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    Towards responsive policy and actions to address non- communicable disease risks amongst adolescents in Indonesia: insights from key stakeholders
    Cini, KI ; Wulan, NR ; Dumuid, D ; Triputri, AN ; Abbsar, I ; Li, L ; Priambodo, DA ; Sameve, GE ; Camellia, A ; Francis, KL ; Sawyer, SM ; Patton, GC ; Ansariadi, A ; Azzopardi, PS (ELSEVIER, 2023-11)
    BACKGROUND: Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) such as cancer, diabetes, heart disease, mental disorder and chronic lung conditions are the leading cause of death and disability in Indonesia. Adolescence is when risks for NCDs emerge and it is also an important life stage for intervention, yet young people are often at the margins of NCD policy and actions. This study aimed to understand how policies and actions should address NCD risks (tobacco smoking, inadequate physical activity, and diet) for adolescents in Indonesia, and how young people can be meaningfully involved. METHODS: Qualitative in-depth interviews over videoconference (n = 21) were conducted in English or Bahasa with stakeholders in Indonesia. Participants included policymakers, implementation partners, and advocates who were focused on adolescent health or NCDs. Interviews were recorded, transcribed, translated, and thematically analysed using NVivo12. Findings were disseminated to participants for validation and feedback. Youth participants (n = 7) attended an additional workshop and considered recommendations and actions arising from this research. FINDINGS: Participants identified that government and non-government organisations are acting on NCDs in Indonesia, but few of the existing initiatives target adolescents, and adolescent services rarely addressed NCD risks. Participants also felt that policies to protect adolescents from NCD risks (i.e., smoke-free areas in public) were not always enforced. For programs or initiatives focused on adolescent health, those that had engaged adolescents as co-creators and leaders were perceived to be more successful. As such, participants recommended more meaningful engagement of young people, including young people's leadership of initiatives. Additional recommendations included the need for intersectoral engagement and a 'whole-of-government' approach to prevention given the complex determinants of NCD risks, and the need for evidence-based actions that are underpinned by quality data to enable monitoring of progress. INTERPRETATION: There is a recognised need to strengthen policies and actions to address NCD risks amongst adolescents in Indonesia. Meaningful youth engagement that allows young people to take the lead, intersectoral actions, and evidence-based data driven responses were key strategies identified. FUNDING: UNICEF East Asia and Pacific Regional Office.
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    Global, regional, and national mortality among young people aged 10-24 years, 1950-2019: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2019
    Ward, JL ; Azzopardi, PS ; Francis, KL ; Santelli, JS ; Skirbekk, V ; Sawyer, SM ; Kassebaum, NJ ; Mokdad, AH ; Hay, SI ; Abd-Allah, F ; Abdoli, A ; Abdollahi, M ; Abedi, A ; Abolhassani, H ; Abreu, LG ; Abrigo, MRM ; Abu-Gharbieh, E ; Abushouk, AI ; Adebayo, OM ; Adekanmbi, V ; Adham, D ; Advani, SM ; Afshari, K ; Agrawal, A ; Ahmad, T ; Ahmadi, K ; Ahmed, AE ; Aji, B ; Akombi-Inyang, B ; Alahdab, F ; Al-Aly, Z ; Alam, K ; Alanezi, FM ; Alanzi, TM ; Alcalde-Rabanal, JE ; Alemu, BW ; Al-Hajj, S ; Alhassan, RK ; Ali, S ; Alicandro, G ; Alijanzadeh, M ; Aljunid, SM ; Almasi-Hashiani, A ; Almasri, NA ; Al-Mekhlafi, HM ; Alonso, J ; Al-Raddadi, RM ; Altirkawi, KA ; Alvis-Guzman, N ; Amare, AT ; Amini, S ; Aminorroaya, A ; Amit, AML ; Amugsi, DA ; Ancuceanu, R ; Anderlini, D ; Andrei, CL ; Androudi, S ; Ansari, F ; Ansari, I ; Antonio, CAT ; Anvari, D ; Anwer, R ; Appiah, SCY ; Arabloo, J ; Arab-Zozani, M ; Arnlov, J ; Asaad, M ; Asadi-Aliabadi, M ; Asadi-Pooya, AA ; Atout, MMW ; Ausloos, M ; Avenyo, EK ; Avila-Burgos, L ; Quintanilla, BPA ; Ayano, G ; Aynalem, YA ; Azari, S ; Azene, ZN ; Bakhshaei, MH ; Bakkannavar, SM ; Banach, M ; Banik, PC ; Barboza, MA ; Barker-Collo, SL ; Baernighausen, TW ; Basu, S ; Baune, BT ; Bayati, M ; Bedi, N ; Beghi, E ; Bekuma, TT ; Bell, AW ; Bell, ML ; Benjet, C ; Bensenor, IM ; Berhe, AK ; Berhe, K ; Berman, AE ; Bhagavathula, AS ; Bhardwaj, N ; Bhardwaj, P ; Bhattacharyya, K ; Bhattarai, S ; Bhutta, ZA ; Bijani, A ; Bikbov, B ; Biondi, A ; Birhanu, TTM ; Biswas, RK ; Bohlouli, S ; Bolla, SR ; Boloor, A ; Borschmann, R ; Boufous, S ; Bragazzi, NL ; Braithwaite, D ; Breitborde, NJK ; Brenner, H ; Britton, GB ; Burns, RA ; Nagaraja, SB ; Butt, ZA ; dos Santos, FLC ; Camera, LA ; Campos-Nonato, IR ; Campuzano Rincon, JC ; Cardenas, R ; Carreras, G ; Carrero, JJ ; Carvalho, F ; Castaldelli-Maia, JM ; Castaneda-Orjuela, CA ; Castelpietra, G ; Catala-Lopez, F ; Cerin, E ; Chandan, JS ; Chang, H-Y ; Chang, J-C ; Charan, J ; Chattu, VK ; Chaturvedi, S ; Choi, J-YJ ; Chowdhury, MAK ; Christopher, DJ ; Dinh-Toi, C ; Chung, MT ; Chung, S-C ; Cicuttini, FM ; Constantin, TV ; Costa, VM ; Dahlawi, SMA ; Dai, H ; Dai, X ; Damiani, G ; Dandona, L ; Dandona, R ; Daneshpajouhnejad, P ; Darwesh, AM ; Alberto Davila-Cervantes, C ; Davletov, K ; De la Hoz, FP ; De Leo, D ; Dervenis, N ; Desai, R ; Desalew, A ; Deuba, K ; Dharmaratne, SD ; Dhungana, GP ; Dianatinasab, M ; da Silva, DD ; Diaz, D ; Didarloo, A ; Djalalinia, S ; Dorostkar, F ; Doshi, CP ; Doshmangir, L ; Doyle, KE ; Duraes, AR ; Kalan, ME ; Ebtehaj, S ; Edvardsson, D ; El Tantawi, M ; Elgendy, IY ; El-Jaafary, SI ; Elsharkawy, A ; Eshrati, B ; Eskandarieh, S ; Esmaeilnejad, S ; Esmaeilzadeh, F ; Esteghamati, S ; Faro, A ; Farzadfar, F ; Fattahi, N ; Feigin, VL ; Ferede, TY ; Fereshtehnejad, S-M ; Fernandes, E ; Ferrara, P ; Filip, I ; Fischer, F ; Fisher, JL ; Foigt, NA ; Folayan, MO ; Fomenkov, AA ; Foroutan, M ; Fukumoto, T ; Gad, MM ; Gaidhane, AM ; Gallus, S ; Gebre, T ; Gebremedhin, KB ; Gebremeskel, GG ; Gebremeskel, L ; Gebreslassie, AA ; Gesesew, HA ; Ghadiri, K ; Ghafourifard, M ; Ghamari, F ; Ghashghaee, A ; Gilani, SA ; Gnedovskaya, EV ; Godinho, MA ; Golechha, M ; Goli, S ; Gona, PN ; Gopalani, SV ; Gorini, G ; Grivna, M ; Gubari, MIM ; Gugnani, HC ; Guimaraes, RA ; Guo, Y ; Gupta, R ; Haagsma, JA ; Hafezi-Nejad, N ; Haile, TG ; Haj-Mirzaian, A ; Haj-Mirzaian, A ; Hall, BJ ; Hamadeh, RR ; Abdullah, KH ; Hamidi, S ; Handiso, DW ; Hanif, A ; Hankey, GJ ; Haririan, H ; Maria Haro, J ; Hasaballah, AI ; Hashi, A ; Hassan, A ; Hassanipour, S ; Hassankhani, H ; Hayat, K ; Heidari-Soureshjani, R ; Herteliu, C ; Heydarpour, F ; Ho, HC ; Hole, MK ; Holla, R ; Hoogar, P ; Hosseini, M ; Hosseinzadeh, M ; Hostiuc, M ; Hostiuc, S ; Househ, M ; Hsairi, M ; Huda, TM ; Humayun, A ; Hussain, R ; Hwang, B-F ; Iavicoli, I ; Ibitoye, SE ; Ilesanmi, OS ; Ilic, IM ; Ilic, MD ; Inbaraj, LR ; Intarut, N ; Iqbal, U ; Irvani, SSN ; Islam, MM ; Islam, SMS ; Iso, H ; Ivers, RQ ; Jahani, MA ; Jakovljevic, M ; Jalali, A ; Janodia, MD ; Javaheri, T ; Jeemon, P ; Jenabi, E ; Jha, RP ; Jha, V ; Ji, JS ; Jonas, JB ; Jones, KM ; Joukar, F ; Jozwiak, JJ ; Juliusson, PB ; Jurisson, M ; Kabir, A ; Kabir, Z ; Kalankesh, LR ; Kalhor, R ; Kamyari, N ; Kanchan, T ; Karch, A ; Karimi, SE ; Kaur, S ; Kayode, GA ; Keiyoro, PN ; Khalid, N ; Khammarnia, M ; Khan, M ; Khan, MN ; Khatab, K ; Khater, MM ; Khatib, MN ; Khayamzadeh, M ; Khazaie, H ; Khoja, AT ; Kieling, C ; Kim, Y-E ; Kim, YJ ; Kimokoti, RW ; Kisa, A ; Kisa, S ; Kivimaki, M ; Koolivand, A ; Kosen, S ; Koyanagi, A ; Krishan, K ; Kugbey, N ; Kumar, GA ; Kumar, M ; Kumar, N ; Kurmi, OP ; Kusuma, D ; La Vecchia, C ; Lacey, B ; Lal, DK ; Lalloo, R ; Lan, Q ; Landires, I ; Lansingh, VC ; Larsson, AO ; Lasrado, S ; Lassi, ZS ; Lauriola, P ; Lee, PH ; Lee, SWH ; Leigh, J ; Leonardi, M ; Leung, J ; Levi, M ; Lewycka, S ; Li, B ; Li, M-C ; Li, S ; Lim, L-L ; Lim, SS ; Liu, X ; Lorkowski, S ; Lotufo, PA ; Lunevicius, R ; Maddison, R ; Mahasha, PW ; Mahdavi, MM ; Mahmoudi, M ; Majeed, A ; Maleki, A ; Malekzadeh, R ; Malta, DC ; Mamun, AA ; Mansouri, B ; Mansournia, MA ; Martinez, G ; Martinez-Raga, J ; Martins-Melo, FR ; Mason-Jones, AJ ; Masoumi, SZ ; Mathur, MR ; Maulik, PK ; McGrath, JJ ; Mehndiratta, MM ; Mehri, F ; Memiah, PTN ; Mendoza, W ; Menezes, RG ; Mengesha, EW ; Meretoja, A ; Meretoja, TJ ; Mestrovic, T ; Miazgowski, B ; Miazgowski, T ; Michalek, IM ; Miller, TR ; Mini, GK ; Mirica, A ; Mirrakhimov, EM ; Mirzaei, H ; Mirzaei, M ; Moazen, B ; Mohammad, DK ; Mohammadi, S ; Mohammadian-Hafshejani, A ; Mohammadifard, N ; Mohammadpourhodki, R ; Mohammed, S ; Monasta, L ; Moradi, G ; Moradi-Lakeh, M ; Moradzadeh, R ; Moraga, P ; Morrison, SD ; Mosapour, A ; Khaneghah, AM ; Mueller, UO ; Muriithi, MK ; Murray, CJL ; Muthupandian, S ; Naderi, M ; Nagarajan, AJ ; Naghavi, M ; Naimzada, MD ; Nangia, V ; Nayak, VC ; Nazari, J ; Ndejjo, R ; Negoi, I ; Negoi, RI ; Netsere, HB ; Nguefack-Tsague, G ; Diep, NN ; Huong, LTN ; Nie, J ; Ningrum, DNA ; Nnaji, CA ; Nomura, S ; Noubiap, JJ ; Nowak, C ; Nunez-Samudio, V ; Ogbo, FA ; Oghenetega, OB ; Oh, I-H ; Oladnabi, M ; Olagunju, AT ; Olusanya, BO ; Olusanya, JO ; Bali, AO ; Omer, MO ; Onwujekwe, OE ; Ortiz, A ; Otoiu, A ; Otstavnov, N ; Otstavnov, SS ; Overland, S ; Owolabi, MO ; Mahesh, PA ; Padubidri, JR ; Pakshir, K ; Palladino, R ; Pana, A ; Panda-Jonas, S ; Pandey, A ; Able Panelo, CI ; Park, E-K ; Patten, SB ; Peden, AE ; Filipino Pepito, VC ; Peprah, EK ; Pereira, J ; Pesudovs, K ; Hai, QP ; Phillips, MR ; Piradov, MA ; Pirsaheb, M ; Postma, MJ ; Pottoo, FH ; Pourjafar, H ; Pourshams, A ; Prada, SI ; Pupillo, E ; Syed, ZQ ; Rabiee, MH ; Rabiee, N ; Radfar, A ; Rafiee, A ; Raggi, A ; Rahim, F ; Rahimi-Movaghar, V ; Rahman, MHU ; Rahman, MA ; Ramezanzadeh, K ; Ranabhat, CL ; Rao, SJ ; Rashedi, V ; Rastogi, P ; Rathi, P ; Rawaf, DL ; Rawaf, S ; Rawal, L ; Rawassizadeh, R ; Renzaho, AMN ; Rezaei, N ; Rezaei, N ; Rezai, MS ; Riahi, SM ; Rickard, J ; Roever, L ; Ronfani, L ; Roth, GA ; Rubagotti, E ; Rumisha, SF ; Rwegerera, GM ; Sabour, S ; Sachdev, PS ; Saddik, B ; Sadeghi, E ; Moghaddam, SS ; Sagar, R ; Sahebkar, A ; Sahraian, MA ; Sajadi, SM ; Salem, MR ; Salimzadeh, H ; Samy, AM ; Sanabria, J ; Santric-Milicevic, MM ; Saraswathy, SYI ; Sarrafzadegan, N ; Sarveazad, A ; Sathish, T ; Sattin, D ; Saxena, D ; Saxena, S ; Schiavolin, S ; Schwebel, DC ; Schwendicke, F ; Senthilkumaran, S ; Sepanlou, SG ; Sha, F ; Shafaat, O ; Shahabi, S ; Shaheen, AA ; Shaikh, MA ; Shakiba, S ; Shamsi, MB ; Shannawaz, M ; Sharafi, K ; Sheikh, A ; Sheikhbahaei, S ; Shetty, BSK ; Shi, P ; Shigematsu, M ; Shin, JI ; Shiri, R ; Shuval, K ; Siabani, S ; Sigfusdottir, ID ; Sigurvinsdottir, R ; Santos Silva, DA ; Silva, JP ; Simonetti, B ; Singh, JA ; Singh, V ; Sinke, AH ; Skryabin, VY ; Slater, H ; Smith, EUR ; Sobhiyeh, MR ; Sobngwi, E ; Soheili, A ; Somefun, OD ; Sorrie, MB ; Soyiri, IN ; Sreeramareddy, CT ; Stein, DJ ; Stokes, MA ; Sudaryanto, A ; Sultan, I ; Tabares-Seisdedos, R ; Tabuchi, T ; Tadakamadla, SK ; Taherkhani, A ; Tamiru, AT ; Tareque, MI ; Thankappan, KR ; Thapar, R ; Thomas, N ; Titova, MV ; Tonelli, M ; Tovani-Palone, MR ; Bach, XT ; Travillian, RS ; Tsai, AC ; Tsatsakis, A ; Car, LT ; Uddin, R ; Unim, B ; Unnikrishnan, B ; Upadhyay, E ; Vacante, M ; Tahbaz, SV ; Valdez, PR ; Varughese, S ; Vasankari, TJ ; Venketasubramanian, N ; Villeneuve, PJ ; Violante, FS ; Vlassov, V ; Vos, T ; Giang, TV ; Waheed, Y ; Wamai, RG ; Wang, Y ; Wang, Y ; Wang, Y-P ; Westerman, R ; Wickramasinghe, ND ; Wu, A-M ; Wu, C ; Jabbari, SHY ; Yamagishi, K ; Yano, Y ; Yaya, S ; Yazdi-Feyzabadi, V ; Yeshitila, YG ; Yip, P ; Yonemoto, N ; Yoon, S-J ; Younis, MZ ; Yousefinezhadi, T ; Yu, C ; Yu, Y ; Yuce, D ; Zaidi, SS ; Bin Zaman, S ; Zamani, M ; Zamanian, M ; Zarafshan, H ; Zarei, A ; Zastrozhin, MS ; Zhang, Y ; Zhang, Z-J ; Zhao, X-JG ; Zhu, C ; Patton, GC ; Viner, RM (ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC, 2021-10-30)
    BACKGROUND: Documentation of patterns and long-term trends in mortality in young people, which reflect huge changes in demographic and social determinants of adolescent health, enables identification of global investment priorities for this age group. We aimed to analyse data on the number of deaths, years of life lost, and mortality rates by sex and age group in people aged 10-24 years in 204 countries and territories from 1950 to 2019 by use of estimates from the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD) 2019. METHODS: We report trends in estimated total numbers of deaths and mortality rate per 100 000 population in young people aged 10-24 years by age group (10-14 years, 15-19 years, and 20-24 years) and sex in 204 countries and territories between 1950 and 2019 for all causes, and between 1980 and 2019 by cause of death. We analyse variation in outcomes by region, age group, and sex, and compare annual rate of change in mortality in young people aged 10-24 years with that in children aged 0-9 years from 1990 to 2019. We then analyse the association between mortality in people aged 10-24 years and socioeconomic development using the GBD Socio-demographic Index (SDI), a composite measure based on average national educational attainment in people older than 15 years, total fertility rate in people younger than 25 years, and income per capita. We assess the association between SDI and all-cause mortality in 2019, and analyse the ratio of observed to expected mortality by SDI using the most recent available data release (2017). FINDINGS: In 2019 there were 1·49 million deaths (95% uncertainty interval 1·39-1·59) worldwide in people aged 10-24 years, of which 61% occurred in males. 32·7% of all adolescent deaths were due to transport injuries, unintentional injuries, or interpersonal violence and conflict; 32·1% were due to communicable, nutritional, or maternal causes; 27·0% were due to non-communicable diseases; and 8·2% were due to self-harm. Since 1950, deaths in this age group decreased by 30·0% in females and 15·3% in males, and sex-based differences in mortality rate have widened in most regions of the world. Geographical variation has also increased, particularly in people aged 10-14 years. Since 1980, communicable and maternal causes of death have decreased sharply as a proportion of total deaths in most GBD super-regions, but remain some of the most common causes in sub-Saharan Africa and south Asia, where more than half of all adolescent deaths occur. Annual percentage decrease in all-cause mortality rate since 1990 in adolescents aged 15-19 years was 1·3% in males and 1·6% in females, almost half that of males aged 1-4 years (2·4%), and around a third less than in females aged 1-4 years (2·5%). The proportion of global deaths in people aged 0-24 years that occurred in people aged 10-24 years more than doubled between 1950 and 2019, from 9·5% to 