Literature DB >> 25480438

The burden of disease in Spain: results from the global burden of disease study 2010.

Josep Maria Haro1,2, Stefanos Tyrovolas3,4, Noe Garin5,6, Cesar Diaz-Torne7, Loreto Carmona8, Lidia Sanchez-Riera9,10, Fernando Perez-Ruiz11, Christopher J L Murray12.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: We herein evaluate the Spanish population's trends in health burden by comparing results of two Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Studies (the GBD studies) performed 20 years apart.
METHODS: Data is part of the GBD study for 1990 and 2010. We present results for mortality, years of life lost (YLLs), years lived with disability, and disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) for the Spanish population. Uncertainty intervals for all measures have been estimated.
RESULTS: Non-communicable diseases accounted for 3,703,400 (95% CI 3,648,270-3,766,720) (91.3%) of 4,057,400 total deaths, in the Spanish population. Cardiovascular and circulatory diseases were the main cause of mortality among non-communicable diseases (34.7% of total deaths), followed by neoplasms (27.1% of total deaths). Neoplasms, cardiovascular and circulatory diseases, and chronic respiratory diseases were the top three leading causes for YLLs. The most important causes of DALYs in 2010 were neoplasms, cardiovascular and circulatory diseases, musculoskeletal disorders, and mental and behavioral disorders.
CONCLUSIONS: Mortality and disability in Spain have become even more linked to non-communicable diseases over the last years, following the worldwide trends. Cardiovascular and circulatory diseases, neoplasms, mental and behavioral disorders, and neurological disorders are the leading causes of mortality and disability. Specific focus is needed from health care providers and policy makers to develop health promotion and health education programs directed towards non-communicable disorders.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25480438      PMCID: PMC4276068          DOI: 10.1186/s12916-014-0236-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMC Med        ISSN: 1741-7015            Impact factor:   8.775


Background

The impact of diseases and injures on population health is usually assessed with measures of mortality and non-fatal health outcomes [1]. These estimates are used to signal the most relevant public health problems, allow comparison between different populations and different health conditions, and assess changes over time. The only comprehensive effort to date to estimate summary measures of the global population health, by cause and by world region, is the ongoing Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors (GBD) initiative [2,3]. The first GBD study analyzed data from 1990 [4] and was published in 1993. Since then, a number of updates have been published [5]. The Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study 2010 (GBD 2010) has updated and expanded previous efforts to include 1,160 diseases and injury sequelae from the previous analysis, which included 483 diseases. The most important limitation of previous GBD studies is that results were not estimated with uncertainty [6]. Specifically, uncertainty can come from many sources, including heterogeneity in the empirical data that are available and uncertainty in the indirect estimation models used to make predictions for populations with little or no data. However, this limitation has been solved in the recent analysis of the GBD 2010 study. The GBD initiative uses disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) and mortality as the summary measurements of the impact of health conditions on population health. The DALY combines the years of life lost (YLLs) due to premature mortality and the years lived with disability (YLDs). The use of DALYs as measure of impact, the inclusion of a large number of communicable and non-communicable conditions, the analysis of the impact of health conditions stratified by gender and age, and the effort to use comparable methodologies across countries and regions make the GBD project an excellent tool to understand the determinants of health and their variability across time and regions. According to previous reported global results, in 1990, 47% of DALYs were attributed to communicable, maternal, neonatal, and nutritional disorders, 43% to non-communicable diseases, and 10% to injuries, while in 2010, this had reversed to 35%, 54%, and 11%, respectively [5]. Besides clear differences among countries with different socioeconomic conditions, heterogeneity is also present when analyzing and comparing countries with more similar socioeconomic conditions. For example, in the United Kingdom (UK), mortality and disability as well as overall health has improved in absolute terms between 1990 and 2010. However, according to Murray et al. [7], the UK performed worse than other EU countries in age-standardized mortality, YLLs, and life expectancy rates. The UK age-standardized DALY rates for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, disorders of drug use, lower respiratory infections, breast cancers, and preterm birth complications were significantly higher compared to the mean of the EU-15 area countries [7]. Spain is a southern European country with distinct sociodemographic and health characteristics; while in former years large proportions of the population adhered to a Mediterranean diet, dietary habits are changing rapidly with alarming rates of obesity and smoking and alcohol drinking are still highly prevalent in the country despite public health efforts to reduce consumption. Nevertheless, the, until recently, universal coverage of the National Health System also facilitates good health care levels and the implementation of some preventive actions. Until now, to the best of our knowledge, only two studies have tried to assess the burden of disease in Spain. Genova-Maleras et al. [8] estimated the impact of different diseases using DALYs. According to the researchers, the DALYs due to all diseases and injuries were estimated at 5.1 million in Spain. Almost 90% of these were attributed to chronic diseases. Specifically, the leading causes of DALYs were neurological and mental disorders, followed by malignant neoplasms and cardiovascular diseases [8]. However, the aforementioned results were partially limited, since the mortality data came from Spanish registers, while the incidence and severity rates were obtained from estimations of the WHO for a variety of European countries (i.e., WHO European Region Eur-A). A more recent project, but only including data from Valencia, revealed similar results [9], reporting that the number of DALYs gradually increased with age and almost 27% of all DALYs occurred among people over the age of 70 [9]. Given the scarcity of analysis of the data from Spain and the relevance of learning from the experience and comparison with similar and not so similar countries, the aim of the present work was to evaluate the change in burden of disease in Spain, comparing the available data of the GBD over time, between 1990 and 2010.

