Global behavioral risk factor surveillance:
Gespeichert in:
Format: | Buch |
---|---|
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York [u. a.]
Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers
2003
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Includes bibliographical references and index |
Beschreibung: | XVII, 255 S. graph. Darst. 26cm |
ISBN: | 0306477777 |
Internformat
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Global behavioral risk factor surveillance |c edited by David V. McQueen and Pekka Puska |
264 | 1 | |a New York [u. a.] |b Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers |c 2003 | |
300 | |a XVII, 255 S. |b graph. Darst. |c 26cm | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
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338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
500 | |a Includes bibliographical references and index | ||
650 | 0 | |a World health | |
650 | 0 | |a Health behavior / Cross-cultural studies | |
650 | 0 | |a Health risk assessment / Cross-cultural studies | |
650 | 0 | |a Public health / Cross-cultural studies | |
650 | 0 | 7 | |a Gesundheitsgefährdung |0 (DE-588)4071808-6 |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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---|---|
adam_text | CONTENTS
1. INTRODUCTION 1
David V. McQueen and Pekka Puska
2. WHY IS GLOBAL SURVEILLANCE NECESSARY?
TOWARDS GLOBAL SURVEILLANCE OF NON-
COMMUNICABLE DISEASE RISK FACTORS:
DEVELOPMENTS AND CHALLENGES 3
Pekka Puska
1. INTRODUCTION 3
2. MAJOR ISSUES 4
3. INTERNATIONAL STRUCTURES 5
4. RECENT PROGRESS 6
5. REFERENCES 7
3. THE WHO STEPWISE APPROACH TO SURVEILLANCE
(STEPS) OF NON-COMMUNICABLE DISEASE
RISK FACTORS 9
Ruth Bonita, Regina Winkelmann, Kathy A. Douglas, and Maximilian de Courten
1. INTRODUCTION 9
2. THE EMERGING EPIDEMIC OF CHRONIC DISEASES 10
3. SURVEILLANCE 11
3.1. Definitions 11
3.2. The Role of WHO in Responding to the NCD Epidemic 11
3.3. Risk Factor Surveillance or Disease Surveillance? 12
3.4. Choice of Risk Factors for Global NCD Surveillance 13
3.5. Choice of Core Measures 13
4. WHO STEPWISE APPROACH TO SURVEILLANCE (STEPS) 14
ix
i CONTENTS
4.1. A Framework for NCD Risk Factor Surveillance 14
4.2. Inclusion of Additional NCD Risk Factors for Local Needs 16
4.3. Choice of Summary Measures 16
5. FROM SURVEYS TO SURVEILLANCE 17
6. CONCLUSION 17
7. REFERENCES 18
8. APPENDIX: KEY QUESTIONS FOR PLANNING NCD RISK
FACTOR SURVEILLANCE 19
8.1. What Are the Long-Term Objectives? 19
8.2. Which Risk Factors Will Be Measured? 19
8.3. How Will the Risk Factor Measures Be Obtained? 19
8.4. What Is the Sample for the Survey? 19
8.5. How Big Must the Sample Be? 20
8.6. Will the Data Be Trusted? 20
