:10.1016/j.wsif.2023.102761;

  • Ans: 01/01/2023
  • FI: 1.5

It has been shown that there are gender inequalities in the effects of housing on health, which increase when housing conditions worsen. This study explored the different forms of meaning and uses of housing, according to gender and housing situation, as possible mechanisms that operate in the gender differences of health outcomes associated with different housing situations. A qualitative study was conducted through 9 non-mixed discussion groups (women and men) with people with and without housing insecurity. They reflected on the meanings and uses of housing and its link with health. The content analysis identified discourses on the sense of belonging, testimonial housing, daily practices and embodiment of housing experiences, which varied according to gender and residential situation. A complex and intersectional look is needed in the approach to the residential phenomenon, to achieve a greater understanding of the unequal effects on people’s health. © 2023 Elsevier Ltd

Characteristics and outcomes of COVID-19 patients with COPD from the United States, South Korea, and Europe

Moreno-Martos D., Verhamme K., Ostropolets A., Kostka K., Duarte-Sales T., Prieto-Alhambra D., Alshammari T.M., Alghoul H., Ahmed W.-U.-R., Blacketer C., DuVall S., Lai L., Matheny M., Nyberg F., Posada J., Rijnbeek P., Spotnitz M., Sena A., Shah N., Suchard M., Chan You S., Hripcsak G., Ryan P. and Morales D.
2023 Jan 1; . doi:10.12688/wellcomeopenres.17403.3;

  • Ans: 01/01/2023
  • FI:

Background: Characterization studies of COVID-19 patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are limited in size and scope. The aim of the study is to provide a large-scale characterization of COVID-19 patients with COPD. Methods: We included thirteen databases contributing data from January-June 2020 from North America (US), Europe and Asia. We defined two cohorts of patients with COVID-19 namely a ‘diagnosed’ and ‘hospitalized’ cohort. We followed patients from COVID-19 index date to 30 days or death. We performed descriptive analysis and reported the frequency of characteristics and outcomes among COPD patients with COVID-19. Results: The study included 934,778 patients in the diagnosed COVID-19 cohort and 177,201 in the hospitalized COVID-19 cohort. Observed COPD prevalence in the diagnosed cohort ranged from 3.8% (95%CI 3.5-4.1%) in French data to 22.7% (95%CI 22.4-23.0) in US data, and from 1.9% (95%CI 1.6-2.2) in South Korean to 44.0% (95%CI 43.1-45.0) in US data, in the hospitalized cohorts. COPD patients in the hospitalized cohort had greater comorbidity than those in the diagnosed cohort, including hypertension, heart disease, diabetes and obesity. Mortality was higher in COPD patients in the hospitalized cohort and ranged from 7.6% (95%CI 6.9-8.4) to 32.2% (95%CI 28.0-36.7) across databases. ARDS, acute renal failure, cardiac arrhythmia and sepsis were the most common outcomes among hospitalized COPD patients.   Conclusion: COPD patients with COVID-19 have high levels of COVID-19-associated comorbidities and poor COVID-19 outcomes. Further research is required to identify patients with COPD at high risk of worse outcomes. Copyright: © 2023 Moreno-Martos D et al.

12-year evolution of multimorbidity patterns among older adults based on Hidden Markov Models

A. ROSO-LLORACH, D. VETRANO, C. TREVISAN, S. FERNANDEZ, M. GUISADO-CLAVERO, L. CARRASCO-RIBELLES, L. FRATIGLIONI, C. VIOLAN and A. CALDERON-LARRANAGA
2022 Dec 31; . doi:10.18632/aging.204395; PMID:36435509

  • Ans: 31/12/2022
  • FI: 5.2

Background: The evolution of multimorbidity patterns during aging is still an under-researched area. We lack evidence concerning the time spent by older adults within one same multimorbidity pattern, and their transitional probability across different patterns when further chronic diseases arise. The aim of this study is to fill this gap by exploring multimorbidity patterns across decades of age in older adults, and longitudinal dynamics among these patterns.Methods: Longitudinal study based on the Swedish National study on Aging and Care in Kungsholmen (SNAC-K) on adults >= 60 years (N=3,363). Hidden Markov Models were applied to model the temporal evolution of both multimorbidity patterns and individuals’ transitions over a 12-year follow-up.Findings: Within the study population (mean age 76.1 years, 66.6% female), 87.2% had >= 2 chronic conditions at baseline. Four longitudinal multimorbidity patterns were identified for each decade. Individuals in all decades showed the shortest permanence time in an Unspecific pattern lacking any overrepresented diseases (range: 4.6-10.9 years), but the pattern with the longest permanence time varied by age. Sexagenarians remained longest in the Psychiatric-endocrine and sensorial pattern (15.4 years); septuagenarians in the Neuro-vascular and skin-sensorial pattern (11.0 years); and octogenarians and beyond in the Neuro-sensorial pattern (8.9 years). Transition probabilities varied across decades, sexagenarians showing the highest levels of stability.Interpretation: Our findings highlight the dynamism and heterogeneity underlying multimorbidity by quantifying the varying permanence times and transition probabilities across patterns in different decades. With increasing age, older adults experience decreasing stability and progressively shorter permanence time within one same multimorbidity pattern.

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