Methods

Overview

The GBD 2010 study estimates the impact of 291 diseases and injuries and 67 risk factors for 187 countries distributed into 21 world regions between 1990 and 2010. For each cause, 1 to 24 sequelae were defined. Sequelae are the clinical outcomes that can be related to specific diseases and injuries such as neuropathy due to diabetes. In total, the study includes 1,160 sequelae. More detailed information about data and analysis for the GBD 2010 have been previously reported [2,5,6,10,11]. For the present analysis, only information regarding Spain will be reported.

Measurements

We report data on mortality, YLLs due to premature mortality, YLDs, and DALYs. Age-specific mortality rates for Spain were estimated for each sex. As in other developed countries, information about deaths was predominantly driven by data from official vital registration systems [12]. The denominators were based on Spanish census returns and intercensal estimates. Similarly to the other 187 countries of the GBD study, the estimated number of deaths and YLLs was based on 235 defined underlying causes of mortality from the list of 291 diseases and injuries, for 20 age groups and both sexes [2,13]. The YLLs were computed by multiplying the number of deaths in each age group by a reference life expectancy [2]. The YLDs were computed by multiplying the prevalence of a sequelae by its disability weight (DW), used to quantify population’s health losses. This procedure varies slightly compared to previous GBD studies, in which incidence and average duration of the case until remission was used instead of prevalence [14]. A total of 1,160 possible sequelae of diseases and injuries were analyzed. Murray et al. [5] have described the systematic analysis of available data conducted for each sequelae with regard to the prevalence, incidence, remission, and excess mortality. For each age-sex-year group, estimates were made for most sequelae using Bayesian meta-regression methods. DWs were obtained for 220 health states covering the 1,160 sequelae [6]. For each sequelae, DWs were derived based on the scoring of short lay descriptions of the relevant health domains in large population-based studies in several countries (i.e., Peru, USA) and through an open internet survey [15]. Finally, for the estimation of the DALYs, the arithmetic sum of YLLs and YLDs was used. The YLDs age-standardized rates for each cause, in 1990 and 2010, were calculated. For this procedure the WHO age-standard was used as has been described in former GBD analyses [16]. Spain’s YLDs age-standardized rankings were compared with other European countries. The aforementioned comparison of YLDs age-standardized rates provides an opportunity to compare the YLDs across the European countries in specific periods, controlling for number variations and crude rates due to differences in population age. In order to differentiate the change in DALYs due to demographic variations from those to health changes or other reasons, two counterfactual increases in total DALYs were calculated based on the 1990 population sex and age distribution and compared with the observed increase from 1990 to 2010: i) the expected increase in total DALYs if total population increase had been as observed but without change in the age/sex structure or in strata-specific DALY rates; ii) the expected increase in total DALYs if the population and its age/sex structure had changed as observed but without change in strata-specific DALY rates (application of 1990 stratum-specific DALY rates to the 2010 population strata sizes). The first estimate, (i), provides the increase attributable to population increase without population aging; (ii) minus (i) gives the increase attributable to population aging and the observed increase from 1990 to 2010 minus (ii) gives the increase attributable to changes in stratum-specific DALY rates.

Uncertainty levels

Uncertainty levels for mortality rate were estimated using standard simulation methods [2]. Uncertainty for mortality and YLLs reflected uncertainty in the levels of all-cause mortality and uncertainty in the estimation of each mortality cause, in each age group, sex, and year. Uncertainty in the disability weight for each sequelae was propagated into the estimates of YLDs for each disease and injury. For a more accurate estimation of YLDs, the effect of comorbidity was taken into account, as explained in Vos et al. [10]. Specifically, the procedure of microsimulation for each country (explicitly here for Spain), age, sex, and year were used in a large number of simulated individuals. This standard simulation method was repeated 1,000 times to be able to capture uncertainty in the prevalence of all sequelae and disability weights [10].