8.7. How Will the Data Be Handled and Analysed? 20
8.8. What Will the Project Cost? 21
8.9. What Ethical Approval Is Required? 21
8.10. Is Everything Ready To Start? 21
8.11. How Will Oversight and Quality Control of the
Surveillance System Be Managed? 22
8.12. How Is Surveillance Infra-Structure Being Built
and Maintained? 22
4. PARTNERSHIPS, STRATEGIES, AND ALLIANCES FOR
GLOBAL SURVEILLANCE 23
Vivian Lin
1. INTRODUCTION 23
2. USERS AND PARTNERS 24
3. STRATEGIES FOR PARTNERSHIP DEVELOPMENT 25
4. LESSONS FROM THE GROUND 28
4.1. China (Top-Down Partnership) 28
4.2. Australia (Bottom-Up Partnership) 30
5. ISSUES FOR GLOBAL DEVELOPMENT 31
6. REFERENCES 33
5. ANALYSIS AND INTERPRETATION OF DATA FROM
THE U.S. BEHAVIORAL RISK FACTOR
SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM (BRFSS) 35
Deborah Holtzman
1. INTRODUCTION 35
2. THE SYSTEM 35
2.1. Development of the BRFSS 35
CONTENTS Xi
2.2. Sampling Procedures 36
2.3. Joint Venture 36
2.4. Expansion 38
3. ANALYSIS AND INTERPRETATION OF BRFSS DATA 39
3.1. Questionnaire Flexibility 39
3.2. Sample Design 40
3.3. Data Quality 40
3.4. Accessibility of Data 41
• 3.5. Use of BRFSS Data by States 41
3.6. Use of BRFSS Data by CDC and Other Agencies 42
4. CONCLUSION 43
5. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT 45
6. REFERENCES 45
6. SURVEILLANCE SYSTEMS AND DATA ANALYSIS:
CONTINUOUSLY COLLECTED BEHAVIOURAL
DATA. BRITISH AND AMERICAN EXAMPLES 47
Stefano Campostrini
1. INTRODUCTION 47
1.1. Behavioural Risk Factor Surveillance Systems 47
1.2. Peculiarities of Data from Surveillance Systems 48
2. SAMPLE GOALS AND APPROACHES 49
2.1. Simple Trend Estimates 49
2.2. Sophisticated Trend Estimates (and Inter-Action
among Variables) 51
2.3. Deconstruction of Change 52
2.4. Trends and Changes in the Association among Variables 52
2.5. Evaluation and Intervention Analyses 53
2.6. Estimate of the Change Point over Time 54
3. CONCLUSION 55
4. REFERENCES 55
7. FINBALT HEALTH MONITOR. MONITORING
HEALTH BEHAVIOUR IN FINLAND AND THE
BALTIC COUNTRIES 57
Ritva Prattala, Ville Helasoja, and the Finbalt Group
1. INTRODUCTION 57
2. ESTONIA, FINLAND, LATVIA, AND LITHUANIA:
NATIONS AND POPULATIONS 58
3. CONDUCTING THE FINBALT HEALTH MONITOR 60
3.1. Origins and History of the Finbalt Project 60
3.2. Administration of the Finbalt Project 60
xii CONTENTS
3.3. Development of the Finbalt Questionnaire 61
3.4. Main Domains of the 1998 Finbalt Questionnaire 63
4. EVALUATION OF THE FINBALT MATERIAL 66
4.1. Data Collection 66
4.2. Quality of the Data 68
5. DISCUSSION 68
6. CONCLUSIONS 70
7. REFERENCES 71
8. TOWARDS A EUROPEAN HEALTH MONITORING
SYSTEM. RESULTS OF A PILOT STUDY ON
PHYSICAL ACTIVITY 73
Alfred ROtten, Randall Rzewnicki, Heiko Ziemainz, Wil T. M. Ooijendijk, Frederico
