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  1. Article ; Online: A strengthening evidence-base for mass deworming, but questions remain.

    Koukounari, Artemis / Hollingsworth, T Deirdre

    Lancet (London, England)

    2017  Volume 389, Issue 10066, Page(s) 231–233

    Language English
    Publishing date 2017-01-21
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 3306-6
    ISSN 1474-547X ; 0023-7507 ; 0140-6736
    ISSN (online) 1474-547X
    ISSN 0023-7507 ; 0140-6736
    DOI 10.1016/S0140-6736(16)32452-7
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Article ; Online: Latent Class Analysis: Insights about design and analysis of schistosomiasis diagnostic studies.

    Koukounari, Artemis / Jamil, Haziq / Erosheva, Elena / Shiff, Clive / Moustaki, Irini

    PLoS neglected tropical diseases

    2021  Volume 15, Issue 2, Page(s) e0009042

    Abstract: Various global health initiatives are currently advocating the elimination of schistosomiasis within the next decade. Schistosomiasis is a highly debilitating tropical infectious disease with severe burden of morbidity and thus operational research ... ...

    Abstract Various global health initiatives are currently advocating the elimination of schistosomiasis within the next decade. Schistosomiasis is a highly debilitating tropical infectious disease with severe burden of morbidity and thus operational research accurately evaluating diagnostics that quantify the epidemic status for guiding effective strategies is essential. Latent class models (LCMs) have been generally considered in epidemiology and in particular in recent schistosomiasis diagnostic studies as a flexible tool for evaluating diagnostics because assessing the true infection status (via a gold standard) is not possible. However, within the biostatistics literature, classical LCM have already been criticised for real-life problems under violation of the conditional independence (CI) assumption and when applied to a small number of diagnostics (i.e. most often 3-5 diagnostic tests). Solutions of relaxing the CI assumption and accounting for zero-inflation, as well as collecting partial gold standard information, have been proposed, offering the potential for more robust model estimates. In the current article, we examined such approaches in the context of schistosomiasis via analysis of two real datasets and extensive simulation studies. Our main conclusions highlighted poor model fit in low prevalence settings and the necessity of collecting partial gold standard information in such settings in order to improve the accuracy and reduce bias of sensitivity and specificity estimates.
    MeSH term(s) Diagnostic Errors ; Diagnostic Tests, Routine/standards ; Diagnostic Tests, Routine/statistics & numerical data ; Humans ; Latent Class Analysis ; Models, Statistical ; Reference Standards ; Schistosomiasis/diagnosis ; Sensitivity and Specificity
    Language English
    Publishing date 2021-02-04
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2429704-5
    ISSN 1935-2735 ; 1935-2727
    ISSN (online) 1935-2735
    ISSN 1935-2727
    DOI 10.1371/journal.pntd.0009042
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  3. Article ; Online: Latent Class Analysis

    Artemis Koukounari / Haziq Jamil / Elena Erosheva / Clive Shiff / Irini Moustaki

    PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, Vol 15, Iss 2, p e

    Insights about design and analysis of schistosomiasis diagnostic studies.

    2021  Volume 0009042

    Abstract: Various global health initiatives are currently advocating the elimination of schistosomiasis within the next decade. Schistosomiasis is a highly debilitating tropical infectious disease with severe burden of morbidity and thus operational research ... ...

    Abstract Various global health initiatives are currently advocating the elimination of schistosomiasis within the next decade. Schistosomiasis is a highly debilitating tropical infectious disease with severe burden of morbidity and thus operational research accurately evaluating diagnostics that quantify the epidemic status for guiding effective strategies is essential. Latent class models (LCMs) have been generally considered in epidemiology and in particular in recent schistosomiasis diagnostic studies as a flexible tool for evaluating diagnostics because assessing the true infection status (via a gold standard) is not possible. However, within the biostatistics literature, classical LCM have already been criticised for real-life problems under violation of the conditional independence (CI) assumption and when applied to a small number of diagnostics (i.e. most often 3-5 diagnostic tests). Solutions of relaxing the CI assumption and accounting for zero-inflation, as well as collecting partial gold standard information, have been proposed, offering the potential for more robust model estimates. In the current article, we examined such approaches in the context of schistosomiasis via analysis of two real datasets and extensive simulation studies. Our main conclusions highlighted poor model fit in low prevalence settings and the necessity of collecting partial gold standard information in such settings in order to improve the accuracy and reduce bias of sensitivity and specificity estimates.
    Keywords Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ; RC955-962 ; Public aspects of medicine ; RA1-1270
    Language English
    Publishing date 2021-02-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  4. Article ; Online: Evaluating hybrid controls methodology in early-phase oncology trials: A simulation study based on the MORPHEUS-UC trial.

