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Featured researches published by Nicholas Graetz.


Injury Prevention | 2016

The global burden of injury: incidence, mortality, disability-adjusted life years and time trends from the Global Burden of Disease study 2013

Juanita A. Haagsma; Nicholas Graetz; Ian Bolliger; Mohsen Naghavi; Hideki Higashi; Erin C. Mullany; Semaw Ferede Abera; Jerry Abraham; Koranteng Adofo; Ubai Alsharif; Emmanuel A. Ameh; Walid Ammar; Carl Abelardo T Antonio; Lope H. Barrero; Tolesa Bekele; Dipan Bose; Alexandra Brazinova; Ferrán Catalá-López; Lalit Dandona; Rakhi Dandona; Paul I. Dargan; Diego De Leo; Louisa Degenhardt; Sarah Derrett; Samath D. Dharmaratne; Tim Driscoll; Leilei Duan; Sergey Petrovich Ermakov; Farshad Farzadfar; Valery L. Feigin

Background The Global Burden of Diseases (GBD), Injuries, and Risk Factors study used the disability-adjusted life year (DALY) to quantify the burden of diseases, injuries, and risk factors. This paper provides an overview of injury estimates from the 2013 update of GBD, with detailed information on incidence, mortality, DALYs and rates of change from 1990 to 2013 for 26 causes of injury, globally, by region and by country. Methods Injury mortality was estimated using the extensive GBD mortality database, corrections for ill-defined cause of death and the cause of death ensemble modelling tool. Morbidity estimation was based on inpatient and outpatient data sets, 26 cause-of-injury and 47 nature-of-injury categories, and seven follow-up studies with patient-reported long-term outcome measures. Results In 2013, 973 million (uncertainty interval (UI) 942 to 993) people sustained injuries that warranted some type of healthcare and 4.8 million (UI 4.5 to 5.1) people died from injuries. Between 1990 and 2013 the global age-standardised injury DALY rate decreased by 31% (UI 26% to 35%). The rate of decline in DALY rates was significant for 22 cause-of-injury categories, including all the major injuries. Conclusions Injuries continue to be an important cause of morbidity and mortality in the developed and developing world. The decline in rates for almost all injuries is so prominent that it warrants a general statement that the world is becoming a safer place to live in. However, the patterns vary widely by cause, age, sex, region and time and there are still large improvements that need to be made.


The Lancet | 2017

Mapping under-5 and neonatal mortality in Africa, 2000–15: a baseline analysis for the Sustainable Development Goals

Nick Golding; Roy Burstein; Joshua Longbottom; Annie J Browne; Aaron Osgood-Zimmerman; Lucas Earl; Samir Bhatt; Ewan Cameron; Daniel C. Casey; Laura Dwyer-Lindgren; Tamer H. Farag; Abraham D. Flaxman; Maya Fraser; Peter W. Gething; Harry S. Gibson; Nicholas Graetz; L Kendall Krause; Xie Rachel Kulikoff; Stephen S Lim; Bonnie Mappin; Chloe Morozoff; Robert C Reiner; Amber Sligar; David L. Smith; Haidong Wang; Daniel J Weiss; Christopher J L Murray; Catherine L. Moyes; Simon I. Hay

Summary Background During the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) era, many countries in Africa achieved marked reductions in under-5 and neonatal mortality. Yet the pace of progress toward these goals substantially varied at the national level, demonstrating an essential need for tracking even more local trends in child mortality. With the adoption of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in 2015, which established ambitious targets for improving child survival by 2030, optimal intervention planning and targeting will require understanding of trends and rates of progress at a higher spatial resolution. In this study, we aimed to generate high-resolution estimates of under-5 and neonatal all-cause mortality across 46 countries in Africa. Methods We assembled 235 geographically resolved household survey and census data sources on child deaths to produce estimates of under-5 and neonatal mortality at a resolution of 5 × 5 km grid cells across 46 African countries for 2000, 2005, 2010, and 2015. We used a Bayesian geostatistical analytical framework to generate these estimates, and implemented predictive validity tests. In addition to reporting 5 × 5 km estimates, we also aggregated results obtained from these estimates into three different levels—national, and subnational administrative levels 1 and 2—to provide the full range of geospatial resolution that local, national, and global decision makers might require. Findings Amid improving child survival in Africa, there was substantial heterogeneity in absolute levels of under-5 and neonatal mortality in 2015, as well as the annualised rates of decline achieved from 2000 to 2015. Subnational areas in countries such as Botswana, Rwanda, and Ethiopia recorded some of the largest decreases in child mortality rates since 2000, positioning them well to achieve SDG targets by 2030 or earlier. Yet these places were the exception for Africa, since many areas, particularly in central and western Africa, must reduce under-5 mortality rates by at least 8·8% per year, between 2015 and 2030, to achieve the SDG 3.2 target for under-5 mortality by 2030. Interpretation In the absence of unprecedented political commitment, financial support, and medical advances, the viability of SDG 3.2 achievement in Africa is precarious at best. By producing under-5 and neonatal mortality rates at multiple levels of geospatial resolution over time, this study provides key information for decision makers to target interventions at populations in the greatest need. In an era when precision public health increasingly has the potential to transform the design, implementation, and impact of health programmes, our 5 × 5 km estimates of child mortality in Africa provide a baseline against which local, national, and global stakeholders can map the pathways for ending preventable child deaths by 2030. Funding Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.