Schena, Timo Stahl, Yves Vanden Auweele, and John Welshman
1. INTRODUCTION 73
1.1. Background: Relevance of the European Community
Approach to Health Monitoring 74
1.2. The Health Monitoring Programme 74
1.3. Demonstration Project: The European Physical Activity Surveillance
System 75
2. INVENTORY OF PHYSICAL ACTIVITY INDICATORS,
SURVEYS, AND SURVEILLANCE STRUCTURES 77
2.1. Data and Methods 77
2.2. Comparison of Existing European Union Physical
Activity Surveys 78
3. DEVELOPMENT OF NEW SURVEY INDICATORS 82
4. DESIGN AND METHODS TESTING 83
5. DATA, TESTING, AND RESULTS 84
5.1. Indicator Test Study 84
5.2. Response Rates for Telephone and Mail Surveys 84
5.3. Results of Reliability Analysis 87
5.4. Results of Comparability Analysis 87
5.5. Results of Regression Analysis: Predictive Power Related to
Subjective Health Status 88
6. GENERAL CONCLUSION 90
7. NEXT STEPS OF DEVELOPMENT 92
8. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 92
9. REFERENCES 92
9. COMPARISON OF SURVEILLANCE DATA ON
METROPOLITAN AND RURAL HEALTH. DIABETES
IN SOUTHERN AUSTRALIA AS AN EXAMPLE 95
David H. Wilson
CONTENTS lUl
1. BACKGROUND 95
2. INTRODUCTION 95
3. METHODS 99
3.1. Participants 99
3.2. Data Collection 99
3.3. Statistical Methods 100
4. RESULTS 101
5. DISCUSSION 107
6. REFERENCES 116
10. DID THEY USE IT? BEYOND THE COLLECTION
OF SURVEILLANCE INFORMATION 119
Judith M. Ottoson and David H. Wilson
1. INTRODUCTION 119
2. SURVEILLANCE ASSUMPTIONS AND CONTEXT 120
3. UNDERSTANDING THE DIMENSIONS OF USE 122
3.1. What Is Used? 123
3.2. What Are the Kinds of Uses? 124
3.3. Who Uses It? 126
3.4. When Is It Used? 127
3.5. How Direct Is the Derivation? 127
3.6. How Much Effect Is Needed before Data Are
Considered Used? 128
3.7. How Well Is It Used? 128
4. IMPLICATIONS FOR USE 128
5. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT 130
6. REFERENCES 130
11. HARMONISING LOCAL HEALTH SURVEY DATA.
THE EURALIM EXPERIENCE 133
Alfredo Morabia, Mary E. Northridge, Sigrid Beer-Borst, and Serge Hercberg
for the EURALIM Study Group
1. INTRODUCTION 133
2. EURALIM 134
2.1. Objectives 134
2.2. Study Design 134
2.3. Harmonisation and Database Management 135
2.4. Harmonisation of Dietary Data 136
2.5. Comparison of Within-Population Contrasts 140
2.6. Information Campaign 148
3. THE EURALIM EXPERIENCE 148
riv CONTENTS
3.1. Co-ordination of Locally Based Surveys 148
3.2. Definition of New Uniform Variables 148
3.3. Age Standardisation 150
3.4. Contrasts by Gender, Age Group, and Social Class 150
3.5. Realistic Public Health Objectives 151
4. STRATEGIES FOR GLOBAL SURVEILLANCE OF
HEALTH DETERMINANTS 151
5. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT 153
6. REFERENCES 153
7. APPENDIX: EURALIM SITES AND KEY PERSONNEL 154
12. ANALYSIS, INTERPRETATION, AND USE OF COMPLEX
SOCIAL AND BEHAVIORAL SURVEILLANCE DATA.
LOOKING BACK IN ORDER TO GO FORWARD 155
David V. McQueen and Linda Gauger Eisner
1. INTRODUCTION 155
2. FRAMEWORK AND GOALS OF THE MEETING 156
3. PLENARY SESSION 156
4. WORKING GROUPS 158
4.1. Analysis Group 158
4.2. Interpretation Group 163
4.3. Data Use Group 168
5. CLOSING SESSION AND DEVELOPMENT OF
RECOMMENDATIONS 175
6. CONCLUSION 176
13. MEGA COUNTRY HEALTH PROMOTION NETWORK
SURVEILLANCE INITIATIVE. STRENGTHENING
THE CAPACITY OF THE WORLD S MOST
POPULOUS COUNTRIES TO MONITOR NON-
COMMUNICABLE DISEASE BEHAVIOURAL
RISK FACTORS 179
Kathy A. Douglas, Gonghuan Yang, David V. McQueen, and Pekka Puska
1. INTRODUCTION 179
2. EXPERIENCES CONDUCTING CONTINUOUS
BEHAVIOURAL RISK FACTOR SURVEILLANCE
SYSTEMS IN THE UNITED STATES AND CHINA 180
2.1. U.S. Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System 180
2.2. China s Adaptation of the BRFSS 181
2.3. Comparison of U.S. and China Surveillance Systems 181
2.4. Lessons Learned 182
2.5. Issues for Further Consideration 188
CONTENTS XV
3. MEGA COUNTRY HEALTH PROMOTION NETWORK
SURVEILLANCE GOALS 191
3.1. Moving from Surveys to Surveillance 191
3.2. Addressing Critical Population-Based NCD Health Needs 192
3.3. Contributing to Global NCD Data Collection 193
4. SURVEILLANCE CHALLENGES IN THE MEGA
COUNTRIES 193
5. CONCLUSION 194
6. REFERENCES 195
14. EPIDEMIOLOGICAL SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM
IN LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN.
