It’s our greatest pleasure to welcome you to the “3rd International Conference on Chronic Diseases” scheduled to be held during May 20-21, 2019 at London, UK aims at bringing pioneers from Chronic Diseases for new ideas and practical development experiences which concentrate on both theory and practices.
The Theme of the conference is around, “Prevent Diseases and Promote Health”
For more information, mail us at chronicdiseases@pulsusevents.org
This document discusses non-communicable diseases (NCDs) in Somalia. It provides background on NCDs globally and in Africa, noting they account for over half of deaths worldwide and their treatment is expensive. The document then discusses the problem of NCDs in Somalia, where cardiovascular diseases and diabetes are increasing causes of death. The rationale for the study is described, focusing on identifying risk factors like lifestyle and diet that contribute to NCDs. The objectives are to assess NCD prevalence, risk factors, and their distribution in Somalia. Research questions and hypotheses relate to links between behaviors like smoking/inactivity and NCD risk.
Delay in a seeking care among tuberculosis patients attending tuberculosis cl...said warsame
This document appears to be a thesis submitted for a bachelor's degree in public health focusing on delays in seeking care among tuberculosis patients in Yaqshid district, Mogadishu, Somalia. It includes an abstract stating that a cross-sectional study of 80 TB patients found that the majority (70%) had delays over 30 days in seeking care from symptom onset. Most delays were due to lack of knowledge about TB causes, transmission and treatment. The thesis will analyze sociocultural factors associated with treatment delays and their implications for TB prevention and control efforts.
The document discusses the WHO PEN (Package of Essential NCD Interventions) for primary health care. The PEN aims to establish policies and plans for preventing and controlling noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) like cardiovascular diseases, cancers, diabetes and chronic lung diseases. The WHO meeting objectives were to develop a conceptual framework for the PEN in primary health care settings, identify core technologies/medicines/risk prediction tools, and discuss intervention protocols and operational outlines for integrating interventions into primary care. The PEN seeks to address the growing global NCD burden by implementing a core set of evidence-based NCD prevention and control interventions in primary health care.
The document discusses the growing burden of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) in India. It notes that NCDs now account for over 60% of deaths in India and this proportion is projected to increase further. The major NCDs affecting India are cardiovascular diseases, cancer, diabetes, and chronic respiratory diseases. The rising burden is linked to lifestyle changes like increasing tobacco use, unhealthy diets, physical inactivity, and urbanization. Managing NCDs poses challenges for India's healthcare system due to the country's large population and diversity.
The document outlines India's National Programme for Control and Prevention of Non-Communicable Diseases (NPCDCS) such as cancer, diabetes, cardiovascular diseases and stroke. It aims to integrate NCD prevention and control with primary healthcare and improve early diagnosis, management and treatment of NCDs. Key objectives include preventing NCDs through lifestyle changes and screening, building healthcare capacity for NCDs, and improving access to treatment. The program promotes healthy behaviors and screens for NCDs opportunistically. It also works to establish NCD clinics and strengthen infrastructure for NCD care.
This document discusses non-communicable diseases (NCDs) such as cardiovascular disease, cancer, chronic respiratory disease, and diabetes. It notes that NCDs are the leading cause of death worldwide, responsible for 63% of all annual deaths. Four main NCDs - cardiovascular diseases, cancers, chronic respiratory diseases, and diabetes - account for 82% of NCD deaths. The global burden of NCDs is growing, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. Risk factors include behaviors like tobacco use, unhealthy diet, and physical inactivity, as well as physiological factors like high blood pressure. The document discusses NCD burdens and risks in South and Southeast Asia specifically, including Bangladesh and Thailand. It emphasizes
1) Nepal is endemic for 8 neglected tropical diseases including lymphatic filariasis (LF), trachoma, soil-transmitted helminths (STH), dengue fever (DF), kala-azar, leprosy, rabies, and cysticercosis. Dengue cases in Nepal have increased significantly in 2019.
2) Nepal has developed national plans and programs to control and eliminate several NTDs, including kala-azar elimination by 2020, LF elimination by 2020, and trachoma elimination through the SAFE strategy. Integrated preventative chemotherapy is conducted for LF and STH.
3) Major challenges for NTD control in Nepal include addressing climate change and den
This document discusses the management of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) in primary health care in Nepal. It notes that NCDs such as cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, and cancer place a large burden yet are primarily treated in tertiary hospitals. The WHO recommends protocols for managing NCDs at primary care levels through integrated care of conditions like diabetes and hypertension. However, managing NCDs in primary care in Nepal faces challenges of limited health workers, equipment, and budgets. Opportunities exist in guidelines, training, and donor support to strengthen NCD prevention and control.
This document discusses non-communicable diseases (NCDs) in Somalia. It provides background on NCDs globally and in Africa, noting they account for over half of deaths worldwide and their treatment is expensive. The document then discusses the problem of NCDs in Somalia, where cardiovascular diseases and diabetes are increasing causes of death. The rationale for the study is described, focusing on identifying risk factors like lifestyle and diet that contribute to NCDs. The objectives are to assess NCD prevalence, risk factors, and their distribution in Somalia. Research questions and hypotheses relate to links between behaviors like smoking/inactivity and NCD risk.
Delay in a seeking care among tuberculosis patients attending tuberculosis cl...said warsame
This document appears to be a thesis submitted for a bachelor's degree in public health focusing on delays in seeking care among tuberculosis patients in Yaqshid district, Mogadishu, Somalia. It includes an abstract stating that a cross-sectional study of 80 TB patients found that the majority (70%) had delays over 30 days in seeking care from symptom onset. Most delays were due to lack of knowledge about TB causes, transmission and treatment. The thesis will analyze sociocultural factors associated with treatment delays and their implications for TB prevention and control efforts.
The document discusses the WHO PEN (Package of Essential NCD Interventions) for primary health care. The PEN aims to establish policies and plans for preventing and controlling noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) like cardiovascular diseases, cancers, diabetes and chronic lung diseases. The WHO meeting objectives were to develop a conceptual framework for the PEN in primary health care settings, identify core technologies/medicines/risk prediction tools, and discuss intervention protocols and operational outlines for integrating interventions into primary care. The PEN seeks to address the growing global NCD burden by implementing a core set of evidence-based NCD prevention and control interventions in primary health care.
The document discusses the growing burden of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) in India. It notes that NCDs now account for over 60% of deaths in India and this proportion is projected to increase further. The major NCDs affecting India are cardiovascular diseases, cancer, diabetes, and chronic respiratory diseases. The rising burden is linked to lifestyle changes like increasing tobacco use, unhealthy diets, physical inactivity, and urbanization. Managing NCDs poses challenges for India's healthcare system due to the country's large population and diversity.
The document outlines India's National Programme for Control and Prevention of Non-Communicable Diseases (NPCDCS) such as cancer, diabetes, cardiovascular diseases and stroke. It aims to integrate NCD prevention and control with primary healthcare and improve early diagnosis, management and treatment of NCDs. Key objectives include preventing NCDs through lifestyle changes and screening, building healthcare capacity for NCDs, and improving access to treatment. The program promotes healthy behaviors and screens for NCDs opportunistically. It also works to establish NCD clinics and strengthen infrastructure for NCD care.
