The PERSIAN Cohort: Providing the Evidence Needed for Healthcare Reform.

Sareh Eghtesad(Tehran University of Medical Sciences), Zahra Mohammadi(Tehran University of Medical Sciences), Amaneh Shayanrad(Tehran University of Medical Sciences), Elnaz Faramarzi(Tabriz University of Medical Sciences), Farahnaz Joukar(Guilan University of Medical Sciences), Behrooz Hamzeh(Kermanshah University of Medical Sciences), Mojtaba Farjam(Fasa University of Medical Sciences), Mohammad Javad Zare Sakhvidi(Shahid Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences and Health Services), Mohammadreza Miri-Monjar(Zahedan University of Medical Sciences), Mahmood Moosazadeh(Mazandaran University of Medical Sciences), Hamid Hakimi(Rafsanjan University of Medical Sciences), Salar Rahimi Kazerooni(Shiraz University of Medical Sciences), Bahman Cheraghian(Ahvaz Jundishapur University of Medical Sciences), Ali Ahmadi(Shahrekord University of Medical Sciences), Azim Nejatizadeh(Hormozgan University of Medical Sciences), Iraj Mohebbi(Urmia University), Farhad Pourfarzi(Ardabil University of Medical Sciences), Farzin Roozafzai(Tehran University of Medical Sciences), Nazgol Motamed-Gorji(Tehran University of Medical Sciences), Seyed Ali Montazeri(Tehran University of Medical Sciences), Sahar Masoudi(Tehran University of Medical Sciences), Masoumeh Amin‐Esmaeili(Tehran University of Medical Sciences), Navid Danaie(Semnan University of Medical Sciences), Seyed Reza Mirhafez(University of Neyshabur), Hassan Hashemi(Farabi Hospital), Hossein Poustchi(Tehran University of Medical Sciences), Reza Malekzadeh(Tehran University of Medical Sciences)
PubMed
November 1, 2017
Cited by 167

Abstract

In the past, communicable diseases caused the highest mortality in Iran. Improvements in socioeconomic status and living standards including access to safe drinking water, along with the inception of Health Houses in the 1980s, have changed disease patterns, decreasing the spread of and deaths from infectious and communicable diseases. The incidence and prevalence of non-communicable diseases (NCD), however, have now increased in Iran, accounting for nearly 80% of deaths and disabilities. Without interventions, NCD are predicted to impose a substantial human and economic burden in the next 2 decades. However, Iran's health system is not equipped with the necessary policies to combat this growth and must refocus and reform. Therefore, in the year 2013, the Ministry of Health and Medical Education funded a well-designed nationwide cohort study-Prospective Epidemiological Research Studies in IrAN (PERSIAN)-in order to assess the burden of NCD and investigate the risk factors associated with them in the different ethnicities and geographical areas of Iran. The PERSIAN Cohort, which aims to include 200000 participants, has 4 components: Adult (main), Birth, Youth and Elderly, which are being carried out in 22 different regions of Iran. Having an enormous dataset along with a biobank of blood, urine, hair and nail samples, the PERSIAN Cohort will serve as an important infrastructure for future implementation research and will provide the evidence needed for new healthcare policies in order to better control, manage and prevent NCD.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis