Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Yves Coppieters is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Yves Coppieters.


BMC Public Health | 2005

A prospective study of cumulative job stress in relation to mental health

Isabelle Godin; Yves Coppieters; Johannes Siegrist

BackgroundThis study tests associations between psychosocial stress at work measured by the effort-reward imbalance model in a dynamic perspective, and multiple indicators of poor mental health, in a prospective design.Methods1986 male and female employees from four Belgian enterprises were followed-up over one year within the framework of the Somstress study. Based on two consecutive measurements, an index of cumulative job stress was constructed and its associations with five indicators of mental health were studied, excluding caseness at entry (for depression, anxiety, somatisation, chronic fatigue and psychotropic drug consumption respectively). Taking into account the longitudinal design, four categories of job stress are defined: 1) employees free from stress at both measures, 2) job stress present at first measure but not at the second one, 3) recent onset of job stress as evidenced by second measure 4) workers exposed to stress at both measures. Multivariate logistic regression with appropriate adjustments was applied.ResultsIn bivariate analysis, a clear graded association of cumulative job stress with all five mental health indicators is observed, both in men and women. In multivariate logistic regression analysis, recent onset of stress is strongly associated with poor mental health among men (odds ratios ranging from 1.8 to 4.6), while cumulative stress shows strongest effects on mental health in women (odds ratios ranging from 1.4 to 7.1).ConclusionCumulative experience and recent onset of job stress in terms of high effort spent and low reward received is associated with elevated risk of all five indicators of poor mental health at follow-up in a large cohort of employees.


European Journal of Epidemiology | 2004

Is obesity associated with injuries among young people

Christine Bazelmans; Yves Coppieters; Isabelle Godin; Florence Parent; Luc Berghmans; Michèle Dramaix; Alain Levêque

Objectives: To look at the relationship between obesity and trauma among young people in the Hainaut Province in Belgium. Design: A cross-sectional study (questionnaire and physical examination) was conduced among a sample of 2363 children of 9- to 17-year-olds (n = 2363) in 1998. Results: In the past 12 months prior to the survey, 37% of the sample had at least one injury requiring treatment (with or without hospitalization), and 5% had a severe injury (with at least one night at the hospital). More than 15% were classified to be obese according to the WHO definition. We observed a significantly higher frequency of injury in obese people, in boys, in subjects playing sport intensively, with members of a sports club and in those reporting more than one physical activity per week. In multivariate analysis for injury, gender, physical activity, playing sport in a club and obesity were significant. For severe injuries, only gender and physical activity remained significant in the multivariate analysis. Conclusion: Our analysis shows that childhood obesity and physical activity increase the occurrence of injuries. However, we did not observe an association between obesity and severe injuries. Obesity as a risk factor for the occurrence of injuries has to be confirmed by other studies, and the understanding of the mechanism for the observed association needs more investigation.


Vaccine | 2001

Analysis of factors influencing vaccine uptake: perspectives from Belgium

Béatrice Swennen; P. Van Damme; Akke Vellinga; Yves Coppieters; Am Depoorter

METHODS AND OBJECTIVES To estimate the infant vaccination coverage in Belgium, a random cluster sample according to the expanded program on immunization (EPI) cluster sampling technique was performed in 1999 in the Flemish (Flanders) and French (Wallonia) speaking community of Belgium. The objective was to document the infant vaccination coverage retrospectively in 18-24-month-old children. In addition, the study offered the opportunity to assess some factors influencing vaccine uptake in infants. RESULTS In the Flemish community infant vaccination coverage could not be associated with any of the socio-demographic factors, with two exceptions: the province (county) and the hepatitis B (HepB) vaccination. The main reason for not complying with the vaccination schedule was mainly carelessness on either parents or physicians side. In the French speaking community parents feel mostly themselves responsible for the non-vaccination or incomplete vaccination of their child, except for pertussis. For all vaccines, the attitude of the physician is mentioned as being very influential in the decision to vaccinate a child. Most of the socio-demographic factors showed no association with the infant vaccination coverage. CONCLUSION The surveys in Flanders and Wallonia stress the importance of having information made available, and underline the role parents as well as physicians (and nurses) play in the infant immunization coverage.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2012

Gender differences in acute myocardial infarction, twenty-five years registration.