21·6%. INTERPRETATION: Variation in adolescent mortality between countries and by sex is widening, driven by poor progress in reducing deaths in males and older adolescents. Improving global adolescent mortality will require action to address the specific vulnerabilities of this age group, which are being overlooked. Furthermore, indirect effects of the COVID-19 pandemic are likely to jeopardise efforts to improve health outcomes including mortality in young people aged 10-24 years. There is an urgent need to respond to the changing global burden of adolescent mortality, address inequities where they occur, and improve the availability and quality of primary mortality data in this age group. FUNDING: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
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    Eating disorder symptoms across the weight spectrum in Australian adolescents
    Hughes, EK ; Kerr, JA ; Patton, GC ; Sawyer, SM ; Wake, M ; Le Grange, D ; Azzopardi, P (WILEY, 2019-08)
    OBJECTIVE: Despite known associations between eating disorders and obesity, little is known about the current prevalence of symptoms of eating disorders across the weight spectrum. This study therefore aimed to estimate the population prevalence of eating disorder symptoms in relation to weight status in adolescents. METHOD: The sample comprised 3,270 participants (14-15 years; 52% boys) drawn from Wave 6 of the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children. Symptoms of anorexia nervosa (AN) and bulimia nervosa (BN) were assessed using self-report on the Branched Eating Disorder Test. This measure identifies clinically significant symptoms in the past 3 months according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fifth edition. Using study-derived cross-sectional population weights, the prevalence of each symptom was estimated for the total population and by sex and weight status. RESULTS: The estimated population prevalence was high (14.3-25.7%) for body image symptoms such as fear of weight gain and overvaluation of body weight but lower (0.5-3.7%) for behavioral symptoms such as binge eating and compensatory behaviors. Symptoms were more prevalent among adolescents with overweight or obesity. Although most symptoms tended to have higher prevalence among girls than boys, boys with obesity had higher prevalence of binge eating and excessive exercise than girls with obesity. The overall estimated population prevalence for AN and BN was 0.20% and 0.10%, respectively. DISCUSSION: The study highlights a need for clinicians to be cognizant of disordered eating behaviors regardless of weight status and has implications for both eating disorder and obesity prevention and intervention.
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    Understanding mental health and its determinants from the perspective of adolescents: A qualitative study across diverse social settings in Indonesia
    Willenberg, L ; Wulan, N ; Medise, BE ; Devaera, Y ; Riyanti, A ; Ansariadi, A ; Wiguna, T ; Kaligis, F ; Fisher, J ; Luchters, S ; Jameel, A ; Sawyer, SM ; Thach, T ; Kennedy, E ; Patton, GC ; Wiweko, B ; Azzopardi, PS (ELSEVIER, 2020-08)
    Poor mental health is a leading contributor to the burden of disease experienced by adolescents, including in resource constrained settings. However, little is known about how adolescents in these countries conceptualise mental health and its determinants which is essential to informing effective responses. This study aimed to explore how adolescents in Indonesia (a populous and rapidly developing country) conceptualise mental health and what they identify as important determinants. Eight focus group discussions (FGDs) were conducted with 86 Indonesian adolescents (aged 16-18 years), sampled from schools and community settings from Jakarta and South Sulawesi. FGDs were recorded, transcribed, translated and thematically analysed. Mental health was recognised as a significant concern by adolescents in Indonesia. Good mental health was conceptualised as emotional wellbeing and happiness. By contrast, poor mental health was predominantly described in terms of substantial mental illness manifesting as behavioural and physical disturbance. Further, poor mental health only happened to 'other' people, with stigmatising views prevalent. Absent from the discussions were common symptoms of poor mental health (stress, loneliness, poor sleep) and common mental disorders (e.g. depression, anxiety) or a conceptualisation that reflected poor mental health to be a normal human experience. Discussions around determinants of poor mental health suggested that family connections (particularly with parents), school pressures, and adverse exposures on social media were important drivers of poor mental health, with religion also surfacing as an important determinant. In highlighting mental health as an important issue for Indonesian adolescents, this study provides a foundation for targeted responses.
