National School of Public Health (EDSY)
Recent publications
Waste collectors have a theoretical risk of Hepatitis A virus infection. The aim of the study was to assess the prevalence and risk factors of hepatitis A virus infection (HAV) among municipal solid waste workers (MSWWs) in a municipality of central Greece. A seroprevalence study of HAV was conducted among 208 employees (100 waste collectors and 108 municipal gardeners) of a municipality in central Greece. Total antibodies against HAV were measured and information regarding potential risk factors was collected through a face to face interview. The prevalence of HAV infection among the municipal waste collectors was 61% vs. 27% among municipal gardeners. Logistic regression analysis showed that exposure to waste (OR = 2.87; 95% CI = 1.24-6.62) and age (OR = 22.57; 95% CI = 7.29-69.88) were independently associated with the anti-HAV positivity. Moreover, waste collectors who reported smoking/drinking/eating during waste collection were at higher risk of HAV infection (RR = 2.84; 95% CI = 1.73-4.63). Stratified analysis among municipal waste collectors indicated an independent association between eating/smoking/ drinking during waste collection and anti-HAV (+) (OR = 3.85; 95% CI = 1.34-11.06). Occupational exposure to waste is a potential risk factor for HAV infection. Smoking/eating/drinking during waste collection could be the mode of hepatitis A virus transmission among municipal waste collectors.
To assess the cost-utility of hypertension treatment versus a hypothetical 'no-treatment' strategy in Greece. A six-state Markov model simulated the occurrence of major cardiovascular events for hypertensive patients over a 20-year period. Baseline population consisted of a cohort of 1453 patients (46.92% men) that were followed up for a 1-year period, during which health-resource use and clinical characteristics of hypertension were documented. Age, sex and smoking status - specific transition probabilities in the model - were estimated via the HellenicSCORE and Framingham risk equations. The analysis followed a third-party payer perspective. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) of treatment versus no treatment were 3539&OV0556;/quality-adjusted life year (QALY), 3986&OV0556;/QALY, 3957&OV0556;/QALY and 5485&OV0556;/QALY gained for men smokers, men nonsmokers, women smokers and women nonsmokers, respectively. ICERs became more favorable with an increase in the years of treatment and advanced age of treatment initiation across all study groups. The probabilistic sensitivity analysis showed that the base-case scenario results were cost-effective for an implicit 30 000&OV0556;/QALY threshold at 97.4, 95.2, 94.8, and 86% of the 10 000 Monte Carlo simulations for men smokers, men nonsmokers, women smokers and women nonsmokers, respectively. In the case of hypertension, one of the most prevalent and modifiable diseases/risk factors, that is accompanied by large-scale costs, the above analysis demonstrates that treatment is a highly cost-effective intervention that should be further supported at the patient and the system level.
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24 members
Nikos Maniadakis
  • Health Services Management
John Kyriopoulos
  • Health Economics
Eleni Kornarou
  • Department of Epidemiology & Medical Statistics
Effie Simou
  • Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics
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Athens, Greece