    Wang, Guanbo / Poulin-Costello, Melanie / Pang, Herbert / Zhu, Jiawen / Helms, Hans-Joachim / Reyes-Rivera, Irmarie / Platt, Robert W / Pang, Menglan / Koukounari, Artemis

    Pharmaceutical statistics

    2023  Volume 23, Issue 1, Page(s) 31–45

    Abstract: Phase Ib/II oncology trials, despite their small sample sizes, aim to provide information for optimal internal company decision-making concerning novel drug development. Hybrid controls (a combination of the current control arm and controls from one or ... ...

    Abstract Phase Ib/II oncology trials, despite their small sample sizes, aim to provide information for optimal internal company decision-making concerning novel drug development. Hybrid controls (a combination of the current control arm and controls from one or more sources of historical trial data [HTD]) can be used to increase statistical precision. Here we assess combining two sources of Roche HTD to construct a hybrid control in targeted therapy for decision-making via an extensive simulation study. Our simulations are based on the real data of one of the experimental arms and the control arm of the MORPHEUS-UC Phase Ib/II study and two Roche HTD for atezolizumab monotherapy. We consider potential complications such as model misspecification, unmeasured confounding, different sample sizes of current treatment groups, and heterogeneity among the three trials. We evaluate two frequentist methods (with both Cox and Weibull accelerated failure time [AFT] models) and three different commensurate priors in Bayesian dynamic borrowing (with a Weibull AFT model), and modifications within each of those, when estimating the effect of treatment on survival outcomes and measures of effect such as marginal hazard ratios. We assess the performance of these methods in different settings and the potential of generalizations to supplement decisions in early-phase oncology trials. The results show that the proposed joint frequentist methods and noninformative priors within Bayesian dynamic borrowing with no adjustment on covariates are preferred, especially when treatment effects across the three trials are heterogeneous. For generalization of hybrid control methods in such settings, we recommend more simulation studies.
    MeSH term(s) Humans ; Bayes Theorem ; Computer Simulation ; Neoplasms/drug therapy ; Research Design ; Sample Size ; Clinical Trials as Topic
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-09-24
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2083706-9
    ISSN 1539-1612 ; 1539-1604
    ISSN (online) 1539-1612
    ISSN 1539-1604
    DOI 10.1002/pst.2336
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  5. Article ; Online: Maternal immunisation against Group B Streptococcus: A global analysis of health impact and cost-effectiveness.

    Procter, Simon R / Gonçalves, Bronner P / Paul, Proma / Chandna, Jaya / Seedat, Farah / Koukounari, Artemis / Hutubessy, Raymond / Trotter, Caroline / Lawn, Joy E / Jit, Mark

    PLoS medicine

    2023  Volume 20, Issue 3, Page(s) e1004068

    Abstract: Background: Group B Streptococcus (GBS) can cause invasive disease (iGBS) in young infants, typically presenting as sepsis or meningitis, and is also associated with stillbirth and preterm birth. GBS vaccines are under development, but their potential ... ...

