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Dive into the research topics where Eva Hallner is active.

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Featured researches published by Eva Hallner.


Allergy | 2012

Development and comorbidity of eczema, asthma and rhinitis to age 12 : data from the BAMSE birth cohort

Natalia Ballardini; Inger Kull; Tomas Lind; Eva Hallner; Catarina Almqvist; Eva Östblom; Erik Melén; Göran Pershagen; G. Lilja; Anna Bergström; Magnus Wickman

Allergy‐related diseases are a public health issue, but knowledge on development and comorbidity among children is scarce. The aim was to study the development of eczema, asthma and rhinitis in relation to sex and parental allergy, in a population‐based cohort, during childhood.


Allergy | 2016

IgE antibodies in relation to prevalence and multimorbidity of eczema, asthma, and rhinitis from birth to adolescence

Natalia Ballardini; Anna Bergström; C-F. Wahlgren; M. van Hage; Eva Hallner; Inger Kull; Erik Melén; J. M. Anto; Jean Bousquet; Magnus Wickman

Eczema, asthma, and rhinitis affect a large proportion of children, but their prevalence varies with age. IgE antibodies are also common in the pediatric population. However, the links between IgE, disease, and trajectories are unclear.


Pediatric Allergy and Immunology | 1999

Peanut oil in vitamin A and D preparations: Reactions to skin test and manifestation of symptoms

Inger Kull; Eva Hallner; G. Lilja; A.‐C. Öhman‐Johansson; H. Öman; Magnus Wickman

The aim of this study was to establish whether there is a link between sensitisation to peanut and exposure to peanut oil in vitamin A and D preparations. Forty‐one children with a positive in vivo or in vitro test towards peanut were included. Twenty‐one children had consumed vitamins A and D in oil solution, 14 in water solution, and 6 both types. Refined and unrefined peanut oils were obtained and skin prick test extracts were prepared. None of the children exhibited a positive SPT in response to the refined peanut extract. In contrast, 15 children exhibited a positive SPT to the unrefined extract. There was no significant difference in the number of children reacting clinically to peanut exposure who had received vitamins A and D in oil‐based or water‐based formulations. However, children with clinical allergy to peanut and who had exclusively consumed vitamin A and D in peanut oil, exhibited a greater number of different allergic symptoms upon consumption of peanut compared with clinical allergic children who had consumed the vitamins in water solution or both types (p < 0.01). This study indicates that sensitisation to peanut during childhood through consumption of vitamins A and D in oil‐based solution seems unlikely, but its consumption may contribute to the development of a wider range of clinical symptoms due to peanut exposure.


Journal of Asthma | 2014

Experiences of living with asthma : a focus group study with adolescents and parents of children with asthma

M Jonsson; Ann-Charlotte Egmar; Eva Hallner; Inger Kull

Abstract Objective: The goal for asthma treatment is that every individual, so far as possible, shall live without symptoms and exacerbations. Patients and health care professionals sometimes have different perceptions of what is important for achieving good quality of life. This work aims to describe the experiences among adolescents as well as those of parents with young children living with asthma. Methods: Four focus group interviews were performed, two with parents of young children and two with adolescents. The data were qualitatively analyzed, using Systematic Text Condensation. Result: Three themes relevant to the participants’ experiences of living with asthma were presented; strategies, frustrations and expectations. The adolescents wanted to be like their peers and developed their own strategies for self-management of asthma, which included not always taking medication as prescribed. The parents emphasized frustration regarding not being believed, lack of understanding feelings of loneliness, or anxiety. One identified expectation was that the participants wanted to be met with competence and understanding in asthma care from health care professionals. Another expectation expressed among parents was that teachers in nursery and primary schools should have more knowledge and understanding on how to care for children with asthma. Conclusion: Living with asthma leads to developing personal strategies in self-management of asthma. Moreover both parents and adolescents had expectations of being met by competent and understanding health care professionals. Developing a partnership between patients and health care professionals could be a successful way to improve the care of patients with asthma.