Yves Coppieters; Philippe Collart; Alain Levêque

BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES The French-speaking Community of Belgium has set up a register of ischaemic cardiopathies (1983-2007). The aim consists in analyzing the evolution of fatal and non-fatal acute coronary events rates as well as the 28 days case fatality on a 25-year period and examine sex differences in lethality. METHODS This register assures a standardized procedure according to the MONICA criteria. For each period, we present attack rates and trends analysis. Hospital lethality takes again in-patients and community lethality is calculated starting from all the cases. RESULTS The total attack rate is rather stable between 1983 and 2007 for women (from 12 to 19 per 10,000 residents). For men, there is a distinct decline of the total attack rate since 1991 till 1993 (63 to 43 per 10,000 residents). We systematically observe a reduction in risk between men and women according to the age. For each 5-year period, this risk decreases significantly with age and this difference is strongest during the periods 1993-1997 and 1998-2002. The analysis shows also a significant decline in lethality between the 1983-1987 and 1993-1997 periods. Among women, lethality is systematically higher than in men in spite of the presence or the absence of antecedents of myocardial infarction. CONCLUSIONS Favourable evolutions in the attack rates of acute coronary events in the study population appear clearly on the 25-year period of observation. The whole lethality rates decreased during the first 15 years of the register; after that, it stabilized.


Health Research Policy and Systems | 2005

Analysis of adequacy levels for human resources improvement within primary health care framework in Africa

Florence Parent; Audrey Fromageot; Yves Coppieters; Colette Lejeune; Dominique Lemenu; Michèle Garant; Danielle Piette; Alain Levêque; Jean-Marie De Ketele

Human resources in health care system in sub-Saharan Africa are generally picturing a lack of adequacy between expected skills from the professionals and health care needs expressed by the populations. It is, however, possible to analyse these various lacks of adequacy related to human resource management and their determinants to enhance the effectiveness of the health care system. From two projects focused on nurse professionals within the health care system in Central Africa, we present an analytic grid for adequacy levels looking into the following aspects:- adequacy between skills-based profiles for health system professionals, quality of care and service delivery (health care system /medical standards), needs and expectations from the populations,- adequacy between allocation of health system professionals, quality of care and services delivered (health care system /medical standards), needs and expectations from the populations,- adequacy between human resource management within health care system and medical standards,- adequacy between human resource management within education/teaching/training and needs from health care system and education sectors,- adequacy between basic and on-going education and realities of tasks expected and implemented by different categories of professionals within the health care system body,- adequacy between intentions for initial and on-going trainings and teaching programs in health sciences for trainers (teachers/supervisors/health care system professionals/ directors (teaching managers) of schools...).This tool is necessary for decision-makers as well as for health care system professionals who share common objectives for changes at each level of intervention within the health system. Setting this adequacy implies interdisciplinary and participative approaches for concerned actors in order to provide an overall vision of a more broaden system than health district, small island with self-rationality, and in which they operate.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2016

Air pollution and ST-elevation myocardial infarction: A case-crossover study of the Belgian STEMI registry 2009–2013

Jean-François Argacha; Philippe Collart; A. Wauters; Peter Kayaert; S. Lochy; D. Schoors; J. Sonck; T. de Vos; M. Forton; O. Brasseur; Christophe Beauloye; S. Gevaert; Patrick Evrard; Yves Coppieters; Peter Sinnaeve; Marc J. Claeys