    Abstract Background: Group B Streptococcus (GBS) can cause invasive disease (iGBS) in young infants, typically presenting as sepsis or meningitis, and is also associated with stillbirth and preterm birth. GBS vaccines are under development, but their potential health impact and cost-effectiveness have not been assessed globally.
    Methods and findings: We assessed the health impact and value (using net monetary benefit (NMB), which measures both health and economic effects of vaccination into monetary units) of GBS maternal vaccination in an annual cohort of 140 million pregnant women across 183 countries in 2020. Our analysis uses a decision tree model, incorporating risks of GBS-related health outcomes from an existing Bayesian disease burden model. We extrapolated country-specific GBS-related healthcare costs using data from a previous systematic review and calculated quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) lost due to infant mortality and long-term disability. We assumed 80% vaccine efficacy against iGBS and stillbirth, following the WHO Preferred Product Characteristics, and coverage based on the proportion of pregnant women receiving at least 4 antenatal visits. One dose was assumed to cost $50 in high-income countries, $15 in upper-middle income countries, and $3.50 in low-/lower-middle-income countries. We estimated NMB using alternative normative assumptions that may be adopted by policymakers. Vaccinating pregnant women could avert 127,000 (95% uncertainty range 63,300 to 248,000) early-onset and 87,300 (38,100 to 209,000) late-onset infant iGBS cases, 31,100 deaths (14,400 to 66,400), 17,900 (6,380 to 49,900) cases of moderate and severe neurodevelopmental impairment, and 23,000 (10,000 to 56,400) stillbirths. A vaccine effective against GBS-associated prematurity might also avert 185,000 (13,500 to 407,000) preterm births. Globally, a 1-dose vaccine programme could cost $1.7 billion but save $385 million in healthcare costs. Estimated global NMB ranged from $1.1 billion ($-0.2 to 3.8 billion) under the least favourable normative assumptions to $17 billion ($9.1 to 31 billion) under the most favourable normative assumptions. The main limitation of our analysis was the scarcity of data to inform some of the model parameters such as those governing health-related quality of life and long-term costs from disability, and how these parameters may vary across country contexts.
    Conclusions: In this study, we found that maternal GBS vaccination could have a large impact on infant morbidity and mortality. Globally, a GBS maternal vaccine at reasonable prices is likely to be a cost-effective intervention.
    MeSH term(s) Infant ; Female ; Infant, Newborn ; Pregnancy ; Humans ; Cost-Benefit Analysis ; Stillbirth ; Streptococcal Infections/epidemiology ; Streptococcal Infections/prevention & control ; Quality of Life ; Bayes Theorem ; Premature Birth ; Vaccination/methods ; Immunization ; Streptococcus agalactiae ; Vaccines
    Chemical Substances Vaccines
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-03-14
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 2185925-5
    ISSN 1549-1676 ; 1549-1277
    ISSN (online) 1549-1676
    ISSN 1549-1277
    DOI 10.1371/journal.pmed.1004068
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  6. Article ; Online: Stillbirths and neonatal deaths among 18 942 women with postpartum hemorrhage: Analysis of perinatal outcomes in the WOMAN trial.

    Hough, Amy / Shakur-Still, Haleema / Roberts, Ian / Koukounari, Artemis / Lawn, Joy E

    International journal of gynaecology and obstetrics: the official organ of the International Federation of Gynaecology and Obstetrics

    2020  Volume 153, Issue 1, Page(s) 146–153

    Abstract: Objective: To describe the rates and risk factors for stillbirth and pre-discharge neonatal mortality (PDNM), and impact on quality of life (QoL) among women with postpartum hemorrhage (PPH).: Methods: A secondary analysis was conducted of the WOMAN ... ...

    Abstract Objective: To describe the rates and risk factors for stillbirth and pre-discharge neonatal mortality (PDNM), and impact on quality of life (QoL) among women with postpartum hemorrhage (PPH).
    Methods: A secondary analysis was conducted of the WOMAN trial, which evaluated the use of tranexamic acid for PPH and collected infant outcome data to assess drug safety. The analysis was restricted to singletons (n=18 942). Overall and country-level rates of stillbirth and PDNM were calculated. Multilevel logistic regression models examined the association of stillbirth and PDNM with selected risks, and the association of mother's QoL at discharge after stillbirth or PDNM.
    Results: For women with PPH, the rate of stillbirths was 104.42 per 1000 births (n=1978) and the rate of PDNM was 15.56 per 1000 live births (n=264). Cesarean delivery, increasing blood loss, maternal complications, and maternal death were strongly associated with these adverse outcomes. Women with stillbirth and PDNM were significantly more likely to report poorer QoL.
    Conclusion: Women with PPH experience an extremely high rate of stillbirth and slightly elevated PDNM, which is associated with markers of the severity of their condition and impacts on their QoL.
    MeSH term(s) Adult ; Cesarean Section/adverse effects ; Female ; Humans ; Infant ; Infant Mortality ; Infant, Newborn ; Maternal Death ; Perinatal Death/etiology ; Postpartum Hemorrhage/epidemiology ; Pregnancy ; Quality of Life ; Risk Factors ; Stillbirth/epidemiology ; Young Adult
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-11-02
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 80149-5
    ISSN 1879-3479 ; 0020-7292
    ISSN (online) 1879-3479
    ISSN 0020-7292
    DOI 10.1002/ijgo.13413
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  7. Article ; Online: Estimation of country-level incidence of early-onset invasive Group B Streptococcus disease in infants using Bayesian methods.

    Gonçalves, Bronner P / Procter, Simon R / Clifford, Sam / Koukounari, Artemis / Paul, Proma / Lewin, Alexandra / Jit, Mark / Lawn, Joy

    PLoS computational biology

    2021  Volume 17, Issue 6, Page(s) e1009001

    Abstract: Neonatal invasive disease caused by Group B Streptococcus (GBS) is responsible for much acute mortality and long-term morbidity. To guide development of better prevention strategies, including maternal vaccines that protect neonates against GBS, it is ... ...