Nature | 2018

Mapping child growth failure in Africa between 2000 and 2015

Aaron Osgood-Zimmerman; Anoushka Millear; R W Stubbs; Chloe Shields; B V Pickering; Lucas Earl; Nicholas Graetz; D K Kinyoki; Sarah E Ray; Samir Bhatt; Annie J Browne; Roy Burstein; Ewan Cameron; Daniel C. Casey; Aniruddha Deshpande; Peter W. Gething; Harry S. Gibson; Nathaniel J Henry; M Herrero; L K Krause; Ian Letourneau; A J Levine; Patrick Y Liu; Joshua Longbottom; B K Mayala; Jonathan F Mosser; Abdisalan M. Noor; David M Pigott; E G Piwoz; Puja Rao

Insufficient growth during childhood is associated with poor health outcomes and an increased risk of death. Between 2000 and 2015, nearly all African countries demonstrated improvements for children under 5 years old for stunting, wasting, and underweight, the core components of child growth failure. Here we show that striking subnational heterogeneity in levels and trends of child growth remains. If current rates of progress are sustained, many areas of Africa will meet the World Health Organization Global Targets 2025 to improve maternal, infant and young child nutrition, but high levels of growth failure will persist across the Sahel. At these rates, much, if not all of the continent will fail to meet the Sustainable Development Goal target—to end malnutrition by 2030. Geospatial estimates of child growth failure provide a baseline for measuring progress as well as a precision public health platform to target interventions to those populations with the greatest need, in order to reduce health disparities and accelerate progress.


Nature | 2018

Mapping local variation in educational attainment across Africa.

Nicholas Graetz; Joseph I. Friedman; Aaron Osgood-Zimmerman; Roy Burstein; Molly H Biehl; Chloe Shields; Jonathan F Mosser; Daniel C. Casey; Aniruddha Deshpande; Lucas Earl; Robert C Reiner; Sarah E Ray; A J Levine; R W Stubbs; B K Mayala; Joshua Longbottom; Annie J Browne; Samir Bhatt; Daniel J. Weiss; Peter W. Gething; Ali H. Mokdad; Stephen S Lim; Murray Cjl.; Emmanuela Gakidou; Simon I. Hay

Educational attainment for women of reproductive age is linked to reduced child and maternal mortality, lower fertility and improved reproductive health. Comparable analyses of attainment exist only at the national level, potentially obscuring patterns in subnational inequality. Evidence suggests that wide disparities between urban and rural populations exist, raising questions about where the majority of progress towards the education targets of the Sustainable Development Goals is occurring in African countries. Here we explore within-country inequalities by predicting years of schooling across five by five kilometre grids, generating estimates of average educational attainment by age and sex at subnational levels. Despite marked progress in attainment from 2000 to 2015 across Africa, substantial differences persist between locations and sexes. These differences have widened in many countries, particularly across the Sahel. These high-resolution, comparable estimates improve the ability of decision-makers to plan the precisely targeted interventions that will be necessary to deliver progress during the era of the Sustainable Development Goals.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2018

Variation in Childhood Diarrheal Morbidity and Mortality in Africa, 2000–2015

Robert C Reiner; Nicholas Graetz; Daniel C. Casey; Christopher Troeger; Gregory M. Garcia; Jonathan F Mosser; Aniruddha Deshpande; Scott J Swartz; Sarah E Ray; Brigette F. Blacker; Puja C Rao; Aaron Osgood-Zimmerman; Roy Burstein; David M Pigott; Ian M. Davis; Ian Letourneau; Lucas Earl; Jennifer M. Ross; Ibrahim Khalil; Tamer H. Farag; Oliver J. Brady; Moritz U. G. Kraemer; David L. Smith; Samir Bhatt; Daniel J. Weiss; Peter W. Gething; Nicholas J Kassebaum; Ali H. Mokdad; Christopher J. L. Murray; Simon I. Hay