PERSPECTIVES, CHALLENGES, AND SOLUTIONS 197
Ligia de Salazar
1. INTRODUCTION 197
2. EPIDEMIOLOGICAL SURVEILLANCE IN LATIN
AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN 198
2.1. Background 198
2.2. Limitations and Challenges 199
3. A COMMUNITY-BASED INFORMATION AND
EPIDEMIOLOGICAL SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM: AN
ANSWER TO THE OBSTACLES IN DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES 201
3.1. Rationale 201
3.2. Information and Epidemiological Surveillance System for
School-Age and Adolescent Populations (SIVEA) 203
4. CONCLUSION 206
5. REFERENCES 206
15. CREATING A SYNTHETIC BEHAVIOURAL RISK
FACTOR INDEX TO ASSESS TRENDS IN
SURVEILLANCE DATA. AN INDEX OF RISK FOR
CARDIO-VASCULAR DISEASE AS AN EXAMPLE 209
Stefano Campostrini and David V. McQueen
1. INTRODUCTION 209
2. CREATING A SYNTHETIC BEHAVIOURAL RISK
FACTOR INDEX 210
3. THE U.S. BEHAVIORAL RISK FACTOR
SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM 211
3.1. History of the BRFSS 211
3.2. BRFSS Methodology 211
3.3. Using BRFSS Data to Create a Synthetic Index 212
xvi CONTENTS
4. METHODS 213
4.1. The Cardiovascular Disease Behavioral Risk Index (CaDRI) 213
4.2. The Delphi Technique 214
4.3. Data Analysis 215
5. RESULTS 215
6. DISCUSSION 219
7. REFERENCES 219
16. PERSPECTIVES ON BUILDING INFRA-STRUCTURE,
COMPARING DATA, AND USING SURVEILLANCE
DATA IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES 221
David V. McQueen, Mary Hall, and Kelli Byers Hooper
1. INTRODUCTION 221
2. BACKGROUND 221
3. ISSUES 222
3.1. Capacity 222
3.2. Comparability 223
3.3. Data Use 224
4. THEMES 225
4.1. Time as a Variable 226
4.2. Sampling Methods 226
4.3. Data Collection 226
4.4. Data Analysis 226
4.5. How Data Are Used 226
4.6. Limitations 226
5. CONCLUSION 226
17. NON-COMMUNICABLE DISEASE SURVEILLANCE
IN LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN.
