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1.
Malaysian Journal of Medicine and Health Sciences ; : 64-68, 2020.
Article Dans Anglais | WPRIM | ID: wpr-876677

Résumé

@#Introduction: Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the principal cause of admission and death in the Malaysian government hospitals. Method: The pattern of cardiac related mortality (CRM) cases in Hospital Serdang, Selangor was reviewed to determine the specific trends in ethnicity, age, gender and type of CRM. Data was drawn from the death registry records in Forensic Department of Hospital Serdang from January 2006 to December 2008. This preliminary project was carried out to assess the number of CRM cases and their characteristics to feed the decision to sensibly embark on another project related to atherosclerosis. Results: Out of 573 CRM cases, 84.5% were Malaysians out of which the majority were Malays (45.9%), followed by Chinese (30.2%), and Indians (22.1%). The majority were men (78.4%) with a mean age of death at 51.83 ± 14.10 (95% CI 50.52-53.14) years as compared to women (21.6%) with a mean age of death at 57.42 ± 16.92 (95% CI 54.41-60.43) years. Declining mortality trend was observed only in men. The 46-60 years old age group had the highest percentage of mortality and continually increase by year. Ischaemic heart disease (IHD) was the most common CRM type (69.1% in 2006, 66.2% in 2007, and 71.9% in 2008). Conclusion: We observed inconsistent trends of CRM in Hospital Serdang in terms of ethnicity, age, gender and type of CRM cases presented. Nevertheless, these findings do not necessarily represent the overall trends of CRM in Malaysia.

2.
Journal of the Korean Academy of Family Medicine ; : 1077-1085, 2001.
Article Dans Coréen | WPRIM | ID: wpr-149633

Résumé

BACKGROUND: In western countries the proportion of deaths in the hospital has somewhat decreased. While that of Korea has continuously increased, it is interesting things that the hospital death rate in Korea is less than that in western countries. Therefore we tried to find the factors associated with the place of death in Korea. METHODS: We obtained the data from the National Statistical Office. They are composed of address, occupation, cause of death, marital status, and level of education. Causes of death were classified by ICD 10. Univariate and Mutivariate analysis were done to find the effect of each variable for the place of death. RESULTS: Total number of the study population was 242,362 (male;136,063, female;106,299). Female died more in the hospital. The younger are more likely to die in the hospital. People having lived in metropolitan, having educated to higher level and professionals died more in the hospital. And the people having had ischemic heart disease and cancer death were more likely to die in the hospital. The single(unmarried, divorced) died more in the hospital. In multivariate analysis, the place of death was significantly different by sex, age, address, occupation, cause of death, and level of education. CONCLUSION: In Korea sex, age, address, occupation, cause of death, and level of education are helpful in predicting the palce of death.


Sujets)
Femelle , Humains , Cause de décès , Éducation , Corée , Situation de famille , Mortalité , Analyse multifactorielle , Ischémie myocardique , Professions
3.
Korean Journal of Preventive Medicine ; : 227-238, 1996.
Article Dans Coréen | WPRIM | ID: wpr-182956

Résumé

This study was conducted to evaluate the accuracy of the official death registry in rural area. The base data used for the study was 379 deaths registered during the period of 1993 and 1994 in 4 rural townships of Chonnam Province. The interview survey for cause-of-death was performed on the next of kin and/or neighbor. Additional medical informations were collected from hospitals and medical insurance associations for the purpose of verification. The underlying cause-of-death of 278 cases presumed by the survey was compared to the cause on official death registry. There was a prominent disagreement of cause-of-death between the survey data and the registry data(agreement rate: 38.9~44.6%%, according to disease classification method). These results may be caused by extremely low rates of physicians' certification, which were mostly confined to the poisoning and injury. Symptoms, signs, and ill defined conditions on death registry could be classified into circulatory disease(32.3%), neoplasm(21.2%), digestive disease(7.l%), injury and poisoning(7.l%) and so on. These results suggest that careful attention and verification be required on utilization of death registry data in rural area.


Sujets)
Cause de décès , Attestation , Classification , Assurance , Intoxication
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