This document discusses non-communicable diseases (NCDs) such as cardiovascular disease, cancer, chronic respiratory disease, and diabetes. It notes that NCDs are the leading cause of death worldwide, responsible for 63% of all annual deaths. Four main NCDs - cardiovascular diseases, cancers, chronic respiratory diseases, and diabetes - account for 82% of NCD deaths. The global burden of NCDs is growing, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. Risk factors include behaviors like tobacco use, unhealthy diet, and physical inactivity, as well as physiological factors like high blood pressure. The document discusses NCD burdens and risks in South and Southeast Asia specifically, including Bangladesh and Thailand. It emphasizes
1) Nepal is endemic for 8 neglected tropical diseases including lymphatic filariasis (LF), trachoma, soil-transmitted helminths (STH), dengue fever (DF), kala-azar, leprosy, rabies, and cysticercosis. Dengue cases in Nepal have increased significantly in 2019.
2) Nepal has developed national plans and programs to control and eliminate several NTDs, including kala-azar elimination by 2020, LF elimination by 2020, and trachoma elimination through the SAFE strategy. Integrated preventative chemotherapy is conducted for LF and STH.
3) Major challenges for NTD control in Nepal include addressing climate change and den
This document discusses the management of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) in primary health care in Nepal. It notes that NCDs such as cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, and cancer place a large burden yet are primarily treated in tertiary hospitals. The WHO recommends protocols for managing NCDs at primary care levels through integrated care of conditions like diabetes and hypertension. However, managing NCDs in primary care in Nepal faces challenges of limited health workers, equipment, and budgets. Opportunities exist in guidelines, training, and donor support to strengthen NCD prevention and control.
Heart failure is a common condition that places a significant burden on healthcare systems. Specialist heart failure nurses play a key role in managing patients with acute heart failure in the hospital and after discharge through activities like identifying patients, developing care plans, educating patients, and providing early follow-up. Research shows that nurse-led interventions can substantially reduce hospital admissions and healthcare costs while improving patients' quality of life. The document describes a project that found delivering intravenous diuretics to patients in their homes or other community settings can safely and effectively avoid hospital admissions and provide better experiences for patients and caregivers compared to inpatient treatment.
Markku Peltonen: THL in public health promotion then and nowTHL
This document discusses the history and role of public health promotion in Finland. It describes how the Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare (THL) has historically focused on health monitoring, research on disease prevention, and providing expertise to inform policies. A key example discussed is the North Karelia Project in the 1970s, which demonstrated that population-wide lifestyle changes could significantly reduce heart disease mortality rates through interventions targeting smoking, blood pressure, and cholesterol. The document also reviews current public health challenges around obesity and dementia, and THL's role in conducting randomized trials demonstrating lifestyle interventions can prevent associated diseases like diabetes and cognitive decline.
Role of peripheral health centres in non communicable diseasesSHAFI UR RAHMAN KHAN
This document discusses the role of peripheral health centers in managing non-communicable diseases (NCDs) in India. It notes that NCDs account for over 60% of deaths globally and are a major cause of mortality in India as well. It then outlines the roles of sub-centers and primary health centers (PHCs) in promoting healthy behaviors, opportunistically screening for NCDs, diagnosing and managing cases, collecting data, and referring more advanced cases. PHCs establish NCD clinics to provide clinical services, investigations, and counseling. The role of community health centers is also described, including expanded screening, prevention activities, lab tests, diagnosis, referral networks, data collection, and hiring dedicated staff.
1. Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) such as cardiovascular diseases, cancers, diabetes and chronic respiratory diseases account for a large burden of disease in Nepal. NCDs represent over 80% of outpatient cases and over 88% of inpatient cases based on national data.
2. Risk factors for NCDs such as tobacco use, harmful alcohol consumption, unhealthy diet, and physical inactivity are highly prevalent in Nepal. Surveys show over one-third of the population uses tobacco and over one-quarter consumes alcohol harmfully.
3. While Nepal has drafted an NCD policy and strategy, urgent action is needed to implement prevention and control efforts for NCDs given their growing burden
Non-Communicable Diseases and Lifestyle-Related DiseasesWilma Beralde
This document discusses non-communicable diseases (NCDs) or lifestyle-related diseases in the Philippines. It identifies the four major NCDs as cardiovascular diseases, cancers, chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases, and diabetes. These diseases share common risk factors like smoking, poor diet, physical inactivity, and obesity. The document provides details on the epidemiology, symptoms, risk factors, screening guidelines, and prevention strategies for hypertension, diabetes, cancers, and other NCDs. It emphasizes that healthy lifestyle changes can help prevent and manage NCDs.
Epidemiology of Non Communicable Diseases (NCDs)Prabesh Ghimire
Declaration: The materials incorporated in this document have come from variety of sources and compiler bears no responsibilities for any information contained herein. The compiler acknowledges all the sources although references have not been explicitly cited for all the contents in this document.
This document provides an overview of public health and community medicine. It discusses how public health aims to promote health and prevent disease for entire populations through organized community efforts. Some key points made include:
- Common public health issues include infectious diseases, malnutrition, cancer, and addiction. Public health movements in the 19th century aimed to improve sanitation and living conditions.
- Clinical medicine focuses on curing individual patients, while public health/community medicine focuses on disease prevention and health promotion for communities through measures like vaccination, water/sanitation infrastructure, and health policies.
- Major contributions of public health include eradicating smallpox and guinea worm, and controlling diseases like polio, leprosy,
Jan 3 how healthy is the filipino revised december 10Nash De Vivar
While Filipinos are living longer lives on average, chronic noncommunicable diseases now pose the greatest health challenges. Filipinos are increasingly getting sick and dying from heart disease, cancer, stroke, and other noncommunicable conditions. These diseases disproportionately affect the elderly population and prevalence increases with age. Additionally, more males are affected by heart disease while breast cancer remains the leading cause of death among women. However, lung cancer has the highest mortality rate overall for both sexes. Longer lifespans mean the population is aging, bringing financial and healthcare resource implications.
This document provides an overview of tropical medicine and global health issues. It discusses diseases that disproportionately impact those living in tropical regions, including neglected tropical diseases. It also covers non-communicable diseases, trauma, urbanization, vector-borne diseases, influenza, avian influenza, measles, malaria, Ebola virus disease, and long-term consequences of the 2014-2015 West Africa Ebola outbreak. Health worker migration is also briefly discussed. The document contains detailed information on the transmission, epidemiology, and impact of various tropical and global health challenges.
This document discusses non-communicable diseases (NCDs), which include cardiovascular diseases, cancer, diabetes, and chronic respiratory diseases. NCDs are the leading cause of death worldwide, responsible for over 36 million deaths annually. The main risk factors for NCDs are unhealthy diet, tobacco use, physical inactivity, and obesity. While genetics and family history can increase risk, behavioral and environmental risk factors can be modified to help prevent around three-quarters of NCD-related deaths through a healthy diet, regular exercise, and medical checkups. NCDs cannot always be cured but can be controlled and prevented through effective interventions targeting risk factors.