ADVANCES SUPPORTED BY THE PAN AMERICAN
HEALTH ORGANIZATION 227
Stephen J. Corber, Sylvia C. Robles, Pedro Ordufiez, and Paz Rodriguez
1. THE PAN AMERICAN HEALTH ORGANIZATION 227
2. SURVEILLANCE OF NON-COMMUNICABLE DISEASES 228
2.1. Questionnaire Development 229
2.2. Survey Evaluation 229
3. CONCLUSION 232
4. REFERENCES 232
CONTENTS XVli
18. PERSPECTIVES ON GLOBAL RISK FACTOR
SURVEILLANCE. LESSONS LEARNED AND
CHALLENGES AHEAD 233
David V. McQueen
1. THE WATERSHED 233
2. THE POWER OF BEHAVIOURAL MONITORING 234
3. TERMINOLOGY 234
4. FOUR ESSENTIALS OF A SOCIO-BEHAVIOURAL
MONITORING SYSTEM FOR PUBLIC HEALTH 235
5. TWO MAJOR AREAS OF CONCERN FOR SOCIO-
BEHAVIOURAL MONITORING 237
6. HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF QUESTIONNAIRES
USED IN RISK FACTOR SURVEILLANCE 239
7. CHALLENGES IN QUESTIONNAIRES 241
8. OPPORTUNITIES IN QUESTIONNAIRES 242
9. ANALYSIS OF SURVEILLANCE DATA 243
10. CONCLUSIONS 244
|
adam_txt |
CONTENTS
1. INTRODUCTION 1
David V. McQueen and Pekka Puska
2. WHY IS GLOBAL SURVEILLANCE NECESSARY?
TOWARDS GLOBAL SURVEILLANCE OF NON-
COMMUNICABLE DISEASE RISK FACTORS:
DEVELOPMENTS AND CHALLENGES 3
Pekka Puska
1. INTRODUCTION 3
2. MAJOR ISSUES 4
3. INTERNATIONAL STRUCTURES 5
4. RECENT PROGRESS 6
5. REFERENCES 7
3. THE WHO STEPWISE APPROACH TO SURVEILLANCE
(STEPS) OF NON-COMMUNICABLE DISEASE
RISK FACTORS 9
Ruth Bonita, Regina Winkelmann, Kathy A. Douglas, and Maximilian de Courten
1. INTRODUCTION 9
2. THE EMERGING EPIDEMIC OF CHRONIC DISEASES 10
3. SURVEILLANCE 11
3.1. Definitions 11
3.2. The Role of WHO in Responding to the NCD Epidemic 11
3.3. Risk Factor Surveillance or Disease Surveillance? 12
3.4. Choice of Risk Factors for Global NCD Surveillance 13
3.5. Choice of Core Measures 13
4. WHO STEPWISE APPROACH TO SURVEILLANCE (STEPS) 14
ix
i CONTENTS
4.1. A Framework for NCD Risk Factor Surveillance 14
4.2. Inclusion of Additional NCD Risk Factors for Local Needs 16
4.3. Choice of Summary Measures 16
5. FROM SURVEYS TO SURVEILLANCE 17
6. CONCLUSION 17
7. REFERENCES 18
8. APPENDIX: KEY QUESTIONS FOR PLANNING NCD RISK
FACTOR SURVEILLANCE 19
8.1. What Are the Long-Term Objectives? 19
8.2. Which Risk Factors Will Be Measured? 19
8.3. How Will the Risk Factor Measures Be Obtained? 19
8.4. What Is the Sample for the Survey? 19
8.5. How Big Must the Sample Be? 20
8.6. Will the Data Be Trusted? 20
8.7. How Will the Data Be Handled and Analysed? 20
8.8. What Will the Project Cost? 21
8.9. What Ethical Approval Is Required? 21
8.10. Is Everything Ready To Start? 21
8.11. How Will Oversight and Quality Control of the
Surveillance System Be Managed? 22
8.12. How Is Surveillance Infra-Structure Being Built
and Maintained? 22
4. PARTNERSHIPS, STRATEGIES, AND ALLIANCES FOR
GLOBAL SURVEILLANCE 23
Vivian Lin
1. INTRODUCTION 23
2. USERS AND PARTNERS 24
3. STRATEGIES FOR PARTNERSHIP DEVELOPMENT 25
4. LESSONS FROM THE GROUND 28
4.1. China (Top-Down Partnership) 28
4.2. Australia (Bottom-Up Partnership) 30
5. ISSUES FOR GLOBAL DEVELOPMENT 31
6. REFERENCES 33
5. ANALYSIS AND INTERPRETATION OF DATA FROM
THE U.S. BEHAVIORAL RISK FACTOR
SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM (BRFSS) 35
Deborah Holtzman
1. INTRODUCTION 35
2. THE SYSTEM 35
2.1. Development of the BRFSS 35
CONTENTS Xi
2.2. Sampling Procedures 36
2.3. Joint Venture 36
2.4. Expansion 38
3. ANALYSIS AND INTERPRETATION OF BRFSS DATA 39
3.1. Questionnaire Flexibility 39
3.2. Sample Design 40
3.3. Data Quality 40
3.4. Accessibility of Data 41
• 3.5. Use of BRFSS Data by States 41
3.6. Use of BRFSS Data by CDC and Other Agencies 42
4. CONCLUSION 43
5. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT 45
6. REFERENCES 45
6. SURVEILLANCE SYSTEMS AND DATA ANALYSIS:
CONTINUOUSLY COLLECTED BEHAVIOURAL
DATA. BRITISH AND AMERICAN EXAMPLES 47
Stefano Campostrini
1. INTRODUCTION 47
1.1. Behavioural Risk Factor Surveillance Systems 47
1.2. Peculiarities of Data from Surveillance Systems 48
2. SAMPLE GOALS AND APPROACHES 49