Background Diarrheal diseases are the third leading cause of disease and death in children younger than 5 years of age in Africa and were responsible for an estimated 30 million cases of severe diarrhea (95% credible interval, 27 million to 33 million) and 330,000 deaths (95% credible interval, 270,000 to 380,000) in 2015. The development of targeted approaches to address this burden has been hampered by a paucity of comprehensive, fine‐scale estimates of diarrhea‐related disease and death among and within countries. Methods We produced annual estimates of the prevalence and incidence of diarrhea and diarrhea‐related mortality with high geographic detail (5 km2) across Africa from 2000 through 2015. Estimates were created with the use of Bayesian geostatistical techniques and were calibrated to the results from the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study 2016. Results The results revealed geographic inequality with regard to diarrhea risk in Africa. Of the estimated 330,000 childhood deaths that were attributable to diarrhea in 2015, more than 50% occurred in 55 of the 782 first‐level administrative subdivisions (e.g., states). In 2015, mortality rates among first‐level administrative subdivisions in Nigeria differed by up to a factor of 6. The case fatality rates were highly varied at the national level across Africa, with the highest values observed in Benin, Lesotho, Mali, Nigeria, and Sierra Leone. Conclusions Our findings showed concentrated areas of diarrheal disease and diarrhea‐related death in countries that had a consistently high burden as well as in countries that had considerable national‐level reductions in diarrhea burden. (Funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.)


Population Health Metrics | 2018

Small area estimation of under-5 mortality in Bangladesh, Cameroon, Chad, Mozambique, Uganda, and Zambia using spatially misaligned data

Laura Dwyer-Lindgren; Ellen Squires; Stephanie Teeple; Gloria Ikilezi; D. Allen Roberts; Danny V. Colombara; Sarah Katherine Allen; Stanley M. Kamande; Nicholas Graetz; Abraham D. Flaxman; Charbel El Bcheraoui; Kristjana Asbjornsdottir; Gilbert Asiimwe; Ângelo Augusto; Orvalho Augusto; Baltazar Chilundo; Caroline De Schacht; Sarah Gimbel; Carol Kamya; Faith Namugaya; Felix Masiye; Cremildo Mauieia; Yodé Miangotar; Honoré Mimche; Acácio Sabonete; Haribondhu Sarma; Kenneth Sherr; Moses Simuyemba; Aaron Chisha Sinyangwe; Jasim Uddin

BackgroundThe under-5 mortality rate (U5MR) is an important metric of child health and survival. Country-level estimates of U5MR are readily available, but efforts to estimate U5MR subnationally have been limited, in part, due to spatial misalignment of available data sources (e.g., use of different administrative levels, or as a result of historical boundary changes).MethodsWe analyzed all available complete and summary birth history data in surveys and censuses in six countries (Bangladesh, Cameroon, Chad, Mozambique, Uganda, and Zambia) at the finest geographic level available in each data source. We then developed small area estimation models capable of incorporating spatially misaligned data. These small area estimation models were applied to the birth history data in order to estimate trends in U5MR from 1980 to 2015 at the second administrative level in Cameroon, Chad, Mozambique, Uganda, and Zambia and at the third administrative level in Bangladesh.ResultsWe found substantial variation in U5MR in all six countries: there was more than a two-fold difference in U5MR between the area with the highest rate and the area with the lowest rate in every country. All areas in all countries experienced declines in U5MR between 1980 and 2015, but the degree varied both within and between countries. In Cameroon, Chad, Mozambique, and Zambia we found areas with U5MRs in 2015 that were higher than in other parts of the same country in 1980. Comparing subnational U5MR to country-level targets for the Millennium Development Goals (MDG), we find that 12.8% of areas in Bangladesh did not meet the country-level target, although the country as whole did. A minority of areas in Chad, Mozambique, Uganda, and Zambia met the country-level MDG targets while these countries as a whole did not.ConclusionsSubnational estimates of U5MR reveal significant within-country variation. These estimates could be used for identifying high-need areas and positive deviants, tracking trends in geographic inequalities, and evaluating progress towards international development targets such as the Sustainable Development Goals.


Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation | 2015

The global burden of injury: Incidence, mortality, disability-adjusted life years and time trends from the Global Burden of Disease study 2013

Juanita A. Haagsma; Nicholas Graetz; Ian Bolliger; Mohsen Naghavi; Hideki Higashi; Erin C. Mullany; Semaw Ferede Abera; Jerry Abraham; Koranteng Adofo; Ubai Alsharif; Emmanuel A. Ameh; Walid Ammar; Carl Abelardo T Antonio; Lope H. Barrero; Tolesa Bekele; Dipan Bose; Alexandra Brazinova; Ferrán Catalá-López; Lalit Dandona; Rakhi Dandona; Paul I. Dargan; Diego De Leo; Louisa Degenhardt; Sarah Derrett; Samath D. Dharmaratne; Tim Driscoll; Leilei Duan; Sergey Petrovich Ermakov; Farshad Farzadfar; Valery L. Feigin

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Lucas Earl

University of Washington

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Roy Burstein

University of Washington

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Samir Bhatt

Imperial College London

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Sarah E Ray

University of Washington

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