This document discusses programs for preventing non-communicable diseases. It focuses on an integrated community-based program to prevent the major non-communicable diseases (cardiovascular disease, cancer, COPD, diabetes) through promoting a healthy lifestyle to reduce risk factors like unhealthy diet, physical inactivity, and smoking. It also discusses programs for preventing other non-communicable diseases like mental disorders, blindness, kidney disease, and supporting people with disabilities. The majority of the document provides details on cardiovascular diseases, including common types like congenital heart disease, rheumatic heart disease, hypertension, and associated risk factors.
Prevalence of noncommunicable diseases in indiaSujay Iyer
The ICMR-INDIAB study found high prevalences of noncommunicable diseases in India, with nearly two-thirds of individuals estimated to have diabetes or prediabetes. Results showed the highest diabetes prevalence was in Tamil Nadu (10.4%) and Chandigarh (13.6%), while obesity was most common in Chandigarh (31.3%). Hypertension prevalence was highest in Tamil Nadu (27.6%) and dyslipidemia affected nearly 80% of the population overall. Less than a third of individuals exhibited good glycemic control, highlighting the need for improved disease management and prevention through increased physical activity and healthier diets.
This document summarizes chronic non-communicable diseases. It discusses how cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, cancer, and chronic respiratory diseases account for 80% of non-communicable disease deaths globally. It defines chronic diseases and non-communicable diseases. It also provides details on the magnitude and burden of major non-communicable diseases like diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, cancer, and stroke; discussing prevalence, mortality rates, and economic costs in India. Gaps in understanding the natural history of chronic diseases are also outlined.
This document provides an overview of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) presented by the Epidemiology Department Group 2 at Bahir Dar University in Ethiopia. It defines NCDs and describes their global, regional, and national distribution. It analyzes patterns of the top five NCDs (cardiovascular disease, cancer, diabetes, chronic respiratory disease, and mental illness) that account for high mortality and morbidity worldwide. It also examines the impact of NCDs on life expectancy and healthy life years lost. Some key points include: NCDs are increasing rapidly in low and middle-income countries and are responsible for over 85% of deaths globally. The largest risk factors for early death and disability are now
- It is not wise to delay prevention and early detection of diseases like cancer, heart disease, and diabetes. Waiting until symptoms become severe or obvious to seek treatment can lead to terrible health outcomes or death.
- Many major non-communicable diseases account for over half of all deaths in India. By 2033, diseases like cancer, cardiovascular disease, and diabetes are projected to cause even more deaths than infectious diseases like HIV/AIDS.
- Early detection through regular health screenings and adopting a healthy lifestyle can help reduce risks and catch diseases in earlier, more treatable stages. Ignoring prevention and putting off treatment is a dangerous approach with serious health consequences.
Non-communicable diseases such as cancer, cardiovascular disease, and diabetes account for over 60% of deaths worldwide. Major risk factors like high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and smoking have large effects on mortality. While rates of non-communicable diseases are highest in developed nations, they are increasing in low- and middle-income countries due to urbanization and changes in lifestyle. Controlling risk factors through public health interventions could significantly reduce the growing global burden of these diseases.
Non Communicable Diseases Policy of India - An analysisShammy Rajan
This document summarizes India's National Programme for Prevention and Control of Cancer, Diabetes, Cardiovascular diseases and Stroke (NPCDCS). It began as separate programs in the 1970s and was established as a national program in 2008, aiming to prevent and control non-communicable diseases through early diagnosis, management, building healthcare capacity, and changing behaviors. The program was implemented in 100 districts across 15 states by 2011-2012 but faced issues with lack of sustained funding, poor infrastructure development, and minimal prevention efforts.
This document discusses non-communicable diseases (NCDs), focusing on hypertension. It defines NCDs and lists common types, like cardiovascular diseases, cancers, respiratory diseases, and diabetes. Globally, NCDs cause 41 million deaths annually. In India, 5.8 million people die from NCDs each year. Risk factors for NCDs are often modifiable, like tobacco use, unhealthy diet, physical inactivity, and alcohol use. The document outlines approaches for primary and secondary prevention of hypertension, including population-wide lifestyle changes and early detection/treatment of high-risk individuals. It also describes India's National Program for Prevention and Control of Cancer, Diabetes, CVD and Stroke.
This document discusses initiatives for the prevention and control of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) globally and in India. It outlines gaps in understanding NCDs, global initiatives like the WHO Global Action Plan 2013-2020, and national programs in India such as the National Program for Prevention and Control of Cancer, Diabetes, Cardiovascular Diseases and Stroke (NPCDCS). The Action Plan aims to reduce NCD mortality by 25% by 2025 through multisectoral actions targeting NCD risks and strengthening health systems. NPCDCS screens for and manages common NCDs through India's public health system.
Find the tentative program of 3rd International Conference on Chronic Diseases.http://bit.ly/2HMRBOV
Exciting waivers on single and group participation
Interested drop a mail : chronicdiseases@pulsusmeet.com
Chat with us through : https://bit.ly/2IGEvzW
PULSUS invites all the researchers, academicians & students all over the world to 5th International Conference on Sexually Transmitted Diseases slated on July 17-18, 2019 at London, UK.
Heart failure is a common condition that places a significant burden on healthcare systems. Specialist heart failure nurses play a key role in managing patients with acute heart failure in the hospital and after discharge through activities like identifying patients, developing care plans, educating patients, and providing early follow-up. Research shows that nurse-led interventions can substantially reduce hospital admissions and healthcare costs while improving patients' quality of life. The document describes a project that found delivering intravenous diuretics to patients in their homes or other community settings can safely and effectively avoid hospital admissions and provide better experiences for patients and caregivers compared to inpatient treatment.
Markku Peltonen: THL in public health promotion then and nowTHL
This document discusses the history and role of public health promotion in Finland. It describes how the Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare (THL) has historically focused on health monitoring, research on disease prevention, and providing expertise to inform policies. A key example discussed is the North Karelia Project in the 1970s, which demonstrated that population-wide lifestyle changes could significantly reduce heart disease mortality rates through interventions targeting smoking, blood pressure, and cholesterol. The document also reviews current public health challenges around obesity and dementia, and THL's role in conducting randomized trials demonstrating lifestyle interventions can prevent associated diseases like diabetes and cognitive decline.
Role of peripheral health centres in non communicable diseasesSHAFI UR RAHMAN KHAN
This document discusses the role of peripheral health centers in managing non-communicable diseases (NCDs) in India. It notes that NCDs account for over 60% of deaths globally and are a major cause of mortality in India as well. It then outlines the roles of sub-centers and primary health centers (PHCs) in promoting healthy behaviors, opportunistically screening for NCDs, diagnosing and managing cases, collecting data, and referring more advanced cases. PHCs establish NCD clinics to provide clinical services, investigations, and counseling. The role of community health centers is also described, including expanded screening, prevention activities, lab tests, diagnosis, referral networks, data collection, and hiring dedicated staff.
1. Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) such as cardiovascular diseases, cancers, diabetes and chronic respiratory diseases account for a large burden of disease in Nepal. NCDs represent over 80% of outpatient cases and over 88% of inpatient cases based on national data.