Results

From 1990 to 2010, the overall Spanish population increased by almost 15% (from 38,914,907 to 44,558,264 people) (Table 1). A similar increase was observed in males and females, close to 15% and 14%, respectively. The population of older adults in Spain presented the highest increase among all age groups. For example, in octogenarians (aged 80+ years), the increase was almost double. The highest decrease of population was observed in the younger ages (0–20 years old), where the population dropped by 21%.
Table 1

Spanish population (millions) in 1990 and 2010

1990 2010 Δ%
Both sexes, all ages38,914,90744,558,26415
  0–19 years old11,078,5218,781,618−21
  20–39 years old11,618,04413,004,29712
  40–59 years old8,820,92712,589,54643
  60–79 years old6,240,6517,878,25226
  80+ years old1,156,7642,304,55499
Males, all ages19,057,59021,964,40515
Females, all ages19,857,31722,593,85914
Spanish population (millions) in 1990 and 2010 Table 2 illustrates the main causes of mortality and YLLs by gender and age group for the Spanish population. As expected, non-communicable diseases were the major cause of mortality, accounting for 3,703,400 (95% CI 3,648,270–3,766,720) (91.3%) of 4,057,400 total deaths. Cardiovascular and circulatory diseases were the main cause of mortality among the non-communicable diseases (34.7% of total deaths), followed by neoplasms (27.1% of total deaths). The third category, injuries, accounted for 4.1% of Spanish deaths [170,040, 95% CI (148,350–187,710)].
Table 2

Main causes of mortality and years of life lost (YLLs) by age groups and by gender, for the Spanish population in 2010

