Paul BuckleySpringer NetherlandsMackay C, Cushion P, Palferman D, et al. Population Level Interventions to Control Psychosocial Risks : Problems and Prospects. In: Derailed Organizational Interventions for Stress and Well-Being. Springer; 2015. p. 59-70.
suggests that population-level interventions targeting these diseases should be considered by the government and healthcare organisations in order to lower the overall risks of diseases manifestation. Examples of healthcare planning include public resource allocation, healthcare personnel training...
1. Many healthcare interventions are not the subject of a QALY assessment and direct comparisons between the cost -effectiveness of different treatments is not possible. 2. QALYs are based on population-level information. They do not take into account the personal ...
The portion of the world’s population living in countries with fertility at or above the replacement level—2.1 births per woman—has fallen. The United Nations projects that “in 2025–2030, only a third of the world’s population will live in countries with fertility levels of at least ...
Reducing salt intake to prevent hypertension might be possible through a combination of fiscal, regulatory, and possibly behavioural interventions,31, 32 although few examples exist of successful national programmes so far. Increased availability and consumption of fruits and vegetables33 might partly ...
By combining triple-(DG-CA3-CA1) ensemble recordings and optogenetic interventions in behaving mice, we show that abDGCs constitute a subset of high-firing-rate neurons with enhanced activity responses to novelty and strong modulation by theta oscillations. Selectively activating abDGCs in their 4–...
Population ageing is a ‘silent’ trend, meaning that it slowly occurs over many years without much notice (also because demographers are often unheard). Furthermore, the ageing process is the outcome of excellent results regarding the high level of life expectancy and birth control. So, populat...
it helps to validate your responses and verify exactly where the first interventions may need to happen. This modeling technique also presents regular data, uses N-squared to make the most important areas stand out, and IP to define the same results once with independent prevalence metrics display...
Public policies frequently involve choices of alternatives in which the size and the composition of the population may vary. Examples are the allocation of resources to prenatal care and the design of aid packages to developing countries. In order to assess the corresponding feasible choices on norma...
5. The framing of these earlier analyses is different to what is presented here. These earlier analyses focused on the impact of three sets of interventions—vaccination, screening and cancer treatment—and assumed that screening would be offered twice in a lifetime. However, these earlier ...