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Review Article:
Hacking Covid-19 with technology
Bhavna Jain, Atif Khan, Neha Verma, Yogesh Bahurupi, Mahendra Singh, Pradeep Aggarwal
Int J Prev Med
2021, 12:73 (25 June 2021)
DOI
:10.4103/ijpvm.IJPVM_439_20
The development, implementation and advancement of technology solutions aimed at combating the COVID-19 outbreak are rapidly taking shape in India. Governments, Venture Capitalists, Academic Institutions, Incubators, Start-ups, and businesses large and small are all doing their part to deploy new innovative solutions as quickly as possible. Various databases were searched to look for different advancements in technology during the current coronavirus pandemic. It is seen that on one end nonpharmacological measure (social distancing, self-isolation, clean hands, and face masks) are time-tested and low-tech ways to help mitigate the viral spread. On the other end, Science and technology sector constituting of data science, machine learning, rapid diagnostic tests, mobile-first telehealth and computational simulation systems for drug development, artificial intelligence, virtual collaboration, and data tracking are complex ways of using the technology that have strengthened our pandemic response.
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Review Article:
Prevalence of complete edentulism in individuals at least 30 years old in Iran since 2000: A systematic review
Sayed Shojaedin Shayegh, Saleh Ebrahimi, Seyed Mohammad Reza Hakimaneh, Mitra Eisaei
Int J Prev Med
2021, 12:72 (25 June 2021)
DOI
:10.4103/ijpvm.IJPVM_481_19
Background:
The purpose of this study was to systematically review the literature to investigate the prevalence of complete edentulism in Iran.
Method:
An electronic search was performed using three scientific databases: PubMed, Google Scholar, and Irandoc. Moreover, a hand search was performed on theses in the Dental Faculty of Shahed University. Studies published since 2000 were included if they reported on the prevalence of edentulism in Iran in populations at least 35 years old. Eight articles and seven theses were included in the study.
Result:
The reported prevalence of edentulism in Iran ranges from 3% to 78%.
Conclusions:
In this study the reported prevalence has remained stable during the studied period.
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Review Article:
Challenges of the health system in preventing non-communicable diseases; systematized review
Marziye Hadian, MR Mozafari, Elaheh Mazaheri, Alireza Jabbari
Int J Prev Med
2021, 12:71 (25 June 2021)
DOI
:10.4103/ijpvm.IJPVM_487_20
Background:
The basis of prevention of non-communicable diseases is the identification of primary risk factors and the prevention and control of these factors. The purpose is to prevent the spread of the disease and to control it as much as possible. If population growth continues at this rate, by 2030, 52 million people will die from these diseases each year. The aim of this study was to evaluate the challenges of preventing non-communicable diseases.
Methods:
The present study was a systematic review that conducted in July 2020 and the articles related to prevention of non-communicable diseases on databases of web of science, PubMed, Scopus, science direct, Ovid, Pro Quest and Google Scholar. Strategy for searching and selecting the articles was PRISMA Guidelines. R
esults:
Challenges of non-communicable disease prevention, in 4 main codes, including infrastructure, economic, demographic and management and 12 sub-codes that include, lack of preventive infrastructure, restrictions on access to medicine, restrictions on primary health care, restrictions on access to Technology, disease-oriented disease, unsustainable financial resources, failure to implement poverty reduction projects, increase in aging population, migration, rapid and unplanned urban planning, hasty planning and lack of internal and external coordination were classified.
Conclusions:
To reduce non-communicable diseases, strengthen global capacities, reduce risk factors for NCDs and place social determinants by creating health-promoting environments, strengthen health systems to implement prevention and control of NCDs, and place determinants Social can play an effective role through people-centered primary health care.
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