    Abstract Neonatal invasive disease caused by Group B Streptococcus (GBS) is responsible for much acute mortality and long-term morbidity. To guide development of better prevention strategies, including maternal vaccines that protect neonates against GBS, it is necessary to estimate the burden of this condition globally and in different regions. Here, we present a Bayesian model that estimates country-specific invasive GBS (iGBS) disease incidence in children aged 0 to 6 days. The model combines different types of epidemiological data, each of which has its own limitations: GBS colonization prevalence in pregnant women, risk of iGBS disease in children born to GBS-colonized mothers and direct estimates of iGBS disease incidence where available. In our analysis, we present country-specific maternal GBS colonization prevalence after adjustment for GBS detection assay used in epidemiological studies. We then integrate these results with other epidemiological data and estimate country-level incidence of iGBS disease including in countries with no studies that directly estimate incidence. We are able to simultaneously estimate two key epidemiological quantities: the country-specific incidence of early-onset iGBS disease, and the risk of iGBS disease in babies born to GBS-colonized women. Overall, we believe our method will contribute to a more comprehensive quantification of the global burden of this disease, inform cost-effectiveness assessments of potential maternal GBS vaccines and identify key areas where data are necessary.
    MeSH term(s) Bacterial Vaccines/administration & dosage ; Bacterial Vaccines/economics ; Bayes Theorem ; Cost-Benefit Analysis ; Female ; Global Health ; Humans ; Incidence ; Infant ; Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical/prevention & control ; Pregnancy ; Pregnancy Complications, Infectious/prevention & control ; Streptococcal Infections/complications ; Streptococcal Infections/epidemiology ; Streptococcal Infections/microbiology ; Streptococcal Infections/prevention & control ; Streptococcus agalactiae/isolation & purification
    Chemical Substances Bacterial Vaccines
    Language English
    Publishing date 2021-06-14
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 2193340-6
    ISSN 1553-7358 ; 1553-734X
    ISSN (online) 1553-7358
    ISSN 1553-734X
    DOI 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1009001
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  8. Article ; Online: Maternal immunisation against Group B Streptococcus

    Simon R Procter / Bronner P Gonçalves / Proma Paul / Jaya Chandna / Farah Seedat / Artemis Koukounari / Raymond Hutubessy / Caroline Trotter / Joy E Lawn / Mark Jit

    PLoS Medicine, Vol 20, Iss 3, p e

    A global analysis of health impact and cost-effectiveness.

    2023  Volume 1004068

    Abstract: Background Group B Streptococcus (GBS) can cause invasive disease (iGBS) in young infants, typically presenting as sepsis or meningitis, and is also associated with stillbirth and preterm birth. GBS vaccines are under development, but their potential ... ...

    Abstract Background Group B Streptococcus (GBS) can cause invasive disease (iGBS) in young infants, typically presenting as sepsis or meningitis, and is also associated with stillbirth and preterm birth. GBS vaccines are under development, but their potential health impact and cost-effectiveness have not been assessed globally. Methods and findings We assessed the health impact and value (using net monetary benefit (NMB), which measures both health and economic effects of vaccination into monetary units) of GBS maternal vaccination in an annual cohort of 140 million pregnant women across 183 countries in 2020. Our analysis uses a decision tree model, incorporating risks of GBS-related health outcomes from an existing Bayesian disease burden model. We extrapolated country-specific GBS-related healthcare costs using data from a previous systematic review and calculated quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) lost due to infant mortality and long-term disability. We assumed 80% vaccine efficacy against iGBS and stillbirth, following the WHO Preferred Product Characteristics, and coverage based on the proportion of pregnant women receiving at least 4 antenatal visits. One dose was assumed to cost $50 in high-income countries, $15 in upper-middle income countries, and $3.50 in low-/lower-middle-income countries. We estimated NMB using alternative normative assumptions that may be adopted by policymakers. Vaccinating pregnant women could avert 127,000 (95% uncertainty range 63,300 to 248,000) early-onset and 87,300 (38,100 to 209,000) late-onset infant iGBS cases, 31,100 deaths (14,400 to 66,400), 17,900 (6,380 to 49,900) cases of moderate and severe neurodevelopmental impairment, and 23,000 (10,000 to 56,400) stillbirths. A vaccine effective against GBS-associated prematurity might also avert 185,000 (13,500 to 407,000) preterm births. Globally, a 1-dose vaccine programme could cost $1.7 billion but save $385 million in healthcare costs. Estimated global NMB ranged from $1.1 billion ($-0.2 to 3.8 billion) under the least ...
    Keywords Medicine ; R
    Subject code 360
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-03-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  9. Article ; Online: Pathways from maternal depression to young adult offspring depression: an exploratory longitudinal mediation analysis.

