InterLACE: A new international collaboration for a life course approach to women's reproductive health and chronic disease events
Author(s)
Mishra, Gita D
Anderson, Debra
Schoenaker, Danielle AJM
Adami, Hans-Olov
Avis, Nancy E
Brown, Daniel
Bruinsma, Fiona
Brunner, Eric
Cade, Janet E
Crawford, Sybil L
Dobson, Annette J
Elliott, Jane
Giles, Graham G
Gold, Ellen B
Hayashi, Kunihiko
Kuhn, Diana
Lee, Kathryn A
Lee, Jung Su
Melby, Melissa K
Mizunuma, Hideki
Sievert, Lynette L
Weiderpass, Elisabete
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2013
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Evidence from population-based studies of women increasingly points to the inter-related nature of reproductive health, lifestyle, and chronic disease risk. This paper describes the recently established International Collaboration for a Life Course Approach to Reproductive Health and Chronic Disease. InterLACE aims to advance the evidence base for women's health policy beyond associations from disparate studies by means of systematic and culturally sensitive synthesis of longitudinal data. Currently InterLACE draws on individual level data for reproductive health and chronic disease among 200,000 women from over thirteen ...
View more >Evidence from population-based studies of women increasingly points to the inter-related nature of reproductive health, lifestyle, and chronic disease risk. This paper describes the recently established International Collaboration for a Life Course Approach to Reproductive Health and Chronic Disease. InterLACE aims to advance the evidence base for women's health policy beyond associations from disparate studies by means of systematic and culturally sensitive synthesis of longitudinal data. Currently InterLACE draws on individual level data for reproductive health and chronic disease among 200,000 women from over thirteen studies of women's health in seven countries. The rationale for this multi-study research programme is set out in terms of a life course perspective to reproductive health. The research programme will build a comprehensive picture of reproductive health through life in relation to chronic disease risk. Although combining multiple international studies poses methodological challenges, InterLACE represents an invaluable opportunity to strength evidence to guide the development of timely and tailored preventive health strategies.
View less >
View more >Evidence from population-based studies of women increasingly points to the inter-related nature of reproductive health, lifestyle, and chronic disease risk. This paper describes the recently established International Collaboration for a Life Course Approach to Reproductive Health and Chronic Disease. InterLACE aims to advance the evidence base for women's health policy beyond associations from disparate studies by means of systematic and culturally sensitive synthesis of longitudinal data. Currently InterLACE draws on individual level data for reproductive health and chronic disease among 200,000 women from over thirteen studies of women's health in seven countries. The rationale for this multi-study research programme is set out in terms of a life course perspective to reproductive health. The research programme will build a comprehensive picture of reproductive health through life in relation to chronic disease risk. Although combining multiple international studies poses methodological challenges, InterLACE represents an invaluable opportunity to strength evidence to guide the development of timely and tailored preventive health strategies.
View less >
Journal Title
Maturitas
Volume
74
Issue
3
Subject
Clinical sciences
Clinical sciences not elsewhere classified