Primary Care Respiratory Journal | 2012

Adherence to national guidelines for children with asthma at primary health centres in Sweden: potential for improvement

Marina Jonsson; Ann-Charlotte Egmar; Anna Kiessling; Maria Ingemansson; Gunilla Hedlin; Ingvar Krakau; Eva Hallner; Inger Kull

BACKGROUND Although asthma is the most common chronic paediatric disease in Western Europe, the extent of adherence to guidelines for primary care management of paediatric asthma remains unclear. AIMS To evaluate adherence to national guidelines for primary care management of children with asthma. METHODS This survey involved 18 primary healthcare centres in Stockholm, Sweden. The medical records of 647 children aged 6 months to 16 years with a diagnosis of asthma, obstructive bronchitis, or cough were selected and scrutinised. 223 children with obstructive bronchitis or cough not fulfilling the evidence-based criteria for asthma were excluded, yielding a total of 424 subjects. Documentation of the most important indicators of quality as stipulated in national guidelines (i.e., tobacco smoke, spirometry, pharmacological treatment, patient education, and demonstration of inhalation technique) was examined. RESULTS Only 22% (n=49) of the children 6 years of age or older had ever undergone a spirometry test, but the frequency was greater when patients had access to an asthma nurse (p=0.003). Although 58% (n=246) of the total study population were treated with inhaled steroids, documented patient education and demonstration of inhalation technique was present in 14% (n=59). Exposure to tobacco smoke was documented in 14% (n=58). CONCLUSIONS This study reveals a substantial gap between the actual care provided for paediatric asthma and the recommendations formulated in national guidelines.


Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health | 2015

Maternal occupation during pregnancy, birth weight, and length of gestation: combined analysis of 13 European birth cohorts.

Maribel Casas; Sylvaine Cordier; David Martinez; Henrique Barros; Jens Peter Bonde; Alex Burdorf; Nathalie Costet; dos Santos Ac; Asta Danileviciute; Merete Eggesbø; Mariana F. Fernández; Fevotte J; Ana M. García; Regina Gražulevičiene; Eva Hallner; Wojciech Hanke; Manolis Kogevinas; Inger Kull; Stemann Larsen P; Melaki; Christine Monfort; Nordby K-C; Nybo Andersen A-M; Evridiki Patelarou; Kinga Polańska; Lorenzo Richiardi; Santa Marina L; Snijder C; Adonina Tardón; van Eijsden M

OBJECTIVES We assessed whether maternal employment during pregnancy - overall and in selected occupational sectors - is associated with birth weight, small for gestational age (SGA), term low birth weight (LBW), length of gestation, and preterm delivery in a population-based birth cohort design. METHODS We used data from >200 000 mother-child pairs enrolled in 13 European birth cohorts and compared employed versus non-employed women. Among employees, we defined groups of occupations representing the main sectors of employment for women where potential reproductive hazards are considered to be present. The comparison group comprised all other employed women not included in the occupational sector being assessed. We performed meta-analyses of cohort-specific estimates and explored heterogeneity. RESULTS Employees had a lower risk of preterm delivery than non-employees [adjusted odds ratio (OR adj) 0.86, 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 0.81-0.91]. Working in most of the occupational sectors studied was not associated with adverse birth outcomes. Being employed as a nurse was associated with lower risk SGA infants (OR adj0.91, 95% CI 0.84-0.99) whereas food industry workers had an increased risk of preterm delivery (OR adj1.50, 95% CI 1.12-2.02). There was little evidence for heterogeneity between cohorts. CONCLUSIONS This study suggests that, overall, employment during pregnancy is associated with a reduction in the risk of preterm birth and that work in certain occupations may affect pregnancy outcomes. This exploratory study provides an important platform on which to base further prospective studies focused on the potential consequences of maternal occupational exposures during pregnancy on child development.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2014

Infantile eczema: Prognosis and risk of asthma and rhinitis in preadolescence.