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    Smoking prevalence and attributable disease burden in 195 countries and territories, 1990-2015: a systematic analysis from the Global Burden of Disease Study 2015
    Reitsma, MB ; Fullman, N ; Ng, M ; Salama, JS ; Abajobir, A ; Abate, KH ; Abbafati, C ; Abera, SF ; Abraham, B ; Abyu, GY ; Adebiyi, AO ; Al-Aly, Z ; Aleman, AV ; Ali, R ; Al Alkerwi, A ; Allebeck, P ; Al-Raddadi, RM ; Amare, AT ; Amberbir, A ; Ammar, W ; Amrock, SM ; Antonio, CAT ; Asayesh, H ; Atnafu, NT ; Azzopardi, P ; Banerjee, A ; Barac, A ; Barrientos-Gutierrez, T ; Basto-Abreu, AC ; Bazargan-Hejazi, S ; Bedi, N ; Bell, B ; Bello, AK ; Bensenor, IM ; Beyene, AS ; Bhala, N ; Biryukov, S ; Bolt, K ; Brenner, H ; Butt, Z ; Cavalleri, F ; Cercy, K ; Chen, H ; Christopher, DJ ; Ciobanu, LG ; Colistro, V ; Colomar, M ; Cornaby, L ; Dai, X ; Damtew, SA ; Dandona, L ; Dandona, R ; Dansereau, E ; Davletov, K ; Dayama, A ; Degfie, TT ; Deribew, A ; Dharmaratne, SD ; Dimtsu, BD ; Doyle, KE ; Endries, AY ; Ermakov, SP ; Estep, K ; Faraon, EJA ; Farzadfar, F ; Feigin, VL ; Feigl, AB ; Fischer, F ; Friedman, J ; Ghiwot, TT ; Gall, SL ; Gao, W ; Gillum, RF ; Gold, AL ; Gopalani, SV ; Gotay, CC ; Gupta, R ; Gupta, R ; Gupta, V ; Hamadeh, RR ; Hankey, G ; Harb, HL ; Hay, SI ; Horino, M ; Horita, N ; Hosgood, HD ; Husseini, A ; Ileanu, BV ; Islami, F ; Jiang, G ; Jiang, Y ; Jonas, JB ; Kabir, Z ; Kamal, R ; Kasaeian, A ; Kesavachandran, CN ; Khader, YS ; Khalil, I ; Khang, Y-H ; Khera, S ; Khubchandani, J ; Kim, D ; Kim, YJ ; Kimokoti, RW ; Kinfu, Y ; Knibbs, LD ; Kokubo, Y ; Kolte, D ; Kopec, J ; Kosen, S ; Kotsakis, GA ; Koul, PA ; Koyanagi, A ; Krohn, KJ ; Krueger, H ; Defo, BK ; Bicer, BK ; Kulkarni, C ; Kumar, GA ; Leasher, JL ; Lee, A ; Leinsalu, M ; Li, T ; Linn, S ; Liu, P ; Liu, S ; Lo, L-T ; Lopez, AD ; Ma, S ; Abd El Razek, HM ; Majeed, A ; Malekzadeh, R ; Malta, DC ; Manamo, WA ; Martinez-Raga, J ; Mekonnen, AB ; Mendoza, W ; Miller, TR ; Mohammad, KA ; Morawska, L ; Musa, KI ; Nagel, G ; Neupane, SP ; Quyen, N ; Nguyen, G ; Oh, I-H ; Oyekale, AS ; Mahesh, PA ; Pana, A ; Park, E-K ; Patil, ST ; Patton, GC ; Pedro, J ; Qorbani, M ; Rafay, A ; Rahman, M ; Rai, RK ; Ram, U ; Ranabhat, CL ; Refaat, AH ; Reinig, N ; Roba, HS ; Rodriguez, A ; Roman, Y ; Roth, G ; Roy, A ; Sagar, R ; Salomon, J ; Sanabria, J ; Santos, IDS ; Sartorius, B ; Satpathy, M ; Sawhney, M ; Sawyer, S ; Saylan, M ; Schaub, MP ; Schluger, N ; Schutte, AE ; Sepanlou, SG ; Serdar, B ; Shaikh, MA ; She, J ; Shin, M-J ; Shiri, R ; Shishani, K ; Shiue, I ; Sigfusdottir, ID ; Silverberg, JI ; Singh, J ; Singh, V ; Slepak, EL ; Soneji, S ; Soriano, JB ; Soshnikov, S ; Sreeramareddy, CT ; Stein, DJ ; Stranges, S ; Subart, ML ; Swaminathan, S ; Szoeke, CEI ; Tefera, WM ; Topor-Madry, R ; Tran, B ; Tsilimparis, N ; Tymeson, H ; Ukwaja, KN ; Updike, R ; Uthman, OA ; Violante, FS ; Vladimirov, SK ; Vlassov, V ; Vollset, SE ; Vos, T ; Weiderpass, E ; Wen, C-P ; Werdecker, A ; Wilson, S ; Wubshet, M ; Xiao, L ; Yakob, B ; Yano, Y ; Ye, P ; Yonemoto, N ; Yoon, S-J ; Younis, MZ ; Yu, C ; Zaidi, Z ; Zaki, MES ; Zhang, AL ; Zipkin, B ; Murray, CJL ; Forouzanfar, MH ; Gakidou, E (ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC, 2017-05-13)
    BACKGROUND: The scale-up of tobacco control, especially after the adoption of the Framework Convention for Tobacco Control, is a major public health success story. Nonetheless, smoking remains a leading risk for early death and disability worldwide, and therefore continues to require sustained political commitment. The Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD) offers a robust platform through which global, regional, and national progress toward achieving smoking-related targets can be assessed. METHODS: We synthesised 2818 data sources with spatiotemporal Gaussian process regression and produced estimates of daily smoking prevalence by sex, age group, and year for 195 countries and territories from 1990 to 2015. We analysed 38 risk-outcome pairs to generate estimates of smoking-attributable mortality and disease burden, as measured by disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs). We then performed a cohort analysis of smoking prevalence by birth-year cohort to better understand temporal age patterns in smoking. We also did a decomposition analysis, in which we parsed out changes in all-cause smoking-attributable DALYs due to changes in population growth, population ageing, smoking prevalence, and risk-deleted DALY rates. Finally, we explored results by level of development using the Socio-demographic Index (SDI). FINDINGS: Worldwide, the age-standardised prevalence of daily smoking was 25·0% (95% uncertainty interval [UI] 24·2-25·7) for men and 5·4% (5·1-5·7) for women, representing 28·4% (25·8-31·1) and 34·4% (29·4-38·6) reductions, respectively, since 1990. A greater