2. Risk factors for NCDs such as tobacco use, harmful alcohol consumption, unhealthy diet, and physical inactivity are highly prevalent in Nepal. Surveys show over one-third of the population uses tobacco and over one-quarter consumes alcohol harmfully.
3. While Nepal has drafted an NCD policy and strategy, urgent action is needed to implement prevention and control efforts for NCDs given their growing burden
Non-Communicable Diseases and Lifestyle-Related DiseasesWilma Beralde
This document discusses non-communicable diseases (NCDs) or lifestyle-related diseases in the Philippines. It identifies the four major NCDs as cardiovascular diseases, cancers, chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases, and diabetes. These diseases share common risk factors like smoking, poor diet, physical inactivity, and obesity. The document provides details on the epidemiology, symptoms, risk factors, screening guidelines, and prevention strategies for hypertension, diabetes, cancers, and other NCDs. It emphasizes that healthy lifestyle changes can help prevent and manage NCDs.
Epidemiology of Non Communicable Diseases (NCDs)Prabesh Ghimire
Declaration: The materials incorporated in this document have come from variety of sources and compiler bears no responsibilities for any information contained herein. The compiler acknowledges all the sources although references have not been explicitly cited for all the contents in this document.
This document provides an overview of public health and community medicine. It discusses how public health aims to promote health and prevent disease for entire populations through organized community efforts. Some key points made include:
- Common public health issues include infectious diseases, malnutrition, cancer, and addiction. Public health movements in the 19th century aimed to improve sanitation and living conditions.
- Clinical medicine focuses on curing individual patients, while public health/community medicine focuses on disease prevention and health promotion for communities through measures like vaccination, water/sanitation infrastructure, and health policies.
- Major contributions of public health include eradicating smallpox and guinea worm, and controlling diseases like polio, leprosy,
Jan 3 how healthy is the filipino revised december 10Nash De Vivar
While Filipinos are living longer lives on average, chronic noncommunicable diseases now pose the greatest health challenges. Filipinos are increasingly getting sick and dying from heart disease, cancer, stroke, and other noncommunicable conditions. These diseases disproportionately affect the elderly population and prevalence increases with age. Additionally, more males are affected by heart disease while breast cancer remains the leading cause of death among women. However, lung cancer has the highest mortality rate overall for both sexes. Longer lifespans mean the population is aging, bringing financial and healthcare resource implications.
This document provides an overview of tropical medicine and global health issues. It discusses diseases that disproportionately impact those living in tropical regions, including neglected tropical diseases. It also covers non-communicable diseases, trauma, urbanization, vector-borne diseases, influenza, avian influenza, measles, malaria, Ebola virus disease, and long-term consequences of the 2014-2015 West Africa Ebola outbreak. Health worker migration is also briefly discussed. The document contains detailed information on the transmission, epidemiology, and impact of various tropical and global health challenges.
This document discusses non-communicable diseases (NCDs), which include cardiovascular diseases, cancer, diabetes, and chronic respiratory diseases. NCDs are the leading cause of death worldwide, responsible for over 36 million deaths annually. The main risk factors for NCDs are unhealthy diet, tobacco use, physical inactivity, and obesity. While genetics and family history can increase risk, behavioral and environmental risk factors can be modified to help prevent around three-quarters of NCD-related deaths through a healthy diet, regular exercise, and medical checkups. NCDs cannot always be cured but can be controlled and prevented through effective interventions targeting risk factors.
This document discusses programs for preventing non-communicable diseases. It focuses on an integrated community-based program to prevent the major non-communicable diseases (cardiovascular disease, cancer, COPD, diabetes) through promoting a healthy lifestyle to reduce risk factors like unhealthy diet, physical inactivity, and smoking. It also discusses programs for preventing other non-communicable diseases like mental disorders, blindness, kidney disease, and supporting people with disabilities. The majority of the document provides details on cardiovascular diseases, including common types like congenital heart disease, rheumatic heart disease, hypertension, and associated risk factors.
Prevalence of noncommunicable diseases in indiaSujay Iyer
The ICMR-INDIAB study found high prevalences of noncommunicable diseases in India, with nearly two-thirds of individuals estimated to have diabetes or prediabetes. Results showed the highest diabetes prevalence was in Tamil Nadu (10.4%) and Chandigarh (13.6%), while obesity was most common in Chandigarh (31.3%). Hypertension prevalence was highest in Tamil Nadu (27.6%) and dyslipidemia affected nearly 80% of the population overall. Less than a third of individuals exhibited good glycemic control, highlighting the need for improved disease management and prevention through increased physical activity and healthier diets.
This document summarizes chronic non-communicable diseases. It discusses how cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, cancer, and chronic respiratory diseases account for 80% of non-communicable disease deaths globally. It defines chronic diseases and non-communicable diseases. It also provides details on the magnitude and burden of major non-communicable diseases like diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, cancer, and stroke; discussing prevalence, mortality rates, and economic costs in India. Gaps in understanding the natural history of chronic diseases are also outlined.
This document provides an overview of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) presented by the Epidemiology Department Group 2 at Bahir Dar University in Ethiopia. It defines NCDs and describes their global, regional, and national distribution. It analyzes patterns of the top five NCDs (cardiovascular disease, cancer, diabetes, chronic respiratory disease, and mental illness) that account for high mortality and morbidity worldwide. It also examines the impact of NCDs on life expectancy and healthy life years lost. Some key points include: NCDs are increasing rapidly in low and middle-income countries and are responsible for over 85% of deaths globally. The largest risk factors for early death and disability are now
- It is not wise to delay prevention and early detection of diseases like cancer, heart disease, and diabetes. Waiting until symptoms become severe or obvious to seek treatment can lead to terrible health outcomes or death.
- Many major non-communicable diseases account for over half of all deaths in India. By 2033, diseases like cancer, cardiovascular disease, and diabetes are projected to cause even more deaths than infectious diseases like HIV/AIDS.
- Early detection through regular health screenings and adopting a healthy lifestyle can help reduce risks and catch diseases in earlier, more treatable stages. Ignoring prevention and putting off treatment is a dangerous approach with serious health consequences.
Non-communicable diseases such as cancer, cardiovascular disease, and diabetes account for over 60% of deaths worldwide. Major risk factors like high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and smoking have large effects on mortality. While rates of non-communicable diseases are highest in developed nations, they are increasing in low- and middle-income countries due to urbanization and changes in lifestyle. Controlling risk factors through public health interventions could significantly reduce the growing global burden of these diseases.
Non Communicable Diseases Policy of India - An analysisShammy Rajan
This document summarizes India's National Programme for Prevention and Control of Cancer, Diabetes, Cardiovascular diseases and Stroke (NPCDCS). It began as separate programs in the 1970s and was established as a national program in 2008, aiming to prevent and control non-communicable diseases through early diagnosis, management, building healthcare capacity, and changing behaviors. The program was implemented in 100 districts across 15 states by 2011-2012 but faced issues with lack of sustained funding, poor infrastructure development, and minimal prevention efforts.