Natalia Ballardini; Anna Bergström; Maria Böhme; Marianne van Hage; Eva Hallner; E.K. Johansson; Cilla Söderhäll; Inger Kull; Magnus Wickman; Carl-Fredrik Wahlgren

vaccination. This observation suggests that higher frequencies of MA andDNB cells and lower frequencies of IL-21R–expressing B cells at T0 could serve as predictive markers for poor outcome of vaccination as it did in this study for the H3N2 influenza strain. Further studies need to be designed to test this hypothesis with different types of vaccines and possibly in the context of other diseases characterized by chronic immune activation.


Clinical & Experimental Allergy | 2018

Environmental peanut exposure increases the risk of peanut sensitization in high risk children

Helen A. Brough; Inger Kull; Kerry Richards; Eva Hallner; Cilla Söderhäll; Abdel Douiri; Martin Penagos; Erik Melén; Anna Bergström; Victor Turcanu; Magnus Wickman; Gideon Lack

High household peanut consumption is associated with the development of peanut allergy, especially when peanut allergic cases are compared against atopic controls; thus, environmental peanut exposure (EPE) may be a risk factor for peanut sensitization and allergy. In this study, we explored the relationship between EPE and school‐age peanut sensitization in a population‐based cohort.


American Journal of Epidemiology | 2018

Integrating Clinical and Epidemiological Data on Allergic Diseases Across Birth Cohorts: a MeDALL Harmonization Study

Marta Benet; Richard Albang; Mariona Pinart; Cynthia Hohmann; Christina Tischer; Isabella Annesi-Maesano; Nour Baïz; Carsten Bindslev-Jensen; Karin C. Lødrup Carlsen; Kai-Håkon Carlsen; Lourdes Cirugeda; Esben Eller; Maria Pia Fantini; Ulrike Gehring; Beatrix Gerhard; Davide Gori; Eva Hallner; Inger Kull; Jacopo Lenzi; Rosemary Rc McEachan; Eleonora Minina; Isabelle Momas; Silvia Narduzzi; Emily Petherick; Daniela Porta; Fanny Rancière; Marie Standl; Maties Torrent; Alet H. Wijga; John Wright

The numbers of international collaborations among birth cohort studies designed to better understand asthma and allergies have increased in the last several years. However, differences in definitions and methods preclude direct pooling of original data on individual participants. As part of the Mechanisms of the Development of Allergy (MeDALL) Project, we harmonized data from 14 birth cohort studies (each with 3-20 follow-up periods) carried out in 9 European countries during 1990-1998 or 2003-2009. The harmonization process followed 6 steps: 1) organization of the harmonization panel; 2) identification of variables relevant to MeDALL objectives (candidate variables); 3) proposal of a definition for each candidate variable (reference definition); 4) assessment of the compatibility of each cohort variable with its reference definition (inferential equivalence) and classification of this inferential equivalence as complete, partial, or impossible; 5) convocation of a workshop to agree on the reference definitions and classifications of inferential equivalence; and 6) preparation and delivery of data through a knowledge management portal. We agreed on 137 reference definitions. The inferential equivalence of 3,551 cohort variables to their corresponding reference definitions was classified as complete, partial, and impossible for 70%, 15%, and 15% of the variables, respectively. A harmonized database was delivered to MeDALL investigators. In asthma and allergy birth cohorts, the harmonization of data for pooled analyses is feasible, and high inferential comparability may be achieved. The MeDALL harmonization approach can be used in other collaborative projects.


Indoor Air | 2016

Exposure to organophosphate and polybrominated diphenyl ether flame retardants via indoor dust and childhood asthma

Derya Canbaz; M.J.M. van Velzen; Eva Hallner; A. H. Zwinderman; Magnus Wickman; P.E.G. Leonards; R. van Ree; L. S. van Rijt

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Carl-Fredrik Wahlgren

Karolinska University Hospital

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Maria Böhme

Karolinska University Hospital

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