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1.
Medicine (Baltimore) ; 101(1): e28508, 2022 Jan 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35029908

ABSTRACT

ABSTRACT: Studies have shown that a new demographic and epidemiological profile has been emerging in women of childbearing age, mainly due to the increase in life expectancy, reduction in infant mortality, higher survival in old age, and the drop in fertility rate.To evaluate the external (violence) causes of mortality among women in Brazil from 2007 to 2016.This is a quantitative, ecological study of temporal trends and correlations of the main causes of mortality of women of childbearing age and their association with age, from 2007 to 2016 in Brazil. The collected data were extracted from the Departamento de Informática do Sistema Único de Saúde database called the Mortality Information System.It was possible to identify a considerable increase among the Brazilian states, with the highest coefficient of mortality from external causes, especially the northern regions. The highest coefficient identified among the evaluated states was 3.57 per 10,000, and in the northeast and southeast, external causes mainly affected young women aged 10 to 29 years.It is necessary for managers and health professionals to be more aware of the diseases that affect this population.


Subject(s)
Life Expectancy , Mortality , Women's Health , Adolescent , Adult , Brazil/epidemiology , Causality , Cause of Death , Child , Female , Humans , Middle Aged , Violence , Young Adult
2.
Public Health Rev ; 43: 1604500, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36588988

ABSTRACT

Objective: To identify the frequency of vitamin A deficiency in children aged 6 months to 5 years hospitalized for pneumonia. Methods: An integrative literature review was carried out, where searches were made by two independent researchers, with no language limits or publication time in the databases PubMed, LILACS, Web of Science, Scopus and CINAHL, and in the gray literature-OpenGrey, Proquest and Google Scholar. In the eligibility phase, the screened studies were read in full and those that did not answer the research question were excluded. Methodological quality was assessed using the Downs & Black (1998) checklist. Results: 1642 articles were identified, after all stages of screening and selection, 10 studies were included, of which 5 were longitudinal, 4 were intervention and 1 transversal. All studies identified subclinical vitamin A deficiency in children hospitalized with pneumonia; the highest frequency of subclinical vitamin A deficiency was 93.2%. All studies evaluated showed frequencies of subclinical vitamin A deficiency >20%. Conclusion: There is a high frequency of subclinical vitamin A deficiency in children with pneumonia; these data need to be further explored in terms of their associations. For this reason, new studies that evaluate this topic are of fundamental importance.

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