2.1. Simple Trend Estimates 49
2.2. "Sophisticated" Trend Estimates (and Inter-Action
among Variables) 51
2.3. Deconstruction of Change 52
2.4. Trends and Changes in the Association among Variables 52
2.5. Evaluation and Intervention Analyses 53
2.6. Estimate of the Change Point over Time 54
3. CONCLUSION 55
4. REFERENCES 55
7. FINBALT HEALTH MONITOR. MONITORING
HEALTH BEHAVIOUR IN FINLAND AND THE
BALTIC COUNTRIES 57
Ritva Prattala, Ville Helasoja, and the Finbalt Group
1. INTRODUCTION 57
2. ESTONIA, FINLAND, LATVIA, AND LITHUANIA:
NATIONS AND POPULATIONS 58
3. CONDUCTING THE FINBALT HEALTH MONITOR 60
3.1. Origins and History of the Finbalt Project 60
3.2. Administration of the Finbalt Project 60
xii CONTENTS
3.3. Development of the Finbalt Questionnaire 61
3.4. Main Domains of the 1998 Finbalt Questionnaire 63
4. EVALUATION OF THE FINBALT MATERIAL 66
4.1. Data Collection 66
4.2. Quality of the Data 68
5. DISCUSSION 68
6. CONCLUSIONS 70
7. REFERENCES 71
8. TOWARDS A EUROPEAN HEALTH MONITORING
SYSTEM. RESULTS OF A PILOT STUDY ON
PHYSICAL ACTIVITY 73
Alfred ROtten, Randall Rzewnicki, Heiko Ziemainz, Wil T. M. Ooijendijk, Frederico
Schena, Timo Stahl, Yves Vanden Auweele, and John Welshman
1. INTRODUCTION 73
1.1. Background: Relevance of the European Community
Approach to Health Monitoring 74
1.2. The Health Monitoring Programme 74
1.3. Demonstration Project: The European Physical Activity Surveillance
System 75
2. INVENTORY OF PHYSICAL ACTIVITY INDICATORS,
SURVEYS, AND SURVEILLANCE STRUCTURES 77
2.1. Data and Methods 77
2.2. Comparison of Existing European Union Physical
Activity Surveys 78
3. DEVELOPMENT OF NEW SURVEY INDICATORS 82
4. DESIGN AND METHODS TESTING 83
5. DATA, TESTING, AND RESULTS 84
5.1. Indicator Test Study 84
5.2. Response Rates for Telephone and Mail Surveys 84
5.3. Results of Reliability Analysis 87
5.4. Results of Comparability Analysis 87
5.5. Results of Regression Analysis: Predictive Power Related to
Subjective Health Status 88
6. GENERAL CONCLUSION 90
7. NEXT STEPS OF DEVELOPMENT 92
8. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 92
9. REFERENCES 92
9. COMPARISON OF SURVEILLANCE DATA ON
METROPOLITAN AND RURAL HEALTH. DIABETES
IN SOUTHERN AUSTRALIA AS AN EXAMPLE 95
David H. Wilson
CONTENTS lUl
1. BACKGROUND 95
2. INTRODUCTION 95
3. METHODS 99
3.1. Participants 99
3.2. Data Collection 99
3.3. Statistical Methods 100
4. RESULTS 101
5. DISCUSSION 107
6. REFERENCES 116
10. DID THEY USE IT? BEYOND THE COLLECTION
OF SURVEILLANCE INFORMATION 119
Judith M. Ottoson and David H. Wilson
1. INTRODUCTION 119
2. SURVEILLANCE ASSUMPTIONS AND CONTEXT 120
3. UNDERSTANDING THE DIMENSIONS OF USE 122
3.1. What Is Used? 123
3.2. What Are the Kinds of Uses? 124
3.3. Who Uses It? 126
3.4. When Is It Used? 127
3.5. How Direct Is the Derivation? 127
3.6. How Much Effect Is Needed before Data Are
Considered Used? 128
3.7. How Well Is It Used? 128
4. IMPLICATIONS FOR USE 128
5. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT 130
6. REFERENCES 130
11. HARMONISING LOCAL HEALTH SURVEY DATA.
THE EURALIM EXPERIENCE 133
Alfredo Morabia, Mary E. Northridge, Sigrid Beer-Borst, and Serge Hercberg
for the EURALIM Study Group
1. INTRODUCTION 133
2. EURALIM 134
2.1. Objectives 134
2.2. Study Design 134
2.3. Harmonisation and Database Management 135
2.4. Harmonisation of Dietary Data 136
2.5. Comparison of Within-Population Contrasts 140
2.6. Information Campaign 148
3. THE EURALIM EXPERIENCE 148
riv CONTENTS
3.1. Co-ordination of Locally Based Surveys 148
3.2. Definition of New Uniform Variables 148
3.3. Age Standardisation 150
3.4. Contrasts by Gender, Age Group, and Social Class 150
3.5. Realistic Public Health Objectives 151
4. STRATEGIES FOR GLOBAL SURVEILLANCE OF
HEALTH DETERMINANTS 151
5. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT 153
6. REFERENCES 153
7. APPENDIX: EURALIM SITES AND KEY PERSONNEL 154
12. ANALYSIS, INTERPRETATION, AND USE OF COMPLEX
SOCIAL AND BEHAVIORAL SURVEILLANCE DATA.
