GABRIEL ANDREUCCETTI

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
12
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
LIM/40 - Laboratório de Imunohematologia e Hematologia Forense, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina

Resultados de Busca

Agora exibindo 1 - 2 de 2
  • article 1 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    The Effects of Acute Cannabis Use on Nontraffic Injury Risk: Reviewing the Available Literature and Identifying Ways Forward
    (2017) ANDREUCCETTI, G.; YE, Y.; KANG, J.; KORCHA, R.; WITBRODT, J. A.; CARVALHO, H. B.; CHERPITEL, C. J.
    Recent evidence has indicated that cannabis use before driving is associated with a modest but increased risk for traffic-related injuries. However, the question of whether recent cannabis use is associated with a greater risk for other types of injuries remains unanswered. Aiming to better understand how acute cannabis use might affect the risk for all causes of injury, we have summarized the limited data available in the literature on the risk of nontraffic injuries associated with recent cannabis use. Very few studies were able to provide estimate risks for all injuries or injuries other than those related to road traffic injuries, with the limited evidence available showing mixed findings. The only significant risk found (in only one study) suggests an inverse association between all injuries and cannabis use. Study designs are limited, and the majority of studies have neither data on acute cannabis use among injured individuals nor a valid control group for estimating injury risk attributable to cannabis. In conclusion, studies of the association between cannabis and nontraffic injuries present several limitations, particularly regarding sampling strategies, injury risk assessment for different causes of injury, and a dose–response risk relationship with injury. Further studies, incorporating better design for different causes of injury and drug testing, are required to reach firmer conclusions on the association between cannabis use and nontraffic injury risk. © 2017, © The Author(s) 2017.
  • article 12 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Development of the International Alcohol Policy and Injury Index
    (2018) KORCHA, Rachael A.; WITBRODT, Jane; CHERPITEL, Cheryl J.; YE, Yu; ANDREUCCETTI, Gabriel; KANG, Jaewook; MONTEIRO, Maristela
    Objective. To develop a new index to measure the effectiveness of alcohol control policies on selected indicators of alcohol-related injuries. Methods. We used the World Health Organization Global Information System on Alcohol and Health (GISAH) for cross-sectional data from 156 countries for this analysis. Five policy domains were selected: physical availability, drinking context, pricing, advertising, and vehicular. Injury mortality and alcohol-attributable fractions (AAFs) for vehicular deaths were also used for the same countries. We created a new composite indicator, the International Alcohol Policy Injury Index (IAPII), in order to assess the association between policy and deaths due to alcohol-related injury. Results. After we controlled for per-capita alcohol consumption, we found that injury deaths and AAF deaths were inversely associated with four of the five policy domains. The domains were weighted according to effectiveness and used to construct the IAPII, which produced acceptable sensitivity and specificity. Regression results, controlling for consumption, demonstrated that the IAPII was significantly associated with AAF vehicular injury death for males, AAF vehicular injury death for females, and overall injury death at p < 0.01. Conclusions. Our findings support the IAPII as a reliable indicator of the relationship between alcohol policies and injury deaths: the stronger the policy, the less the likelihood of both overall and vehicular injury death. Future work should test the effectiveness of the IAPII in reducing alcohol-related injury morbidity, which accounts for a larger share of the global burden of disease than alcohol-related injury mortality does.