    Koukounari, Artemis / Stringaris, Argyris / Maughan, Barbara

    International journal of methods in psychiatric research

    2016  Volume 26, Issue 2

    Abstract: Maternal depression in the peri-natal period is associated with increased risk for young adult depression in offspring. This study explored mediation of these links via trajectories of child conduct and emotional problems (Strengths and Difficulties ... ...

    Abstract Maternal depression in the peri-natal period is associated with increased risk for young adult depression in offspring. This study explored mediation of these links via trajectories of child conduct and emotional problems (Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire) from ages 4-16 years old in data from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children cohort (n = 13373). Through gender-specific structural equation models, a composite measure of exposure to early maternal depression (Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale), predicted young adult depression at age 18 (Revised Clinical Interview Schedule - distal outcome). Mediational effects were then estimated by testing which parts of joint piecewise latent trajectory models for child/adolescent conduct and emotional problems were associated with both exposure and distal outcome. For girls, only conduct problems in early childhood were consistently indicated to mediate effects of early maternal depression on risk of young adulthood depression. Some evidence for a pathway via changing levels of childhood and adolescent emotional difficulties was also suggested. For boys, by contrast, the differing models gave less consistent findings providing some evidence for a small time-specific indirect effect via early childhood conduct problems. In addition to its practice implications the current methodological application offers considerable potential in exploratory longitudinal developmental mediation studies. © 2016 The Authors International Journal of Methods in Psychiatric Research Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
    MeSH term(s) Adolescent ; Adult ; Age Factors ; Child ; Child Behavior Disorders/etiology ; Child of Impaired Parents/psychology ; Child, Preschool ; Cohort Studies ; Depression/etiology ; Depression/psychology ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Models, Theoretical ; Mother-Child Relations/psychology
    Language English
    Publishing date 2016-07-29
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 1078002-6
    ISSN 1557-0657 ; 1049-8931
    ISSN (online) 1557-0657
    ISSN 1049-8931
    DOI 10.1002/mpr.1520
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  10. Article ; Online: Development of a healthy ageing index in Latin American countries - a 10/66 dementia research group population-based study.

    Daskalopoulou, Christina / Chua, Kia-Chong / Koukounari, Artemis / Caballero, Francisco Félix / Prince, Martin / Prina, A Matthew

    BMC medical research methodology

    2019  Volume 19, Issue 1, Page(s) 226

    Abstract: Background: Our population is ageing and in 2050 more than one out of five people will be 60 years or older; 80% of whom will be living in a low-and-middle income country. Living longer does not entail living healthier; however, there is not a widely ... ...

    Abstract Background: Our population is ageing and in 2050 more than one out of five people will be 60 years or older; 80% of whom will be living in a low-and-middle income country. Living longer does not entail living healthier; however, there is not a widely accepted measure of healthy ageing hampering policy and research. The World Health Organization defines healthy ageing as the process of developing and maintaining functional ability that will enable well-being in older age. We aimed to create a healthy ageing index (HAI) in a subset of six low-and-middle income countries, part of the 10/66 study, by using items of functional ability and intrinsic capacity.
    Methods: The study sample included residents 65-years old and over (n = 12,865) from catchment area sites in Cuba, Dominican Republic, Peru, Venezuela, Mexico and Puerto Rico. Items were collected by interviewing participants or key informants between 2003 and 2010. Two-stage factor analysis was employed and we compared one-factor, second-order and bifactor models. The psychometric properties of the index, including reliability, replicability, unidimensionality and concurrent convergent validity as well as measurement invariance per ethnic group and gender were further examined in the best fit model.
    Results: The bifactor model displayed superior model fit statistics supporting that a general factor underlies the various items but other subdomain factors are also needed. The HAI indicated excellent reliability (ω = 0.96, ω
    Conclusions: A HAI with excellent psychometric properties was created by using items of functional ability and intrinsic capacity in a subset of six low-and-middle income countries. Further research is needed to explore sub-population differences and to validate this index to other cultural settings.
    MeSH term(s) Aged ; Cohort Studies ; Cuba ; Dementia/diagnosis ; Dementia/epidemiology ; Dominican Republic ; Health Status ; Healthy Aging ; Humans ; Incidence ; Income ; Latin America ; Mexico ; Peru ; Predictive Value of Tests ; Proportional Hazards Models ; Psychometrics ; Puerto Rico ; Self-Assessment ; Survival Analysis ; Venezuela
    Language English
    Publishing date 2019-12-05
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 2041362-2
    ISSN 1471-2288 ; 1471-2288
    ISSN (online) 1471-2288
    ISSN 1471-2288
    DOI 10.1186/s12874-019-0849-y
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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