BACKGROUND Previous studies have shown that air pollution particulate matter (PM) is associated with an increased risk for myocardial infarction. The effects of air pollution on the risk of ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), in particular the role of gaseous air pollutants such as NO2 and O3 and the susceptibility of specific populations, are still under debate. METHODS All patients entered in the Belgian prospective STEMI registry between 2009 and 2013 were included. Based on a validated spatial interpolation model from the Belgian Environment Agency, a national index was used to address the background level of air pollution exposure of Belgian population. A time-stratified and temperature-matched case-crossover analysis of the risk of STEMI was performed. RESULTS A total of 11,428 STEMI patients were included in the study. Each 10μg/m3 increase in PM10, PM2.5 and NO2 was associated with an increased odds ratio (ORs) of STEMI of 1.026 (CI 95%: 1.005-1.048), 1.028 (CI 95%: 1.003-1.054) and 1.051 (CI 95%: 1.018-1.084), respectively. No effect of O3 was found. STEMI was associated with PM10 exposure in patients ≥75y.o. (OR: 1.046, CI 95%: 1.002-1.092) and with NO2 in patients ≤54y.o. (OR: 1.071, CI 95%: 1.010-1.136). No effect of air pollution on cardiac arrest or in-hospital STEMI mortality was found. CONCLUSION PM2.5 and NO2 exposures incrementally increase the risk of STEMI. The risk related to PM appears to be greater in the elderly, while younger patients appear to be more susceptible to NO2 exposure.


Human Resources for Health | 2004

A model for analysis, systemic planning and strategic synthesis for health science teaching in the Democratic Republic of the Congo: a vision for action

Florence Parent; Gérard Kahombo; Josué Bapitani; Michèle Garant; Yves Coppieters; Alain Levêque; Danielle Piette

BackgroundThe problem of training human resources in health is a real concern in public health in Central Africa. What can be changed in order to train more competent health professionals? This is of utmost importance in primary health care.MethodsTaking into account the level of training of secondary-level nurses in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), a systemic approach, based on the PRECEDE PROCEED model of analysis, led to a better understanding of the educational determinants and of the factors favourable to a better match between training in health sciences and the expected competences of the health professionals. This article must be read on two complementary levels: one reading, focused on the methodological process, should allow our findings to be transferred to other problems (adaptation of a health promotion model to the educational sphere). The other reading, revolving around the specific theme and results, should provide a frame of reference and specific avenues for action to improve human resources in the health field (using the results of its application in health science teaching in the DRC).ResultsThe results show that it is important to start this training with a global and integrated approach shared by all the actors. The strategies of action entail the need for an approach taking into account all the aspects, i.e. sociological, educational, medical and public health.ConclusionsThe analysis of the results shows that one cannot bring any change without integrated strategies of action and a multidisciplinary approach that includes all the complex determinants of health behaviour, and to do it within the organization of local structures and institutions in the ministry of health in the DRC.


American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2014

Day-of-the-week variations in myocardial infarction onset over a 27-year period: the importance of age and other risk factors.

Philippe Collart; Yves Coppieters; Isabelle Godin; Alain Levêque

INTRODUCTION The aim of this study was to analyze the day-of-the-week variations of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) over a 27-year period. The effects of sex, age, history of AMI, hypertension, fatality, and temporal changes over the 27-year period were also investigated. METHODS The Charleroi register of ischemic cardiopathies is the oldest register of infarctions in the French-speaking community of Belgium and is one of the very rare registers that can track trends over 27 years. The analyses presented in our study relate only to patients in the 25- to 69-year age range over time from 1983 to 2009. The χ2 test for goodness of fit was used to test the difference among the frequencies of AMI events over 7 days during the week. RESULTS Data from 9732 cases of AMI were analyzed. Overall, there was a significant day-of-the-week variation (P<.001), with an excess of AMI observed on Mondays (n=1495) and a minimum on Saturdays (n=1259), corresponding to a relative increase in AMI of 18.2% over the 2 days. The Monday peak is more pronounced for the 35- to 44-year (P=.045) age bracket than for the 45- to 54-year (P=.27) and the 55- to 64-year (P=.032) brackets. The cases with (n=2713) and without (n=4931) arterial hypertension exhibited the same day-of-the-week variation. In contrast, the cases with antecedent AMI (n=1888) exhibited a less pronounced excess of MI incidence on Mondays compared with the cases without antecedent (n=5970). CONCLUSIONS The present study demonstrates that there is a marked incidence peak in AMI on Mondays. This peak is similar for men and women but varies according to age. The Monday peak is not observed in subjects previously admitted for AMI or in fatal cases. The organization of the emergency medical services could take into account the day-of-the-week pattern of AMI to adapt emergency medical service capacity to needs.