This document discusses non-communicable diseases (NCDs), focusing on hypertension. It defines NCDs and lists common types, like cardiovascular diseases, cancers, respiratory diseases, and diabetes. Globally, NCDs cause 41 million deaths annually. In India, 5.8 million people die from NCDs each year. Risk factors for NCDs are often modifiable, like tobacco use, unhealthy diet, physical inactivity, and alcohol use. The document outlines approaches for primary and secondary prevention of hypertension, including population-wide lifestyle changes and early detection/treatment of high-risk individuals. It also describes India's National Program for Prevention and Control of Cancer, Diabetes, CVD and Stroke.
This document discusses initiatives for the prevention and control of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) globally and in India. It outlines gaps in understanding NCDs, global initiatives like the WHO Global Action Plan 2013-2020, and national programs in India such as the National Program for Prevention and Control of Cancer, Diabetes, Cardiovascular Diseases and Stroke (NPCDCS). The Action Plan aims to reduce NCD mortality by 25% by 2025 through multisectoral actions targeting NCD risks and strengthening health systems. NPCDCS screens for and manages common NCDs through India's public health system.
Find the tentative program of 3rd International Conference on Chronic Diseases.http://bit.ly/2HMRBOV
Exciting waivers on single and group participation
Interested drop a mail : chronicdiseases@pulsusmeet.com
Chat with us through : https://bit.ly/2IGEvzW
PULSUS invites all the researchers, academicians & students all over the world to 5th International Conference on Sexually Transmitted Diseases slated on July 17-18, 2019 at London, UK.
Non-communicable Diseases And Interventions to minimize itGaaJeen Parmal
Rise of non-communicable diseases like RTA, obesity, psychological disturbance, etc. Its impact towards the healthcare of a nation. The steps or approach that can be taken to minimize the disease.
An internist is a physician who specializes in internal medicine. They focus on preventing, diagnosing, and treating diseases that affect adults. Internists receive extensive training, with at least three years dedicated to adult medical conditions. They may focus on general internal medicine or subspecialize in one of 13 areas. Internists are often consulted as experts to help solve complex diagnostic problems. Their training provides both broad and deep understanding of the body systems and diseases they treat.
This document provides information about the 3rd International Conference on Diabetes, Endocrinology and Obesity to be held virtually on March 20-21, 2023. The conference will include keynote presentations, distinguished speaker talks, concurrent sessions on various topics related to diabetes, endocrinology and obesity. Some of the session topics include diabetes mellitus types 1 and 2, gestational diabetes, thyroid disorders, cardiovascular risk, and emerging focuses in diabetes research. The scientific program outlines the schedule of presentations for the two day event.
This document outlines a series of events in Lithuania from March 12-23, 2018 dedicated to promoting healthy lifestyles and Lifestyle Medicine. It includes a clinical workshop in Druskininkai applying Lifestyle Medicine in practice, followed by conferences in Vilnius, Kaunas, and Klaipėda featuring international experts and Lithuanian officials to discuss integrating Lifestyle Medicine into the healthcare system. The goal is to demonstrate how Lifestyle Medicine can transform healthcare and improve population health.
This document outlines a series of events in Lithuania from March 12-23, 2018 dedicated to promoting healthy lifestyles and Lifestyle Medicine. It includes a clinical workshop in Druskininkai applying Lifestyle Medicine in practice, followed by conferences in Vilnius, Kaunas, and Klaipėda featuring international experts and Lithuanian officials to discuss integrating Lifestyle Medicine into the healthcare system. The goal is to demonstrate how Lifestyle Medicine can transform healthcare and improve population health.
This document outlines a series of events in Lithuania from March 12-23, 2018 dedicated to promoting healthy lifestyles and Lifestyle Medicine. It includes a clinical workshop in Druskininkai applying Lifestyle Medicine in practice, followed by conferences in Vilnius, Kaunas, and Klaipėda featuring international experts in Lifestyle Medicine and meetings with government officials to discuss integrating Lifestyle Medicine into the healthcare system. The goal is to alter the healthcare paradigm and promote healthy living together through these educational and practical events.
The benefits of patient involvement in research and development (RE:ACT Congr...jangeissler
This document discusses the benefits of patient involvement in health research and development. It notes that innovation is transforming lives but more breakthroughs are still needed. Patients can provide unique perspectives to improve trial design and address unmet needs. However, public distrust and lack of knowledge limit patient participation in research. The document advocates for greater patient involvement at all stages of research, from setting priorities to disseminating results. It highlights the EUPATI initiative which aims to educate patients and the public about medicines research through training courses, educational tools, and national platforms. The goal is empowering patients as partners in research.
International events dedicated to promotion of healthy lifestylesAistKuinskien
This document outlines an international event in Lithuania from March 12-23, 2018 dedicated to promoting healthy lifestyles and Lifestyle Medicine. It includes a preliminary program with workshops, conferences and meetings in several Lithuanian cities featuring international experts in Lifestyle Medicine. The goal is to discuss how Lifestyle Medicine can change healthcare and collaborate on implementing related programs and education in Lithuania.
International events dedicated to promotion of healthy lifestylesDaumantas Kirkutis
This document outlines a series of events in Lithuania from March 12-23, 2018 dedicated to promoting healthy lifestyles and Lifestyle Medicine. It includes a clinical workshop in Druskininkai from March 12-21 on applying Lifestyle Medicine in practice. This is followed by conferences in Vilnius on March 21, Kaunas on March 22, and Klaipėda on March 23 featuring international experts and representatives of Lithuanian health organizations to discuss integrating Lifestyle Medicine into the national healthcare system. The goal is to demonstrate how Lifestyle Medicine can transform healthcare and improve population health.
From Discovery to Delivery: Benchwork to Global Health: Corey CasperUWGlobalHealth
The document discusses the challenges of translating biomedical research into meaningful health improvements, especially for resource-poor countries disproportionately affected by infection-associated cancers. It provides examples from Uganda, which has one of the highest cancer rates in the world but very limited resources and capacity for cancer treatment. Effective translation requires identifying high-burden diseases, conducting etiology research, determining feasibility of implementation, and assessing impact on population health.
The document discusses the importance of medical research into aging given population aging trends. It notes that while lifespans have doubled in recent centuries, aging is associated with increased risk of disease and disability. However, evidence suggests healthy lifespans are also increasing. Understanding aging processes could help tackle multiple age-related diseases and extend healthy years. The report examines the UK's aging research performance and priorities. It finds the UK compares unfavorably to countries like the US in basic aging research. It identifies priorities like attracting senior scientists, developing more aging research centers of excellence, emphasizing aging research within disciplines, and improving understanding of current UK investments. Barriers to developing interventions include small aging clinical trials, a disease-focused regulatory system
Our aim is to alleviate human suffering related to diabetes and its complications among those least able to withstand the burden of the disease. From 2002 to March 2017, the World Diabetes Foundation provided USD 130 million in funding to 511 projects in 115 countries. For every dollar spent, the Foundation raises approximately 2 dollars in cash or as in-kind donations from other sources. The total value of the WDF project portfolio reached USD 377 million, excluding WDF’s own advocacy and strategic platforms.
The document summarizes details about the 4th International Conference on Nephrology and Therapeutics taking place from September 14-16, 2015 in Baltimore, Maryland. The conference will focus on integrating recent discoveries and clinical research for better renal health. It will include sessions on renal dialysis, genetic syndromes, diseases, and transplantation. A young researchers forum and poster competition for students is also planned, along with workshops and keynote speakers. Details on registration, sponsorship, and exhibition opportunities are provided.
