S. Deguen
EHESP
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Featured researches published by S. Deguen.
Social Science & Medicine | 2008
S Havard; S. Deguen; Julie Bodin; Karine Louis; Olivier Laurent; Denis Bard
In the absence of individual data, ecological or contextual measures of socioeconomic level are frequently used to describe social inequalities in health. This work focuses on the methodological aspects of the development and validation of a French small-area index of socioeconomic deprivation and its application to the evaluation of the socioeconomic differentials in health outcomes. This index was derived from a principal component analysis of 1999 national census data from the Strasbourg metropolitan area in eastern France, at the census block level. Composed of 19 variables that reflect the multiple aspects of socioeconomic status (income, employment, housing, family and household, and educational level), it can discriminate disadvantaged urban centres from more privileged rural and suburban areas. Several statistical tests (Cronbachs alpha coefficient, convergent validity tests with other deprivation indices from the literature) provided internal and external validation. Its successful application to another French metropolitan area (Lille, in northern France) confirmed its transposability. Finally, its capacity to capture the social inequalities in health when applied to myocardial infarction data shows its potential value. This study thus provides a new tool in French public health research for characterising neighbourhood deprivation and detecting socioeconomic disparities in the distribution of health outcomes at the small-area level.
International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health | 2011
Pierre Le Cann; Nathalie Bonvallot; Philippe Glorennec; S. Deguen; Christophe Goeury; Barbara Le Bot
Much research is being carried out into indoor exposure to harmful agents. This review focused on the impact on childrens health, taking a broad approach to the indoor environment and including chemical, microbial, physical and social aspects. Papers published from 2006 onwards were reviewed, with regards to scientific context. Most of publications dealt with chemical exposure. Apart from the ongoing issue of combustion by-products, most of these papers concerned semi volatile organic compounds (such as phthalates). These may be associated with neurotoxic, reprotoxic or respiratory effects and may, therefore, be of particular interest so far as children are concerned. In a lesser extent, volatile organic compounds (such as aldehydes) that have mainly respiratory effects are still studied. Assessing exposure to metals is still of concern, with increasing interest in bioaccessibility. Most of the papers on microbial exposure focused on respiratory tract infections, especially asthma linked to allergens and bio-aerosols. Physical exposure includes noise and electromagnetic fields, and articles dealt with the auditory and non auditory effects of noise. Articles on radiofrequency electromagnetic fields mainly concerned questions about non-thermal effects and papers on extremely low-frequency magnetic fields focused on the characterization of exposure. The impact of the indoor environment on childrens health cannot be assessed merely by considering the effect of these different types of exposure: this review highlights new findings and also discusses the interactions between agents in indoor environments and also with social aspects.
American Journal of Epidemiology | 2008
Olivier Laurent; Gaëlle Pédrono; Claire Segala; Laurent Filleul; S Havard; S. Deguen; Charles Schillinger; Emmanuel Rivière; Denis Bard
With few exceptions, studies of short-term health effects of air pollution use pollutant concentrations that are averaged citywide as exposure indicators. They are thus prone to exposure misclassification and consequently to bias. Measurement of the relations between air pollution and health, generally and in specific populations, could be improved by employing more geographically precise exposure estimates. The authors investigated short-term relations between ambient air pollution estimated in small geographic areas (French census blocks) and asthma attacks in Strasbourg, France, in 2000-2005--in the general population and in populations with contrasting levels of socioeconomic deprivation. Emergency health-care networks provided data on 4,683 telephone calls made for asthma attacks. Deprivation was estimated using a block-level index constructed from census data. Hourly concentrations of particulate matter less than 10 microm in aerodynamic diameter (PM(10)), sulfur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide, and ozone were modeled by block with ADMS-Urban software. Adjusted case-crossover analyses showed that asthma calls were positively but not significantly associated with PM(10) (for a 10-microg x m(-3) increase, odds ratio (OR) = 1.035, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.997, 1.075), sulfur dioxide (OR = 1.056, 95% CI: 0.979, 1.139), and nitrogen dioxide (OR = 1.025, 95% CI: 0.990, 1.062). No association was observed for ozone (OR = 0.998, 95% CI: 0.965, 1.032). Socioeconomic deprivation had no significant influence on these relations.
European Journal of Public Health | 2010
S. Deguen; Denis Zmirou-Navier
Trends in Analytical Chemistry | 2011
Y. Oulhote; B. Le Bot; S. Deguen; Philippe Glorennec
Epidemiology | 2006
Olivier Laurent; Claire Segala; Emmanuel Rivière; Charles Schillinger; Laurence Rouil; S. Deguen; S Havard; Laurent Filleul; Denis Bard
Revue D Epidemiologie Et De Sante Publique | 2016
C. Padilla; W. Kihal-Talantikit; S. Perez; S. Deguen
Revue D Epidemiologie Et De Sante Publique | 2008
G. Rougier; S. Deguen; G. Pédrono; C. Ségala
Revue D Epidemiologie Et De Sante Publique | 2008
C. Ségala; S. Deguen; G. Pédrono; Mounir Mesbah; I. Perrin
Revue D Epidemiologie Et De Sante Publique | 2008
Denis Bard; Olivier Laurent; S Havard; S. Deguen; G. Pedrono; C. Segala; C. Schillinger; E. Riviere; Dominique Arveiler; Laurent Filleul; Daniel Eilstein; W. Kihal