A/H1N1 influenza persists as an important public health problem, mainly due to high morbidity and hospitalization rates. It is important to identify patients with A/H1N1 influenza and clinical situations with higher risk of complications. Through this study, it is possible to analyze the characteristics of pediatric patients with A/H1N1 influenza and mainly to emphasize assistance of populations with comorbidities, since they present higher rates of complications and death.
Background
Fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) is a disorder caused by alterations in embryo‐fetal development due to prenatal alcohol exposure. It is estimated that between 0.5 and 2 per 1,000 individuals are born with FAS every year. In Brazil, there are few studies addressing the extent of the problem of FAS/fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD); these studies are confined to limited geographic areas. Therefore, we decided to perform a health needs assessment for FAS/FASD in Brazil.
Methods
To estimate the prevalence of FAS and FASD in Brazil, we used information from the literature, which estimates between 0.5 and 2/1,000 births per year for FAS and 10 to 50/1,000 for FASD.
Results
We estimated that approximately 1,500 to 6,000 children are born with FAS every year. Considering the whole population, the prevalence would be 95,377 to 380,000 affected people. However, when we consider FASD as a whole, we estimate that between 1,900,000 and 9,500,000 Brazilians might suffer the more severe consequences of alcohol exposure during pregnancy and be living with FASD.
Conclusion
The results of the current study indicate that FAS and FASD are prevalent disorders in Brazil, and more policies targeting alcohol intake during pregnancy must be developed.
In 1990, the first Teratogen Information Service in Brazil (SIAT) was implemented
in the Medical Genetics Service at Hospital de Clinicas de Porto Alegre. SIAT is
a free-to-use information service both to health professionals and the general
population, especially to women who are pregnant or planning pregnancy. The main
objective of this paper is to present the activities of SIAT in its initial
years (1990-2006), compared to those in the last decade (2007-2017). In addition
we review the scientific contribution of SIAT in the field of human
teratogenesis. Since 1990, SIAT received 10,533 calls. Use of medications were
the main reason for concern, accounting for 74% of all questions, followed by
other chemical exposures (occupational, cosmetics, environmental), and maternal
infectious diseases. Among its main contributions to scientific knowledge was
the collaboration for the identification of two new human teratogens:
misoprostol in the 1990s and Zika virus in 2015/16. In conclusion, SIAT is still
evolving, as is the Medical Genetics Service that hosts it. Through its 27 years
of existence more than 300 undergraduate and graduate students have rotated at
SIAT. Presently, SIAT is expanding the research to experimental teratogenesis
and to investigation of molecular mechanisms of teratogens.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.