Biomedical research aims to solve medical problems through observation and experimentation. It relies on animal testing before human trials to represent human systems. Almost every major medical advance has depended on animal research, which remains critical to curing diseases that kill millions. Biomedical research objectives include improving public health, validating new treatments through data analysis, and addressing global health issues. Several countries and organizations were cited that conduct biomedical research, including Germany's Helmholtz Association, South African societies, the South African Medical Research Council, and the Philippines' Research Institute for Tropical Medicine. Biomedical research has significantly increased human longevity over the past century through advances such as vaccines, insulin treatment, antibiotics, and improved cancer treatments.
Information and support for patients on MKI treatmentMarika Porrey
This document provides guidance for physicians and patient organizations on information and support for patients receiving treatment with multi-kinase inhibitors (MKIs). It recommends that physicians clearly explain the expected clinical course, treatment options including active surveillance, and implications of radioiodine resistance in differentiated thyroid cancer. Information should be provided over several consultations and emphasize shared decision making. It also recommends that patient organizations support patients by providing educational materials and connecting patients to additional support resources.
Local Advanced Lung Cancer: Artificial Intelligence, Synergetics, Complex Sys...Oleg Kshivets
Overall life span (LS) was 1671.7±1721.6 days and cumulative 5YS reached 62.4%, 10 years – 50.4%, 20 years – 44.6%. 94 LCP lived more than 5 years without cancer (LS=2958.6±1723.6 days), 22 – more than 10 years (LS=5571±1841.8 days). 67 LCP died because of LC (LS=471.9±344 days). AT significantly improved 5YS (68% vs. 53.7%) (P=0.028 by log-rank test). Cox modeling displayed that 5YS of LCP significantly depended on: N0-N12, T3-4, blood cell circuit, cell ratio factors (ratio between cancer cells-CC and blood cells subpopulations), LC cell dynamics, recalcification time, heparin tolerance, prothrombin index, protein, AT, procedure type (P=0.000-0.031). Neural networks, genetic algorithm selection and bootstrap simulation revealed relationships between 5YS and N0-12 (rank=1), thrombocytes/CC (rank=2), segmented neutrophils/CC (3), eosinophils/CC (4), erythrocytes/CC (5), healthy cells/CC (6), lymphocytes/CC (7), stick neutrophils/CC (8), leucocytes/CC (9), monocytes/CC (10). Correct prediction of 5YS was 100% by neural networks computing (error=0.000; area under ROC curve=1.0).
NVBDCP.pptx Nation vector borne disease control programSapna Thakur
NVBDCP was launched in 2003-2004 . Vector-Borne Disease: Disease that results from an infection transmitted to humans and other animals by blood-feeding arthropods, such as mosquitoes, ticks, and fleas. Examples of vector-borne diseases include Dengue fever, West Nile Virus, Lyme disease, and malaria.
Here is the updated list of Top Best Ayurvedic medicine for Gas and Indigestion and those are Gas-O-Go Syp for Dyspepsia | Lavizyme Syrup for Acidity | Yumzyme Hepatoprotective Capsules etc
TEST BANK For Community Health Nursing A Canadian Perspective, 5th Edition by...Donc Test
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Basavarajeeyam is an important text for ayurvedic physician belonging to andhra pradehs. It is a popular compendium in various parts of our country as well as in andhra pradesh. The content of the text was presented in sanskrit and telugu language (Bilingual). One of the most famous book in ayurvedic pharmaceutics and therapeutics. This book contains 25 chapters called as prakaranas. Many rasaoushadis were explained, pioneer of dhatu druti, nadi pareeksha, mutra pareeksha etc. Belongs to the period of 15-16 century. New diseases like upadamsha, phiranga rogas are explained.
Adhd Medication Shortage Uk - trinexpharmacy.comreignlana06
The UK is currently facing a Adhd Medication Shortage Uk, which has left many patients and their families grappling with uncertainty and frustration. ADHD, or Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, is a chronic condition that requires consistent medication to manage effectively. This shortage has highlighted the critical role these medications play in the daily lives of those affected by ADHD. Contact : +1 (747) 209 – 3649 E-mail : sales@trinexpharmacy.com
8 Surprising Reasons To Meditate 40 Minutes A Day That Can Change Your Life.pptxHolistified Wellness
We’re talking about Vedic Meditation, a form of meditation that has been around for at least 5,000 years. Back then, the people who lived in the Indus Valley, now known as India and Pakistan, practised meditation as a fundamental part of daily life. This knowledge that has given us yoga and Ayurveda, was known as Veda, hence the name Vedic. And though there are some written records, the practice has been passed down verbally from generation to generation.
Recomendações da OMS sobre cuidados maternos e neonatais para uma experiência pós-natal positiva.
Em consonância com os ODS – Objetivos do Desenvolvimento Sustentável e a Estratégia Global para a Saúde das Mulheres, Crianças e Adolescentes, e aplicando uma abordagem baseada nos direitos humanos, os esforços de cuidados pós-natais devem expandir-se para além da cobertura e da simples sobrevivência, de modo a incluir cuidados de qualidade.
Estas diretrizes visam melhorar a qualidade dos cuidados pós-natais essenciais e de rotina prestados às mulheres e aos recém-nascidos, com o objetivo final de melhorar a saúde e o bem-estar materno e neonatal.
Uma “experiência pós-natal positiva” é um resultado importante para todas as mulheres que dão à luz e para os seus recém-nascidos, estabelecendo as bases para a melhoria da saúde e do bem-estar a curto e longo prazo. Uma experiência pós-natal positiva é definida como aquela em que as mulheres, pessoas que gestam, os recém-nascidos, os casais, os pais, os cuidadores e as famílias recebem informação consistente, garantia e apoio de profissionais de saúde motivados; e onde um sistema de saúde flexível e com recursos reconheça as necessidades das mulheres e dos bebês e respeite o seu contexto cultural.
Estas diretrizes consolidadas apresentam algumas recomendações novas e já bem fundamentadas sobre cuidados pós-natais de rotina para mulheres e neonatos que recebem cuidados no pós-parto em unidades de saúde ou na comunidade, independentemente dos recursos disponíveis.
É fornecido um conjunto abrangente de recomendações para cuidados durante o período puerperal, com ênfase nos cuidados essenciais que todas as mulheres e recém-nascidos devem receber, e com a devida atenção à qualidade dos cuidados; isto é, a entrega e a experiência do cuidado recebido. Estas diretrizes atualizam e ampliam as recomendações da OMS de 2014 sobre cuidados pós-natais da mãe e do recém-nascido e complementam as atuais diretrizes da OMS sobre a gestão de complicações pós-natais.
O estabelecimento da amamentação e o manejo das principais intercorrências é contemplada.
Recomendamos muito.
Vamos discutir essas recomendações no nosso curso de pós-graduação em Aleitamento no Instituto Ciclos.
Esta publicação só está disponível em inglês até o momento.