percentage of countries and territories achieved significant annualised rates of decline in smoking prevalence from 1990 to 2005 than in between 2005 and 2015; however, only four countries had significant annualised increases in smoking prevalence between 2005 and 2015 (Congo [Brazzaville] and Azerbaijan for men and Kuwait and Timor-Leste for women). In 2015, 11·5% of global deaths (6·4 million [95% UI 5·7-7·0 million]) were attributable to smoking worldwide, of which 52·2% took place in four countries (China, India, the USA, and Russia). Smoking was ranked among the five leading risk factors by DALYs in 109 countries and territories in 2015, rising from 88 geographies in 1990. In terms of birth cohorts, male smoking prevalence followed similar age patterns across levels of SDI, whereas much more heterogeneity was found in age patterns for female smokers by level of development. While smoking prevalence and risk-deleted DALY rates mostly decreased by sex and SDI quintile, population growth, population ageing, or a combination of both, drove rises in overall smoking-attributable DALYs in low-SDI to middle-SDI geographies between 2005 and 2015. INTERPRETATION: The pace of progress in reducing smoking prevalence has been heterogeneous across geographies, development status, and sex, and as highlighted by more recent trends, maintaining past rates of decline should not be taken for granted, especially in women and in low-SDI to middle-SDI countries. Beyond the effect of the tobacco industry and societal mores, a crucial challenge facing tobacco control initiatives is that demographic forces are poised to heighten smoking's global toll, unless progress in preventing initiation and promoting cessation can be substantially accelerated. Greater success in tobacco control is possible but requires effective, comprehensive, and adequately implemented and enforced policies, which might in turn require global and national levels of political commitment beyond what has been achieved during the past 25 years. FUNDING: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and Bloomberg Philanthropies.
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    Direct assessment of mental health and metabolic syndrome amongst Indonesian adolescents: a study design for a mixed-methods study sampled from school and community settings
    Azzopardi, PS ; Willenberg, L ; Wulan, N ; Devaera, Y ; Medise, B ; Riyanti, A ; Ansariadi, A ; Sawyer, S ; Wiguna, T ; Kaligis, F ; Fisher, J ; Tran, T ; Agius, PA ; Borschmann, R ; Brown, A ; Cini, K ; Clifford, S ; Kennedy, EC ; Pedrana, A ; Pham, MD ; Wake, M ; Zimmet, P ; Durrant, K ; Wiweko, B ; Luchters, S (TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD, 2020-12-31)
    Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are the leading cause of morbidity and mortality globally, with the burden largely borne by people living in low- and middle-income countries. Adolescents are central to NCD control through the potential to modify risks and alter the trajectory of these diseases across the life-course. However, an absence of epidemiological data has contributed to the relative exclusion of adolescents from policies and responses. This paper documents the design of a study to measure the burden of metabolic syndrome (a key risk for NCDs) and poor mental health (a key outcome) amongst Indonesian adolescents. Using a mixed-method design, we sampled 16-18-year-old adolescents from schools and community-based settings across Jakarta and South Sulawesi. Initial formative qualitative enquiry used focus group discussions to understand how young people conceptualise mental health and body weight (separately); what they perceive as determinants of these NCDs; and what responses to these NCDs should involve. These findings informed the design of a quantitative survey that adolescents self-completed electronically. Mental health was measured using the Centre for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale-Revised (CESD-R) and Kessler-10 (both validated against formal psychiatric interview in a subsample), with the metabolic syndrome measured using biomarkers and anthropometry. The survey also included scales relating to victimisation, connectedness, self-efficacy, body image and quality of life. Adolescents were sampled from schools using a multistage cluster design, and from the community using respondent-driven sampling (RDS). This study will substantially advance the field of NCD measurement amongst adolescents, especially in settings like Indonesia. It demonstrates that high quality, objective measurement is acceptable and feasible, including the collection of biomarkers in a school-based setting. It demonstrates how comparable data can be collected across both in-school and out of school adolescents, allowing a more comprehensive measure of NCD burden, risk and correlates.
