The epidemiology and socioeconomic impact of chronic pancreatitis
The epidemiology and socioeconomic impact of chronic pancreatitis
Epidemiological studies have been published worldwide in recent decades describing the incidence, mortality, aetiology and trends of chronic pancreatitis. Accumulated evidence suggests that chronic pancreatitis is increasing in incidence and hospital admission rates are rising accordingly. Alcoholic chronic pancreatitis was previously more common in the developed world than elsewhere, but is now increasing worldwide due to growing per capita alcohol consumption in each nation. Supporting alcohol and smoking cessation in individual patients is essential to slow disease progression and improve overall health, as most patients will die of cirrhosis, cardiovascular disease or smoking related cancers rather than chronic pancreatitis. The socioeconomic impact of chronic pancreatitis is difficult to quantify as little data exists, however given the rising incidence the costs to health care and society are likely to increase. This chapter will describe the epidemiology and aetiology of chronic pancreatitis worldwide and discusses the factors that influence its socioeconomic impact.
chronic pancreatitis, epidemiology, incidence, prevalence, mortality, aetiology, risk factors, health care costs, hospital admissions, time trends, socioeconomic factors
219-231
Jupp, James
3a76c4fe-18d3-4c65-91c2-5258a7b0c183
Fine, David
ce3d6a77-040e-4aec-a8f5-4c4c22431605
Johnson, Colin D.
e50aa9cd-8c61-4fe3-a0b3-f51cc3a6c74a
June 2010
Jupp, James
3a76c4fe-18d3-4c65-91c2-5258a7b0c183
Fine, David
ce3d6a77-040e-4aec-a8f5-4c4c22431605
Johnson, Colin D.
e50aa9cd-8c61-4fe3-a0b3-f51cc3a6c74a
Jupp, James, Fine, David and Johnson, Colin D.
(2010)
The epidemiology and socioeconomic impact of chronic pancreatitis.
Best Practice & Research: Clinical Gastroenterology, 24 (3), .
(doi:10.1016/j.bpg.2010.03.005).
(PMID:20510824)
Abstract
Epidemiological studies have been published worldwide in recent decades describing the incidence, mortality, aetiology and trends of chronic pancreatitis. Accumulated evidence suggests that chronic pancreatitis is increasing in incidence and hospital admission rates are rising accordingly. Alcoholic chronic pancreatitis was previously more common in the developed world than elsewhere, but is now increasing worldwide due to growing per capita alcohol consumption in each nation. Supporting alcohol and smoking cessation in individual patients is essential to slow disease progression and improve overall health, as most patients will die of cirrhosis, cardiovascular disease or smoking related cancers rather than chronic pancreatitis. The socioeconomic impact of chronic pancreatitis is difficult to quantify as little data exists, however given the rising incidence the costs to health care and society are likely to increase. This chapter will describe the epidemiology and aetiology of chronic pancreatitis worldwide and discusses the factors that influence its socioeconomic impact.
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Published date: June 2010
Keywords:
chronic pancreatitis, epidemiology, incidence, prevalence, mortality, aetiology, risk factors, health care costs, hospital admissions, time trends, socioeconomic factors
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Local EPrints ID: 172551
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/172551
ISSN: 1521-6918
PURE UUID: 7bf0a938-dc3f-4004-9e56-849bd33fff90
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Date deposited: 27 Jan 2011 09:50
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:29
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Author:
James Jupp
Author:
David Fine
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