Prof. Marcus Renato de Carvalho
www.agostodourado.com
Histololgy of Female Reproductive System.pptxAyeshaZaid1
Dive into an in-depth exploration of the histological structure of female reproductive system with this comprehensive lecture. Presented by Dr. Ayesha Irfan, Assistant Professor of Anatomy, this presentation covers the Gross anatomy and functional histology of the female reproductive organs. Ideal for students, educators, and anyone interested in medical science, this lecture provides clear explanations, detailed diagrams, and valuable insights into female reproductive system. Enhance your knowledge and understanding of this essential aspect of human biology.
Basavarajeeyam is a Sreshta Sangraha grantha (Compiled book ), written by Neelkanta kotturu Basavaraja Virachita. It contains 25 Prakaranas, First 24 Chapters related to Rogas& 25th to Rasadravyas.
Integrating Ayurveda into Parkinson’s Management: A Holistic ApproachAyurveda ForAll
Explore the benefits of combining Ayurveda with conventional Parkinson's treatments. Learn how a holistic approach can manage symptoms, enhance well-being, and balance body energies. Discover the steps to safely integrate Ayurvedic practices into your Parkinson’s care plan, including expert guidance on diet, herbal remedies, and lifestyle modifications.
Light House Retreats: Plant Medicine Retreat Europe
Chronic Diseases 2019 Brochure
1. Chronic Diseases
3rd
International Conference on
May 20-21
2019
London, UK
Hosting Organization: Pulsus Group
40 Bloomsbury Way | Lower Ground Floor
London, United Kingdom | WC1A 2SE | Tel: +1-408-429-2646
chronicdiseases@pulsusevents.org
2. PULSUS
PULSUS brings in a new spin on conferences by presenting the latest scientific improvements in your field. Listen to motivating
keynotes from thought leaders, or rub elbows with pioneers across the globe. London is all set for an amazing event as PULSUS proudly
presents the “3rd International conference on Chronic Diseases” slated on May 20-21, 2019 at London, UK .
PULSUS cordially welcome researchers, academicians, students and business professionals in the fi eld of cardiology, nephrology,
neurology, osteology, hepatology, oncology, endocrinology, pulmonology, immunology, bariatrics, pharmacolgy, biotechnology from
around the world to participate in the upcoming Chronic Diseases 2019. The meeting for this year will revolve around the theme
“Prevent Diseases and Promote Health” thus relaying the most cutting edge findings in the field of Chronic Diseases. The two day
meeting is going to be an event to look forward to for its enlightening symposiums & workshops from established experts of the field,
exceptional keynote sessions directed by the best in the business. It will also prove to be a brilliant open door for the representatives
from Universities and Institutes to cooperate with the world class researchers and an outstanding opportunity for businesses keen at
expanding their global market reach. Interested individuals can confirm their participation by registering for the conference along with
their colleagues. Register soon and avail exciting early bird discounts.
Regards
Chronic Diseases 2019
Organizing Committee
• Chronic Diseases
• Chronic Respiratory Diseases
• Chronic Osteoarticular Diseases
• Neurodegenerative Diseases
• Cardiovascular Diseases
• Obesity and Chronic Diseases
• Diabetology & Metabolic Diseases
• Cancer
• Hypertension
• Kidney Diseases
• Thyroid Diseases
• Liver Diseases
• Autoimmune Diseases
• HIV/AIDS
• Depression & Mental Illness
• Stroke
• Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
• Diagnosis and Therapies
• Risk Factors
Invitation
Conference Highlights
3. PULSUS
Pulsus Group is an internationally renowned medical peer-review publisher and conferences organizer established in the year 1984
publishes and hosts the work of researchers in a manner that exemplifies the highest standards in research integrity.
PULSUS conferences act as a catalyst on the research trends that really matter and spurring their adoption by exploring and disseminating
cutting-edge information. Thus, mainly adhere to stringent peer-review procedure with a view to set an example in promoting standard
medical research with integrity. As an ardent supporter of medical publishing, Pulsus Group closely associates with the The Chronic
Disease Prevention Alliance of Canada, National Association of Chronic Disease Directors, European Society for Medical Oncology,
European Heart Network, European kidney health alliance, International Diabetes Federation, European COPD Coalition, European
Cancer Organisation, European Respiratory Society, European Society of Cardiology, European Society of Hypertension, European
Association for the Study of the Liver, European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, The American Heart Association, Heart
Failure Society of America, Alliance of Cardiovascular Professionals, Society for Neuroscience
Pulsus Conferences explore the future by connecting minds and spreading brilliance at Pulsus Group annual conferences & meetings.
Meet your colleagues, discuss your specialty, spread and aid, learn & grow in association with 1000+ scientific societies from The USA,
Europe, The Middle East, Africa and The Asia-Pacific region. Pulsus group is closely associated with globally renowned academic and
research societies.
Pulsus Conferences believe that true technology and innovation depends on hearing from, and listening to, people with a variety of
perspectives. Pulsus Conferences enhances the technology for people from underrepresented groups by actively recruiting diverse
speakers for our events, signing up a broad variety of authors for journals and videos, and taking part in ongoing conversations about the
value of diversity in the communities we serve.
Pulsus Group Journals
EB Members
About PULSUS
PULSUS
4. PULSUS
Chronic diseases are long-term medical conditions that are generally progressive. Chronic diseases, such as Heart Disease, Diabetes,
Stroke, Asthma, Cancer, Chronic Respiratory Diseases, Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD), Diabetes Mellitus, Hypertension
(High Blood Pressure), Lipid Disorders (e.g. high blood cholesterol). At present, these are the major causes of disability and death globally,
representing 60% of all deaths. Chronic diseases generally cannot be prevented by vaccines or cured by medication, nor do they just
disappear. Health damaging behaviors - particularly tobacco use, lack of physical activity, and poor eating habits - are major contributors
to the leading chronic diseases. Chronic diseases tend to become more common with age. Adopting healthy lifestyle practices such as a
healthy diet, regular physical activity, and avoiding tobacco use can prevent or control the onset of debilitating and expensive complications
of chronic diseases.
Target Audience
• Doctors
• Researchers
• Healthcare Analysts
• Physicians
• Scientists and professors
• Women’s health Care Researchers
• Medical Colleges
• Research faculty
• Academic Scientists
• Students
• Diagnostic laboratory professionals
• Business Entrepreneurs
• Industry professionals
• Directors/Managers/CEO’s
• Presidents & Vice Presidents
• Brand Manufacturers/ Marketers of Consumer Products
• Marketing, Advertising and Promotion Agency Executives
Who should attend?
• Doctors
• Researchers
• Therapists
• Medical and Healthcare Professionals to Exchange Ideas and
• Networking at its 100+ international Conferences
Why to attend?