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    Progress in adolescent health and wellbeing: tracking 12 headline indicators for 195 countries and territories, 1990-2016
    Azzopardi, PS ; Hearps, SJC ; Francis, KL ; Kennedy, EC ; Mokdad, AH ; Kassebaum, NJ ; Lim, S ; Irvine, CMS ; Vos, T ; Brown, AD ; Dogra, S ; Kinner, SA ; Kaoma, NS ; Naguib, M ; Reavley, NJ ; Requejo, J ; Santelli, JS ; Sawyer, SM ; Skirbekk, V ; Temmerman, M ; Tewhaiti-Smith, J ; Ward, JL ; Viner, RM ; Patton, GC (ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC, 2019-03-16)
    BACKGROUND: Rapid demographic, epidemiological, and nutritional transitons have brought a pressing need to track progress in adolescent health. Here, we present country-level estimates of 12 headline indicators from the Lancet Commission on adolescent health and wellbeing, from 1990 to 2016. METHODS: Indicators included those of health outcomes (disability-adjusted life-years [DALYs] due to communicable, maternal, and nutritional diseases; injuries; and non-communicable diseases); health risks (tobacco smoking, binge drinking, overweight, and anaemia); and social determinants of health (adolescent fertility; completion of secondary education; not in education, employment, or training [NEET]; child marriage; and demand for contraception satisfied with modern methods). We drew data from the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD) 2016, International Labour Organisation, household surveys, and the Barro-Lee education dataset. FINDINGS: From 1990 to 2016, remarkable shifts in adolescent health occurred. A decrease in disease burden in many countries has been offset by population growth in countries with the poorest adolescent health profiles. Compared with 1990, an additional 250 million adolescents were living in multi-burden countries in 2016, where they face a heavy and complex burden of disease. The rapidity of nutritional transition is evident from the 324·1 million (18%) of 1·8 billion adolescents globally who were overweight or obese in 2016, an increase of 176·9 million compared with 1990, and the 430·7 million (24%) who had anaemia in 2016, an increase of 74·2 million compared with 1990. Child marriage remains common, with an estimated 66 million women aged 20-24 years married before age 18 years. Although gender-parity in secondary school completion exists globally, prevalence of NEET remains high for young women in multi-burden countries, suggesting few opportunities to enter the workforce in these settings. INTERPRETATION: Although disease burden has fallen in many settings, demographic shifts have heightened global inequalities. Global disease burden has changed little since 1990 and the prevalence of many adolescent health risks have increased. Health, education, and legal systems have not kept pace with shifting adolescent needs and demographic changes. Gender inequity remains a powerful driver of poor adolescent health in many countries. FUNDING: Australian National Health and Medical Research Council, and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
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    Adolescent health in the Eastern Mediterranean Region: findings from the global burden of disease 2015 study
    Mokdad, AH ; Azzopardi, P ; Cini, K ; Kennedy, E ; Sawyer, S ; El Bcheraoui, C ; Charara, R ; Khalil, I ; Moradi-Lakeh, M ; Collison, M ; Afifi, RA ; Al-Raiby, J ; Krohn, KJ ; Daoud, F ; Chew, A ; Afshin, A ; Foreman, KJ ; Kassebaum, NJ ; Kutz, M ; Kyu, HH ; Liu, P ; Olsen, HE ; Smith, A ; Stanaway, JD ; Wang, H ; Arnlov, J ; Kiadaliri, AA ; Alam, K ; Alasfoor, D ; Ali, R ; Alizadeh-Navaei, R ; Al-Raddadi, R ; Altirkawi, KA ; Alvis-Guzman, N ; Anber, N ; Antonio, CAT ; Anwari, P ; Artaman, A ; Asayesh, H ; Barker-Collo, SL ; Bedi, N ; Beghi, E ; Bennett, DA ; Bensenor, IM ; Bhutta, ZA ; Butt, ZA ; Castaneda-Orjuela, CA ; Catala-Lopez, F ; Charlson, FJ ; Danawi, H ; De Leo, D ; Degenhardt, L ; Denno, D ; Deribe, K ; Jarlais, DCD ; Dey, S ; Dharmaratne, SD ; Djalalinia, S ; Erskine, HE ; Fereshtehnejad, S-M ; Ferrari, AJ ; Fischer, F ; Gebrehiwot, TT ; Geleijnse, JM ; Gona, PN ; Gugnani, HC ; Gupta, R ; Hamadeh, RR ; Hamidi, S ; Maria Haro, J ; Hay, RJ ; Hearps, SJC ; Hendrie, D ; Hotez, PJ ; Hu, G ; Jonas, JB ; Karch, A ; Karimi, SM ; Kasaeian, A ; Kebede, S ; Kengne, AP ; Khan, EA ; Khosravi, A ; Khubchandani, J ; Kokubo, Y ; Kopec, JA ; Kosen, S ; Larson, HJ ; Larsson, A ; Leasher, JL ; Leung, J ; Li, Y ; Lotufo, PA ; Lunevicius, R ; Abd El Razek, HM ; Majdzadeh, R ; Majeed, A ; Memiah, P ; Memish, ZA ; Mendoza, W ; Mhimbira, FA ; Miller, TR ; Mitchell, PB ; Monasta, L ; Obermeyer, CM ; Oh, I-H ; Olusanya, BO ; Ortiz, A ; Park, E-K ; Parry, M ; Pereira, DM ; Phillips, MR ; Pourmalek, F ; Qorbani, M ; Radfar, A ; Rafay, A ; Rahimi-Movaghar, V ; Rai, RK ; Rana, SM ; Rawaf, DL ; Rawaf, S ; Reavley, N ; Renzaho, AMN ; Rezaei, S ; Sadegh-Rezai, M ; Rios-Zertuche, D ; Roshandel, G ; Rothenbacher, D ; Safdarian, M ; Safi, S ; Safiri, S ; Sahraian, MA ; Salamati, P ; Samy, AM ; Sanabria, JR ; Santomauro, D ; Sartorius, B ; Schwebel, DC ; Seedat, S ; Sepanlou, SG ; Setegn, T ; Shaheen, A ; Shaikh, MA ; Shiri, R ; Sigfusdottir, ID ; Singh, JA ; Sobaih, BHA ; Sreeramareddy, CT ; Abdulkader, RS ; Tehrani-Banihashemi, A ; Temsah, M-H ; Terkawi, AS ; Thomson, AJ ; Tonelli, M ; Topor-Madry, R ; Tran, BX ; Ukwaja, KN ; Uthman, OA ; Vasankari, T ; Venketasubramanian, N ; Vlassov, VV ; Vollset, SE ; Weiderpass, E ; Weintraub, RG ; Werdecker, A ; Whiteford, HA ; Yano, Y ; Yaseri, M ; Yonemoto, N ; Younis, MZ ; Yu, C ; Jumaan, AO ; Vos, T ; Hay, SI ; Naghavi, M ; Patton, GC ; Murray, CJL (FRONTIERS MEDIA SA, 2018-05)
    OBJECTIVES: The 22 countries of the East Mediterranean Region (EMR) have large populations of adolescents aged 10-24 years. These adolescents are central to assuring the health, development, and peace of this region. We described their health needs. METHODS: Using data from the Global Burden of Disease Study 2015 (GBD 2015), we report the leading causes of mortality and morbidity for adolescents in the EMR from 1990 to 2015. We also report the prevalence of key health risk behaviors and determinants. RESULTS: Communicable diseases and the health consequences of natural disasters reduced substantially between 1990 and 2015. However, these gains have largely been offset by the health impacts of war and the emergence of non-communicable diseases (including mental health disorders), unintentional injury, and self-harm. Tobacco smoking and high body mass were common health risks amongst adolescents. Additionally, many EMR countries had high rates of adolescent pregnancy and unmet need for contraception. CONCLUSIONS: Even with the return of peace and security, adolescents will have a persisting poor health profile that will pose a barrier to socioeconomic growth and development of the EMR.
