Pedro Gullón
University of Alcalá
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Publication
Featured researches published by Pedro Gullón.
Journal of Urban Health-bulletin of The New York Academy of Medicine | 2015
Pedro Gullón; Hannah Badland; Silvia Alfayate; Usama Bilal; Francisco Escobar; Alba Cebrecos; Julia Díez; Manuel Franco
Audit tools are useful for exploring the urban environment and its association with physical activity. Virtual auditing options are becoming increasingly available potentially reducing the resources needed to conduct these assessments. Only a few studies have explored the use of virtual audit tools. Our objective is to test if the Madrid Systematic Pedestrian and Cycling Environment Scan (M-SPACES) discriminates between areas with different urban forms and to validate virtual street auditing using M-SPACES. Three areas (N = 500 street segments) were selected for variation in population density. M-SPACES was used to audit street segments physically and virtually (Google Street View) by two researchers in 2013–2014. For both physical and virtual audits, all analyzed features score significantly different by area (p < 0.05). Most of the features showed substantial (ICC = 0.6–0.8) or almost perfect (ICC ≥ 0.8) agreement between virtual and physical audits, especially neighborhood permeability walking infrastructure, traffic safety, streetscape aesthetics, and destinations. Intra-rater agreement was generally acceptable (ICC > 0.6). Inter-rater agreement was generally poor (ICC < 0.4). Virtual auditing provides a valid and feasible way of measuring residential urban environments. Comprehensive auditor training may be needed to guarantee good inter-rater agreement.
Health Policy | 2016
Marta Cimas; Pedro Gullón; Eva Aguilera; Stefan Meyer; José Manuel Freire; Beatriz Perez-Gomez
The economic crisis has prompted the debate on how to regulate health coverage of undocumented migrants in publicly funded healthcare systems. Spain, as one of the most heavily affected countries in Europe, can be considered a case of particular interest. In 2012 the Spanish Government issued a Royal Decree Law (RDL 16/2012) which revoked their previous full right to public healthcare coverage, now limited for some exceptions. However, the Spanish National Health System is highly decentralized, and this Central Government decree had to be implemented by the Regional Health Authorities. Our aim is to compare regional policies regarding entitlement to healthcare for undocumented migrants after RDL 16/2012 in the 17 Autonomous Regions by performing an exhaustive review of the regional health policy regulations published after the enactment of RDL 16/2012. Our analysis shows that many Regions adopted legal, legislative and administrative actions to void or limit its effects, while others applied it as intended, resulting in huge differences in healthcare coverage for irregular migrants among Spanish Regions. The unequal implementation of this Law constitutes a paradigmatic example of the complexity of nation-wide regulation of controversial key issues in decentralized health systems. In addition, our results highlight that within-country differences in access and/or entitlement can be as relevant as those reported among-country when there is healthcare decentralization.
Gaceta Sanitaria | 2014
Pedro Gullón; Usama Bilal; Manuel Franco
1. Real Decreto-Ley 16/2012, de 20 de abril, de medidas urgentes para garantizar la sostenibilidad del Sistema Nacional de Salud y mejorar la calidad y seguridad de sus prestaciones (24 abril 2012). 2. Cohen MS, Chen YQ, McCauley M, et al. Prevention of HIV-1 infection with early antiretroviral therapy. N Engl J Med. 2011;365:493–505. 3. Del Romero J, Castilla J, Hernando V, et al. Combined antiretroviral treatment and heterosexual transmission of HIV-1: cross sectional and prospective cohort study. BMJ. 2010;340:c2205. 4. Marks G, Crepaz N, Janssen RS. HIV transmission of HIV from persons aware and unaware that they are infected with the virus in the USA. AIDS. 2006;20: 1447–50. 5. Grupo EPI-VIH. Estudio prospectivo de prevalencia de VIH en personas atendidas en una red de centros de diagnóstico de VIH/ITS, 2000-2010. Madrid: Centro Nacional de Epidemiología; 2012. 6. Martínez Martínez-Colubi M. Presentadores tardíos en la infección por VIH en España: consecuencias médicas e impacto económico [tesis doctoral]. Madrid: Universidad Complutense de Madrid; 2012. 7. Instrucción de la Secretaría Autonómica de Sanidad por la que se informa de la puesta en marcha del Programa Valenciano de Protección de la Salud. Conselleria de Sanitat. Valencia, 31 julio 2013.
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health | 2018
Julia Díez; Pedro Gullón; María Sandín Vázquez; Belén Álvarez; María del Prado Martín; María Urtasun; Maite Gamarra; Joel Gittelsohn; Manuel Franco
There is an increasing research interest in targeting interventions at the neighborhood level to prevent obesity. Healthy urban environments require including residents’ perspectives to help understanding how urban environments relate to residents’ food choices and physical activity levels. We describe an innovative community-driven process aimed to develop environmental recommendations for obesity prevention. We conducted this study in a low-income area in Madrid (Spain), using a collaborative citizen science approach. First, 36 participants of two previous Photovoice projects translated their findings into policy recommendations, using an adapted logical framework approach. Second, the research team grouped these recommendations into strategies for obesity prevention, using the deductive analytical strategy of successive approximation. Third, through a nominal group session including participants, researchers, public health practitioners and local policy-makers, we discussed and prioritized the obesity prevention recommendations. Participants identified 12 policy recommendations related to their food choices and 18 related to their physical activity. The research team grouped these into 11 concrete recommendations for obesity prevention. The ‘top-three’ ranked recommendations were: (1) to adequate and increase the number of public open spaces; (2) to improve the access and cost of existing sports facilities and (3) to reduce the cost of gluten-free and diabetic products.
Gaceta Sanitaria | 2016
Pello Latasa; Christian Carlo Gil-Borrelli; José Antonio Aguilera; Laura Reques; Saúl Barreales; Elena Ojeda; Guadalupe Alemán; Carlos Iniesta; Pedro Gullón
OBJECTIVE The purpose of the Core Training Law (CTL) is to amend specialised medical training to include 24 months of common training. The aim of this study is to assess its potential impact on the Preventive Medicine and Public Health (PM&PH) training programme and other medical specialties. METHOD The programmes of the 21 common medical specialties were analysed and the recommended training periods for each specialty collected, before the information was agreed upon by three observers. The training impact was calculated as the percentage of months that should be amended per specialty to adapt to the common training schedule. RESULTS The Preventive Medicine and Public Health training programme is the specialty most affected by the Core Training Law (100%, 24 months). Intensive medicine (0%, 0 months) and medical oncology (17%, 4 months) is the least affected. CONCLUSIONS The CTL affects the common medical specialties in different ways and requires a complete reorganisation of the activities and competencies of PM&PH professionals.
BMC Medical Research Methodology | 2016
Usama Bilal; Julia Díez; Silvia Alfayate; Pedro Gullón; Isabel del Cura; Francisco Escobar; María Sandín; Manuel Franco
International Journal of Epidemiology | 2015
Víctor Carreño; Manuel Franco; Pedro Gullón
International Journal of Health Geographics | 2016
Alba Cebrecos; Julia Díez; Pedro Gullón; Usama Bilal; Manuel Franco; Francisco Escobar
International Journal of Health Geographics | 2017
Pedro Gullón; Usama Bilal; Alba Cebrecos; Hannah Badland; Iñaki Galán; Manuel Franco
Gaceta Sanitaria | 2018
Manuel Franco; Julia Díez; Pedro Gullón; Mario Margolles; Rafael Cofiño; Maribel Pasarín; Carme Borrell