• 10+ Keynote Speaker Session
• 50+ speaker faculty over 2 full days sharing Evidence Based
on Chronic Diseases
• 5+ Workshops
• 13 Interactive sessions
• Mixture of Health care units and Academia Delegates
• Networking
6. PULSUS
Selected contributions will be published in following supporting international Journals:
Journal of Genetic Disorders and Genetic Medicine
Journal of Emerging Diseases and Preventive Medicine
Journal of Clinical Diagnosis and Treatment
A. C. Matin
West Stanford University School of Medicine
Stanford, USA
Mohd Hasmizam Razali
Universiti Malaysia Terengganu, Malaysia
Zeyun Xiao
The University of Melbourne, Australia
Ravi Gupta
Pusan National University, South Korea
Juan José Valdez Alarcón
Michoacana University of Saint Nicolás of
Hidalgo, Mexico
Gayathri Manokaran
University of Melbourne, Australia
Hongjie Li
Stanford University, USA
Ronald Halim
The University of Melbourne, Australia
Handan Erturk
Konya Food and Agriculture University,
Turkey
Xiaodong Ma
Dalian Medical University, China
Zakaria A. Almsherqi
National university of Singapore, Singapore
Sheraz Gul
Fraunhofer Institute for Molecular Biology and
Applied Ecology Hamburg, Germany
Mahavir Chougule
University of Mississippi, USA
GOPAL NAMBI
Salman Bin Abdul Aziz University, Saudi Arabia
Kumar G. S
International Medical University, Malaysia
Editorial Board Members
Supporting Journals
7. About City and Venue
London is the capital and multifarious city of England and the United
Kingdom. It was founded by the Romans and situated on the River Thames
in the south east of the island of Great Britain. Since the 19th century, the
City of London, largely retains its 1.12-square-mile (2.9 km2) medieval
boundaries, London is a leading global city in the field of arts, commerce,
education, entertainment, fashion, finance, healthcare, media, professional
services, research and development, tourism, and transportation accounting
for 13.4% of the UK population. It is known as the largest financial centre
of the world and positioned as the fifth- or sixth-largest metropolitan area
GDP in the world. London is a world cultural capital. It is the world’s
most visited city as measured by international arrivals and has the world’s
largest city airport system measured by passenger traffic. London is the
world’s leading investment destination, hosting more international retailers
and high-net-worth individuals than any other city of UK. City Attractions
Being the capital of UK and the most visited place by the tourists from all
over the world, A trip to the capital wouldn’t be complete without seeing
the modern Coca-Cola London Eye to the historic Tower of London.
8. PULSUS
Why Sponsor Our Event?
• Maximum exposure at a premier conference devoted to those involved in the
office professional industry.
• An opportunity to build and reinforce strategic relationships within the office
professional industry.
• Time to network with industry colleagues and key decision makers.
• A cost effective way to reinforce your organization’s brand and build brand
awareness amongst a relevant audience.
• Access to a broad network of industry partners from state and federal Government
departments and the private sector.
• Time to present latest innovations and new products or services to a pertinent
audience, and showcase your expertise and capabilities.
• Increased marketing opportunities including visibility on the conference website
and associated marketing materials
Diamond Sponsor: $10000
• Top billing logo recognition (Chamber website, event website, invitation/publicity,
event signage)
• Three corporate sponsored workshop slots (audio visual included).
• Two complimentary exhibit booths with priority to purchase exhibition space and
choose booth location (Booth size-3X3 sqm).
• Four complimentary registrations.
• One A4 color advertisement in the congress program or book of abstracts (excluding
cover pages).
• 50% discount on both Extra Delegate Registrations and Booth
Gold Sponsor: $7500
• Logo recognition (Chamber website, event website, invitation/publicity, event
signage)
• Two corporate sponsored workshop slot (must honor deadlines, catering and
audio visual included).
• One complimentary exhibit booth with priority to purchase exhibition space and
choose booth location (Booth size-3X3 sqm).
• Three complimentary congress registrations.
• Logo recognition on congress website front page with link and logo recognition
on congress sponsorship page.
• One A4 color advertisement in the congress program or book of abstracts
(excluding cover pages).
• 50% discount on both Extra Delegate Registrations and Booth
Silver Sponsor: $5000
• Larger name recognition (Chamber website, event website, invitation/publicity,
event signage)
• Two complimentary congress registrations.
• One corporate sponsored workshop slot (must honor deadlines, catering and
audio visual included).
• One complimentary exhibit booth with priority to purchase exhibition space and
choose booth location (Booth size-3X3 sqm).
• One A4 color advertisement in the congress program or book of abstracts (excluding
cover pages).
• 50% discount on both Extra Delegate Registrations and Booth
Bronze Sponsor: $3500
• Larger name recognition (Chamber website, event website, invitation/publicity,
event signage)
• One complimentary congress registrations.
• One corporate sponsored workshop slot (must honor deadlines, catering and audio
visual included).
• One complimentary exhibit booth with priority to purchase exhibition space and
choose booth location (Booth size-3X3 sqm).
• One A4 color advertisement in the congress program or book of abstracts (excluding
cover pages).
• 50% discount on both Extra Delegate Registrations and Booth
Exhibition Sponsor: $2500
• Larger name recognition (Chamber website, event website, invitation/publicity,
event signage)
• One complimentary congress registrations.
• One corporate sponsored workshop slot (must honor deadlines, catering and audio
visual included).
• One complimentary exhibit booth with priority to purchase exhibition space and
choose booth location (Booth size-3X3 sqm).
• Half Page A4 color advertisement in the congress program or book of abstracts
(excluding cover pages).
• 25% discount on both Extra Delegate Registrations and Booth
Sponsorship
9. PULSUS
Name
Organization/Company
Package of your Choice
Country
State
Address
Email
Tel
Fax
PULSUS
PULSUS
Amount
Only Registration
Diamond Sponsor
Package A
Gold Sponsor
Package B
Silver Sponsor
Exhibition
Bronze Sponsor
Please Select the Appropriate Level
For more details: https://chronicdiseases.cmesociety.com/
Email: chronicdiseases@pulsusevents.org
Please invoice
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Delegates who do not pay their bookings are requested to provide a copy
of bank transfer/credit card/cheque details to help payment allocation.
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without proof of payment.
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Beneficiary’s Name PULSUS PTE LTD PULSUS PTE LTD PULSUS PTE LTD
Beneficiary’s Account Number 0863999014 0863999049 0863999022
Bank Name and Address CITI BANK, N.A
8 Marina View, #17-01 Asia Square
Tower 1,Singapore 018960
CITI BANK, N.A
8 Marina View, #17-01 Asia Square
Tower 1,Singapore 018960
CITI BANK, N.A
8 Marina View, #17-01 Asia Square
Tower 1,Singapore 018960
SWIFT CODE CITISGSG CITISGSG CITISGSG
Bank code 7214 7214 7214
Branch code 1 1 1
Registration/Sponsorship Application Form
10. PULSUS
Important Dates and Quick Links
UK: PULSUS
40 Bloomsbury Way, Lower Ground Floor
London, United Kingdom
WC1A 2SE | Tel: +44-203-769-1778
Asia Pacific: PULSUS
22 Sin Ming Lane, #06-76 Midview City
Singapore 573969
Fax: +65 672 50801
Important Dates
Abstract submission opens: August 06, 2018
Registration opens: August 06, 2018
Early bird registration: November 20, 2018
On spot registration: May 20, 2019
Venue Details
London, UK
Abstract Submission link
https://chronicdiseases.cmesociety.com/abstract-submission
Note: All the relevant abstracts will be accepted and published in respective conference proceedings.
PULSUS
Registration link
https://chronicdiseases.cmesociety.com/registration