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    Global burden of diseases, injuries, and risk factors for young people's health during 1990-2013: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2013
    Mokdad, AH ; Forouzanfar, MH ; Daoud, F ; Mokdad, AA ; El Bcheraoui, C ; Moradi-Lakeh, M ; Kyu, HH ; Barber, RM ; Wagner, J ; Cercy, K ; Kravitz, H ; Coggeshall, M ; Chew, A ; O'Rourke, KF ; Steiner, C ; Tuffaha, M ; Charara, R ; Al-Ghamdi, EA ; Adi, Y ; Afifi, RA ; Alahmadi, H ; AlBuhairan, F ; Allen, N ; AlMazroa, M ; Al-Nehmi, AA ; AlRayess, Z ; Arora, M ; Azzopardi, P ; Barroso, C ; Basulaiman, M ; Bhutta, ZA ; Bonell, C ; Breinbauer, C ; Degenhardt, L ; Denno, D ; Fang, J ; Fatusi, A ; Feigl, AB ; Kakuma, R ; Karam, N ; Kennedy, E ; Khoja, TKAM ; Maalouf, F ; Obermeyer, CM ; Mattoo, A ; McGovern, T ; Memish, ZA ; Mensah, GA ; Patel, V ; Petroni, S ; Reavley, N ; Zertuche, DR ; Saeedi, M ; Santelli, J ; Sawyer, SM ; Ssewamala, F ; Taiwo, K ; Tantawy, M ; Viner, RM ; Waldfogel, J ; Zuniga, MP ; Naghavi, M ; Wang, H ; Vos, T ; Lopez, AD ; Al Rabeeah, AA ; Patton, GC ; Murray, CJL (ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC, 2016-06-11)
    BACKGROUND: Young people's health has emerged as a neglected yet pressing issue in global development. Changing patterns of young people's health have the potential to undermine future population health as well as global economic development unless timely and effective strategies are put into place. We report the past, present, and anticipated burden of disease in young people aged 10-24 years from 1990 to 2013 using data on mortality, disability, injuries, and health risk factors. METHODS: The Global Burden of Disease Study 2013 (GBD 2013) includes annual assessments for 188 countries from 1990 to 2013, covering 306 diseases and injuries, 1233 sequelae, and 79 risk factors. We used the comparative risk assessment approach to assess how much of the burden of disease reported in a given year can be attributed to past exposure to a risk. We estimated attributable burden by comparing observed health outcomes with those that would have been observed if an alternative or counterfactual level of exposure had occurred in the past. We applied the same method to previous years to allow comparisons from 1990 to 2013. We cross-tabulated the quantiles of disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) by quintiles of DALYs annual increase from 1990 to 2013 to show rates of DALYs increase by burden. We used the GBD 2013 hierarchy of causes that organises 306 diseases and injuries into four levels of classification. Level one distinguishes three broad categories: first, communicable, maternal, neonatal, and nutritional disorders; second, non-communicable diseases; and third, injuries. Level two has 21 mutually exclusive and collectively exhaustive categories, level three has 163 categories, and level four has 254 categories. FINDINGS: The leading causes of death in 2013 for young people aged 10-14 years were HIV/AIDS, road injuries, and drowning (25·2%), whereas transport injuries were the leading cause of death for ages 15-19 years (14·2%) and 20-24 years (15·6%). Maternal disorders were the highest cause of death for young women aged 20-24 years (17·1%) and the fourth highest for girls aged 15-19 years (11·5%) in 2013. Unsafe sex as a risk factor for DALYs increased from the 13th rank to the second for both sexes aged 15-19 years from 1990 to 2013. Alcohol misuse was the highest risk factor for DALYs (7·0% overall, 10·5% for males, and 2·7% for females) for young people aged 20-24 years, whereas drug use accounted for 2·7% (3·3% for males and 2·0% for females). The contribution of risk factors varied between and within countries. For example, for ages 20-24 years, drug use was highest in Qatar and accounted for 4·9% of DALYs, followed by 4·8% in the United Arab Emirates, whereas alcohol use was highest in Russia and accounted for 21·4%, followed by 21·0% in Belarus. Alcohol accounted for 9·0% (ranging from 4·2% in Hong Kong to 11·3% in Shandong) in China and 11·6% (ranging from 10·1% in Aguascalientes to 14·9% in Chihuahua) of DALYs in Mexico for young people aged 20-24 years. Alcohol and drug use in those aged 10-24 years had an annual rate of change of >1·0% from 1990 to 2013 and accounted for more than 3·1% of DALYs. INTERPRETATION: Our findings call for increased efforts to improve health and reduce the burden of disease and risks for diseases in later life in young people. Moreover, because of the large variations between countries in risks and burden, a global approach to improve health during this important period of life will fail unless the particularities of each country are taken into account. Finally, our results call for a strategy to overcome the financial and technical barriers to adequately capture young people's health risk factors and their determinants in health information systems. FUNDING: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.