Das Gesundheitswesen
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Das Gesundheitswesen · Jun 2020
Review[Quarantine Alone or in Combination with Other Public Health Measures to Control COVID-19: A Rapid Review (Review)].
COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) is a new, rapidly emerging zoonotic infectious disease, that was reported to the World Health Organization for the first time on 31 December 2019. Currently, no effective pharmacological interventions or vaccines are available to treat or prevent COVID-19, therefore nonpharmacological public health measures are more in focus. ⋯ Our confidence in the evidence is very limited. This is mainly because the COVID-19 studies based their models on the limited data that have been available in the early weeks of the pandemic and made different assumptions about the virus. The studies of SARS and MERS are not completely generalizable to COVID-19. Despite only having limited evidence, all the studies found quarantine to be important for controlling the spread of severe coronavirus diseases. Looking to the coming months, in order to maintain the best possible balance of measures, decision makers must continue to constantly monitor the outbreak situation and the impact of the measures they implement.
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Das Gesundheitswesen · Mar 2017
Review[Identification of Good-Practice Projects in Promoting Physical Activity - Methods, Pitfalls and Sampled Outcomes].
The aim of this paper is to identify and show examples of good practice of public health promotion. For this, uniform quality criteria were worked out under consideration of national and international scientific literature. For the identification of examples of good practice, a comparison of different quality criteria was carried out and combined with each other in a first step. ⋯ The analysis reports a lack of "Good-Practice" examples. Deficits lie mainly in documentation and sustainability. Because of incomplete documentation, an assessment as a "Good-Practice" example is only possible to a limited extent; a lot of information, particularly in the evaluation, is missing.
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Das Gesundheitswesen · Mar 2017
Review[German National Physical Activity Recommendations for Adults and Older Adults: Methods, Database and Rationale].
National physical activity recommendations are regarded as crucial elements of comprehensive physical activity promotion strategies. To date, Germany has no such national physical activity recommendations. The aim of this study was to provide physical activity recommendations based on a comprehensive summary of scientific evidence on the relationships between physical activity and a range of health outcomes in adults and older adults. ⋯ Adults and older adults should avoid long periods of sitting and should break up sitting time by physical activity. Physical activity can lead to adverse events, such as musculoskeletal injuries, which can be mitigated through appropriate measures. All in all, the benefits of regular physical activity overweigh by far the risks in both adults and older adults.
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Das Gesundheitswesen · Mar 2017
Review[German National Physical Activity Recommendations for Adults and Older Adults: Methods, Database and Rationale].
National physical activity recommendations are regarded as crucial elements of comprehensive physical activity promotion strategies. To date, Germany has no such national physical activity recommendations. The aim of this study was to provide physical activity recommendations based on a comprehensive summary of scientific evidence on the relationships between physical activity and a range of health outcomes in adults and older adults. ⋯ Adults and older adults should avoid long periods of sitting and should break up sitting time by physical activity. Physical activity can lead to adverse events, such as musculoskeletal injuries, which can be mitigated through appropriate measures. All in all, the benefits of regular physical activity overweigh by far the risks in both adults and older adults.
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Das Gesundheitswesen · Mar 2017
Review[Background and Methodology of the Development of German Physical Activity Guidelines].
This paper describes the process used to develop the physical activity guidelines for German children and adolescents (0-17 years), adults (18-64 years), older adults ≥65 years and adults with chronic diseases. The German physical activity guidelines were developed by an interdisciplinary working group based on existing guidelines using a 3-phased process. Phase 1: Systematic literature searches for current physical activity guidelines; expert consultation-based development of quality criteria. ⋯ We identified 66 guidelines scoring ≥60% of the possible rating points in domain A and B as high-quality "source-guidelines" (children and adolescents n=4, adults=16, older adults n=9, 7 chronic diseases n=37). Source-guidelines constitute the database for the development of the German physical activity guidelines. The national physical activity guidelines for children and adolescents, adults, older adults and persons with chronic diseases serve as an evidence-based and quality-controlled basis for physical activity promotion in Germany.