LOOKING BACK IN ORDER TO GO FORWARD 155
David V. McQueen and Linda Gauger Eisner
1. INTRODUCTION 155
2. FRAMEWORK AND GOALS OF THE MEETING 156
3. PLENARY SESSION 156
4. WORKING GROUPS 158
4.1. Analysis Group 158
4.2. Interpretation Group 163
4.3. Data Use Group 168
5. CLOSING SESSION AND DEVELOPMENT OF
RECOMMENDATIONS 175
6. CONCLUSION 176
13. MEGA COUNTRY HEALTH PROMOTION NETWORK
SURVEILLANCE INITIATIVE. STRENGTHENING
THE CAPACITY OF THE WORLD'S MOST
POPULOUS COUNTRIES TO MONITOR NON-
COMMUNICABLE DISEASE BEHAVIOURAL
RISK FACTORS 179
Kathy A. Douglas, Gonghuan Yang, David V. McQueen, and Pekka Puska
1. INTRODUCTION 179
2. EXPERIENCES CONDUCTING CONTINUOUS
BEHAVIOURAL RISK FACTOR SURVEILLANCE
SYSTEMS IN THE UNITED STATES AND CHINA 180
2.1. U.S. Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System 180
2.2. China's Adaptation of the BRFSS 181
2.3. Comparison of U.S. and China Surveillance Systems 181
2.4. Lessons Learned 182
2.5. Issues for Further Consideration 188
CONTENTS XV
3. MEGA COUNTRY HEALTH PROMOTION NETWORK
SURVEILLANCE GOALS 191
3.1. Moving from Surveys to Surveillance 191
3.2. Addressing Critical Population-Based NCD Health Needs 192
3.3. Contributing to Global NCD Data Collection 193
4. SURVEILLANCE CHALLENGES IN THE MEGA
COUNTRIES 193
5. CONCLUSION 194
6. REFERENCES 195
14. EPIDEMIOLOGICAL SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM
IN LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN.
PERSPECTIVES, CHALLENGES, AND SOLUTIONS 197
Ligia de Salazar
1. INTRODUCTION 197
2. EPIDEMIOLOGICAL SURVEILLANCE IN LATIN
AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN 198
2.1. Background 198
2.2. Limitations and Challenges 199
3. A COMMUNITY-BASED INFORMATION AND
EPIDEMIOLOGICAL SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM: AN
ANSWER TO THE OBSTACLES IN DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES 201
3.1. Rationale 201
3.2. Information and Epidemiological Surveillance System for
School-Age and Adolescent Populations (SIVEA) 203
4. CONCLUSION 206
5. REFERENCES 206
15. CREATING A SYNTHETIC BEHAVIOURAL RISK
FACTOR INDEX TO ASSESS TRENDS IN
SURVEILLANCE DATA. AN INDEX OF RISK FOR
CARDIO-VASCULAR DISEASE AS AN EXAMPLE 209
Stefano Campostrini and David V. McQueen
1. INTRODUCTION 209
2. CREATING A SYNTHETIC BEHAVIOURAL RISK
FACTOR INDEX 210
3. THE U.S. BEHAVIORAL RISK FACTOR
SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM 211
3.1. History of the BRFSS 211
3.2. BRFSS Methodology 211
3.3. Using BRFSS Data to Create a Synthetic Index 212
xvi CONTENTS
4. METHODS 213
4.1. The Cardiovascular Disease Behavioral Risk Index (CaDRI) 213
4.2. The Delphi Technique 214
4.3. Data Analysis 215
5. RESULTS 215
6. DISCUSSION 219
7. REFERENCES 219
16. PERSPECTIVES ON BUILDING INFRA-STRUCTURE,
COMPARING DATA, AND USING SURVEILLANCE
DATA IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES 221
David V. McQueen, Mary Hall, and Kelli Byers Hooper
1. INTRODUCTION 221
2. BACKGROUND 221
3. ISSUES 222
3.1. Capacity 222
3.2. Comparability 223
3.3. Data Use 224
4. THEMES 225
4.1. Time as a Variable 226
4.2. Sampling Methods 226
4.3. Data Collection 226
4.4. Data Analysis 226
4.5. How Data Are Used 226
4.6. Limitations 226
5. CONCLUSION 226
17. NON-COMMUNICABLE DISEASE SURVEILLANCE
IN LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN.
ADVANCES SUPPORTED BY THE PAN AMERICAN
HEALTH ORGANIZATION 227
Stephen J. Corber, Sylvia C. Robles, Pedro Ordufiez, and Paz Rodriguez
1. THE PAN AMERICAN HEALTH ORGANIZATION 227
2. SURVEILLANCE OF NON-COMMUNICABLE DISEASES 228
2.1. Questionnaire Development 229
2.2. Survey Evaluation 229
3. CONCLUSION 232
4. REFERENCES 232
CONTENTS XVli
18. PERSPECTIVES ON GLOBAL RISK FACTOR
SURVEILLANCE. LESSONS LEARNED AND
CHALLENGES AHEAD 233
David V. McQueen
1. THE WATERSHED 233
2. THE POWER OF BEHAVIOURAL MONITORING 234
3. TERMINOLOGY 234
4. FOUR ESSENTIALS OF A SOCIO-BEHAVIOURAL
MONITORING SYSTEM FOR PUBLIC HEALTH 235
5. TWO MAJOR AREAS OF CONCERN FOR SOCIO-
BEHAVIOURAL MONITORING 237
6. HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF QUESTIONNAIRES
USED IN RISK FACTOR SURVEILLANCE 239
7. CHALLENGES IN QUESTIONNAIRES 241
8. OPPORTUNITIES IN QUESTIONNAIRES 242
9. ANALYSIS OF SURVEILLANCE DATA 243
10. CONCLUSIONS 244 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV035092360 |
classification_rvk | QX 700 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)249290262 (DE-599)GBV368571718 |
dewey-full | 362.1 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 362 - Social problems and services to groups |
dewey-raw | 362.1 |
dewey-search | 362.1 |
dewey-sort | 3362.1 |
dewey-tens | 360 - Social problems and services; associations |
discipline | Soziologie Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
discipline_str_mv | Soziologie Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
format | Book |
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genre | (DE-588)4006432-3 Bibliografie gnd-content |
genre_facet | Bibliografie |
id | DE-604.BV035092360 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T22:11:05Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:22:01Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0306477777 |
language | English |
lccn | 2003050651 |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016760460 |
oclc_num | 249290262 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-Er8 DE-29T |
owner_facet | DE-Er8 DE-29T |
physical | XVII, 255 S. graph. Darst. 26cm |
publishDate | 2003 |
publishDateSearch | 2003 |
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spelling | Global behavioral risk factor surveillance edited by David V. McQueen and Pekka Puska New York [u. a.] Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers 2003 XVII, 255 S. graph. Darst. 26cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Includes bibliographical references and index World health Health behavior / Cross-cultural studies Health risk assessment / Cross-cultural studies Public health / Cross-cultural studies Gesundheitsgefährdung (DE-588)4071808-6 gnd rswk-swf Risikoanalyse (DE-588)4137042-9 gnd rswk-swf Gesundheitsverhalten (DE-588)4020774-2 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4006432-3 Bibliografie gnd-content Gesundheitsverhalten (DE-588)4020774-2 s Gesundheitsgefährdung (DE-588)4071808-6 s Risikoanalyse (DE-588)4137042-9 s DE-604 McQueen, David V. Sonstige oth HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016760460&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Global behavioral risk factor surveillance World health Health behavior / Cross-cultural studies Health risk assessment / Cross-cultural studies Public health / Cross-cultural studies Gesundheitsgefährdung (DE-588)4071808-6 gnd Risikoanalyse (DE-588)4137042-9 gnd Gesundheitsverhalten (DE-588)4020774-2 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4071808-6 (DE-588)4137042-9 (DE-588)4020774-2 (DE-588)4006432-3 |
title | Global behavioral risk factor surveillance |
title_auth | Global behavioral risk factor surveillance |
title_exact_search | Global behavioral risk factor surveillance |
title_exact_search_txtP | Global behavioral risk factor surveillance |
title_full | Global behavioral risk factor surveillance edited by David V. McQueen and Pekka Puska |
title_fullStr | Global behavioral risk factor surveillance edited by David V. McQueen and Pekka Puska |
title_full_unstemmed | Global behavioral risk factor surveillance edited by David V. McQueen and Pekka Puska |
title_short | Global behavioral risk factor surveillance |
title_sort | global behavioral risk factor surveillance |
topic | World health Health behavior / Cross-cultural studies Health risk assessment / Cross-cultural studies Public health / Cross-cultural studies Gesundheitsgefährdung (DE-588)4071808-6 gnd Risikoanalyse (DE-588)4137042-9 gnd Gesundheitsverhalten (DE-588)4020774-2 gnd |
topic_facet | World health Health behavior / Cross-cultural studies Health risk assessment / Cross-cultural studies Public health / Cross-cultural studies Gesundheitsgefährdung Risikoanalyse Gesundheitsverhalten Bibliografie |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016760460&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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