International Journal of Environmental Health Research | 2015

Comparison of four case-crossover study designs to analyze the association between air pollution exposure and acute myocardial infarction

Philippe Collart; Yves Coppieters; Gwennaelle Mercier; Victoria Massamba Kubuta; Alain Levêque

The case-crossover design is frequently used for analyzing the acute health effects of air pollution. Nevertheless, only a few studies compared different methods for selecting control periods. In this study, the bidirectional method and three time-stratified methods were used to estimate the association between air pollution and acute myocardial infarction (AMI) in Charleroi, Belgium, during 1999–2008. The strongest associations between air pollution and AMI were observed for PM10 and NO2 during the warm period, OR = 1.095 (95 % CI: 1.003–1.169) and OR = 1.120 (95 % CI: 1.001–1.255), respectively. The results of this study reinforce the evidence of the acute effects of air pollution on AMI, especially during the warm season. This study suggests that the different methods of case-crossover study design are suitable to studying the association between acute events and air pollution. The temperature-stratified design is useful to exclude temperature as a potential confounder.


European Journal of Preventive Cardiology | 2012

Trends in acute myocardial infarction treatment between 1998 and 2007 in a Belgian area (Charleroi)

Philippe Collart; Yves Coppieters; Alain Levêque

Background/objectives: To describe the evolution of the therapeutic practices over 10 years of follow-up of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) in Charleroi and to analyse the factors influencing the choice of treatments and the mortality of these patients. Methods: The Charleroi register of ischaemic cardiopathies is the oldest register of infarctions in the French-speaking community of Belgium and is one of the very rare registers that allows identifying tendencies over 25 years. Analyses presented hereafter relate only patients in the 25–69-year age range over time from 1998 to 2007. The data were analysed in five periods of 2 years. Treatment evolutions over time were analysed using chi-squared tests for trend and logistic regression analyses identify factors influencing the type of treatment. Results: The present study shows a marked increase in the utilization of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) between 1998–1999 and 2006–2007. The use of thrombolytic agents on approximately one-third of the patients treated remained fairly stable between 1998 and 2007. A lower proportion of patients with a history of AMI received thrombolytic agents. Thrombolysis seems beneficial for men and without effect for women. The use of β-blockers continued to increase until the 2000–2001 period and remained fairly stable for the two following periods. 42% of patients were administered three medications (angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, antiplatelet drugs, and β-blockers). Association of PTCA with antiplatelet drugs, β-blockers, and thrombolysis was observed for 58.7, 50.6, and 25.7%, respectively. These associations were still observed after adjustment for gender, age, and comorbidity. The factors associated with fatality were specifically old-aged patients, antecedents of diabetes, hypercholesterolaemia and oral antiplatelet drugs, and β-blockers therapies and PTCA. Conclusions: The evolution of the therapeutic data on AMI in this register confirms the use and the efficacy of thrombolytic therapy. PTCA becomes the main coronary reperfusion treatment with less risk of bleeding. Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors were without effect on mortality.

Collaboration


Dive into the Yves Coppieters's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alain Levêque

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Florence Parent

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Danielle Piette

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Philippe Collart

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Isabelle Godin

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Anne Ingenbleek

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lies Lammens

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Patrick Deboosere

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Colette Lejeune

École Normale Supérieure

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge