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Changes in disease burden in Poland between 1990-2017 in comparison with other Central European countries: A systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2017.

Maria GańczakTomasz MiazgowskiMarta KożybkaArtur KotwasMarcin KorzeńBartosz RudnickiTomasz NogalCatalina Liliana AndreiMarcel AusloosMaciej BanachAlexandra BrazinovaMaria-Magdalena ConstantinEleonora DubljaninClaudiu HerteliuMihaela HostiucSorin HostiucMihajlo Michael JakovljevicJacek Jerzy JozwiakKatarzyna Kissimova-SkarbekZbigniew J KrólTomislav MestrovicBartosz MiazgowskiNeda Milevska KostovaMohsen NaghaviIonuț NegoiRuxandra Irina NegoiAdrian PanaSalvatore RubinoMario SekerijaRadoslaw SierpinskiLucjan SzponarRoman Topor-MadryIsidora S VujcicJustyna WideckaKatarzyna WideckaBogdan WojtyniakVesna ZadnikJacek A Kopec
Published in: PloS one (2020)
There was relatively little geographical variation in premature death and disability in CE in 2017, although some between-country differences existed. Health in Poland has been improving since 1990; in 2017 Poland outperformed CE as a whole for YLLs, YLDs, and DALYs. While the health gap between Poland and Western Europe has diminished, it remains substantial. The shift to NCDs and chronic disability, together with marked between-gender health inequalities, poses a challenge for the Polish health-care system. IHD is still the leading cause of disease burden in Poland, but DALYs from IHD are declining. To further reduce disease burden, an integrated response focused on NCDs and population groups with disproportionally high burden is needed.
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