Deaths (hundreds) YLLs (hundreds)
Both sexes, all ages <1 year 1–19 years 20–39 years 40–59 years 60–79 years 80+ years Males, all ages Females, all ages Both sexes, all ages Males, all ages Females, all ages
All causes4,057.416.914.974.9345.61,283.02,322.22,049.92,007.554,562.832,736.321,826.5
Communicable, maternal, neonatal, and nutritional disorders 183.96 (157.53–214.88)10.41.35.814.335.6116.689.84 (74.84–110.39)94.12 (75.54–117)3,124.9 (2,873.32 – 3,397.56)1,818.74 (1,629.9 – 2,038.1)1,306.17 (1,154.6 – 1,471.72)
HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis16.76 (14.7–19.39)0.00.03.67.53.02.812.12 (10.21–14.78)4.63 (3.85–5.63)555.31 (480.43–649.07)420.04 (349.4–512.85)135.27 (115.48–159.21)
Diarrhea, lower respiratory infections, meningitis, and other common infectious diseases138.1 (113.55–169.75)0.40.71.55.227.8102.464.36 (49.5–85.36)73.75 (55.79–96.84)1,432.97 (1,244.82 – 1,680.97)783.48 (640.77–986.07)649.49 (534.56–788.48)
Neglected tropical diseases and malaria1.66 (0.84–3.19)0.00.00.00.00.30.50.62 (0.31–1.14)1.04 (0.4–2.45)49.34 (27.47–89.06)20.64 (11.35–36.68)28.7 (11.85–61.85)
Maternal disorders0.32 (0.22–0.42)0.00.00.00.00.00.0–*0.32 (0.22–0.42)16.2 (10.86–21.52)–*16.2 (10.86–21.52)
Neonatal disorders9.8 (8.54–11.03)9.80.00.00.00.00.05.5 (4.63–6.4)4.3 (3.4–5.11)842.8 (734.44–948.51)473.06 (398.16–550.48)369.74 (292.36–439.4)
Nutritional deficiencies9.52 (5.24–13.19)0.00.00.00.01.37.83.24 (1.82–4.57)6.29 (2.72–9.74)82.92 (48.12–106.53)35.8 (20.2–45.91)47.12 (22.07–68.11)
Other communicable, maternal, neonatal, and nutritional disorders7.79 (5.07–9.57)0.00.00.11.13.13.14 (2.37–5.02)3.8 (2.32–5.06)145.36 (100.68–168.33)85.71 (56.07–102.53)59.64 (39.63–73.75)
Non-communicable diseases 3,703.42 (3,648.27 – 3,766.72)6.17.539.6297.01.205.72.147.21,853.9 (1,818.92 – 1,891.49)1,849.53 (1,807.93 – 1,895.78)46,970.31 (46,249.68–48,068.86)27,624.78 (27,059.44 – 28,507.45)19,345.53 (18,957.63 – 19,922.49)
Neoplasms1,101.24 (1,014.78 – 1,168.33)0.03.216.5166.4513.7401.3671.72 (603.52–728.99)429.52 (386.58–469.72)18,488.09 (17,216.3 – 19,429.35)11,636.36 (10,542.8 – 12,486.19)6851.73 (6324.27–7307.47)
 Esophageal cancer19.45 (14.41–26.46)0.00.00.04.99.94.616.47 (11.79–23.21)2.97 (1.89–4.47)388.59 (286.84–536.01)349.47 (253.61–493.6)39.11 (23.43–53.73)
 Stomach cancer64.9 (49.72–93.74)0.00.00.77.929.227.136.68 (24.69–52.52)28.22 (18.13–51.95)986.61 (741.61 – 1,378.18)613.71 (403.16–859.83)372.9 (229.02–636.47)
 Liver cancer52.14 (42.39–65.26)0.00.00.36.826.618.232.93 (25.09–42.88)19.2 (14.55–28.42)837.17 (701.49 – 1,036.73)591.1 (470.26–768.21)246.07 (197.75–342.93)
 Larynx cancer17.38 (9.03–31.26)0.00.00.04.88.93.616.56 (8.38–30.24)0.83 (0.38–1.31)361.52 (190.52–673.47)348.38 (180.74–659.95)13.14 (5.59–22.2)
 Trachea, bronchus, and lung cancers191.92 (123.09–218.32)0.00.01.339.2105.446.0163.47 (99.12–188.56)28.45 (12.43–35.7)3,641.21 (2,366.65 – 4,115.82)3,088.96 (1,923.35 – 3,509.43)552.25 (221.23–698.17)
 Breast cancer65.87 (58.98–73.57)0.00.02.016.624.722.5–*65.87 (58.98–73.57)1281.35 (1177.3–1410.43)–*1,281.35 (1,177.3 – 1,410.43)
 Cervical cancer9.09 (5.98–13.94)0.00.00.42.93.32.4–*9.09 (5.98–13.94)207.1 (130.86–301.52)–*207.1 (130.86–301.52)
 Uterine cancer12.5 (5.29–17.15)0.00.00.01.26.35.0–*12.5 (5.29–17.15)181.01 (81.49–256.02)–*181.01 (81.49–256.02)
 Prostate cancer76.48 (43.85–133.33)0.00.00.01.329.545.776.48 (43.85–133.33)–*818.99 (459.29 – 1,372.44)818.99 (459.29 – 1,372.44)–*
 Colon and rectum cancers160.31 (126.24–180.29)0.00.01.116.971.970.390.85 (66.16–104.65)69.46 (50.39–82.73)2,323.71 (1,897.63 – 2,571.55)1,399.22 (1,060.67 – 1,580.73)924.49 (704.14 – 1,098.13)
 Mouth cancer13.87 (11.62–16.79)0.00.00.13.76.23.610.33 (8.48–13.11)3.54 (2.14–4.85)282.8 (236.88–352.29)230.16 (187.58–298.5)52.65 (31.34–70.41)
 Nasopharynx cancer2.61 (1.64–3.53)0.00.00.00.81.20.51.96 (1.14–2.91)0.65 (0.31–1.05)62.2 (39.43–87.48)49.32 (29.12–74.66)12.88 (6.14–19.83)
 Cancer of other part of pharynx and oropharynx8.63 (4.93–11.43)0.00.00.03.24.11.27.5 (4.12–10.7)1.13 (0.48–1.83)206.07 (118.56–292.36)185.2 (104.09–277.98)20.87 (8.52–33.12)
 Gallbladder and biliary tract cancer19.93 (13.61–30.72)0.00.00.01.49.39.07.04 (4.22–11.03)12.89 (7.14–22.96)269.16 (187.54–408.35)107.66 (65.4–163.82)161.5 (88.78–288.73)
 Pancreatic cancer53.44 (38.17–70.44)0.00.00.37.627.418.027.66 (17.79–36.7)25.78 (15.56–39.61)875.5 (637.54 – 1,113.72)517.94 (335.01–680.03)357.56 (215.21–544.31)
 Malignant melanoma of skin9.36 (5.58–13.09)0.00.00.52.23.82.75.14 (2.28–8.31)4.22 (2.23–6.97)198.46 (125.2–285.93)114.49 (55.15–197.21)83.97 (46.36–131.3)
 Non-melanoma skin cancer6.79 (4.12–11.36)0.00.00.00.31.64.73.57 (1.72–6.74)3.23 (1.42–7.1)72.93 (44.47–125.29)46.17 (22.35–90.37)26.75 (11.84–56.5)
 Ovarian cancer21.15 (13.35–27.17)0.00.00.45.010.15.6–*21.15 (13.35–27.17)415.83 (277.13–553.19)–*415.83 (277.13–553.19)
 Testicular cancer0.66 (0.32–1.1)0.00.00.00.00.00.10.66 (0.32–1.1)–*21.3 (11.38–31.3)21.3 (11.38–31.3)–*
 Kidney and other urinary organ cancers34.18 (24.57–56.41)0.00.00.25.216.811.821.44 (14.98–41.31)12.74 (7.01–23.93)574.91 (420.5–941.19)385.7 (278.74–736.03)189.21 (108.55–335.81)
 Bladder cancer49.77 (34.6–60.6)0.00.00.03.622.124.139.86 (24.7–50.26)9.91 (7.13–13)654.29 (461.6–771.51)549.7 (357.15–673.67)104.6 (77.76–128.75)
 Brain and nervous system cancers35.98 (19.75–47.79)0.00.92.08.417.27.519.01 (7.63–26.36)16.96 (6.63–25.86)830.9 (476.65 – 1,032.05)470.77 (201.2–635.62)360.13 (155.29–483.64)
 Thyroid cancer3.59 (2.59–4.71)0.00.00.00.31.71.41.2 (0.67–1.73)2.39 (1.48–3.39)57.39 (42.19–73.87)23.49 (12.68–33.42)33.91 (21.28–47.35)
 Hodgkin's disease2.65 (1.69–3.95)0.00.00.30.41.10.61.43 (0.72–2.35)1.22 (0.6–2.06)70.16 (46.16–106.97)41.58 (21.53–69.86)28.59 (14.86–49.59)
 Non-Hodgkin lymphoma27.11 (17.91–33.76)0.00.01.04.012.69.314.12 (8.57–17.92)12.98 (6.48–17.22)487.31 (353.12–563.21)283.95 (184.07–336.15)203.35 (113.58–246.19)
 Multiple myeloma17.81 (11.24–25.25)0.00.00.01.69.76.48.93 (4.6–15.05)8.88 (4.49–14.08)267.24 (175.37–381.15)142.53 (75.4–242.08)124.71 (64.53–196.93)
 Leukemia39.1 (27.64–48.47)0.00.91.53.816.316.622.79 (13.64–28.19)16.31 (8.25–23.37)672.27 (529–803.1)406.11 (272.07–491.1)266.16 (149.02–354.36)
 Other neoplasms84.59 (64.71–111.97)0.00.82.211.637.032.945.63 (29.95–69.82)38.96 (25.69–58.6)1,442.11 (1,134.05 – 1,965.74)850.47 (589.15 – 1,306.45)591.64 (403.56–900.02)
Cardiovascular and circulatory diseases1,411.99 (1,323.93 – 1,541.5)0.20.99.870.4374.6956.1621.16 (583.59–657.16)790.83 (714.8–921.4)1,4937.05 (1,4229.38 – 1,6134.05)8,344.88 (7,929.4 – 8,713.27)6,592.17 (6,047.73 – 7,708.66)
 Rheumatic heart disease36.79 (29.03–45.78)0.00.00.11.39.425.78.77 (5.83–11.22)28.02 (21.11–36.12)368.29 (308.32–428.92)117.17 (78.95–138.38)251.12 (204.52–302.84)
 Ischemic heart disease626.56 (577.22–692.18)0.00.14.940.2178.0403.3308.45 (282.37–349.41)318.11 (282.55–370.95)7,081 (6,637.38 – 7,802.67)4,428.89 (4,114.2 – 4,977.74)2,652.11 (2,409.27 – 3,107.44)
 Cerebrovascular disease429.4 (368.79–561.38)0.00.11.914.0103.2310.0171.63 (142.42–222.99)257.77 (213.81–366.07)4,112.36 (3,640.69 – 5,216.74)2,003.92 (1,732.92 – 2,516.07)2,108.44 (1,807.93 – 2,964.23)
 Hypertensive heart disease63.64 (47.68–83.36)0.00.00.11.612.948.821.25 (15.45–26.68)42.38 (27.82–62.1)566.48 (445.62–709.6)242.98 (183.82–285.61)323.5 (216.24–460.26)
 Cardiomyopathy and myocarditis50.88 (43.67–60.5)0.00.01.14.816.328.428.21 (22.58–36.59)22.67 (18.15–27.22)697.3 (611.01–826.99)470.92 (389.76–589.69)226.37 (192.37–257.76)
 Atrial fibrillation and flutter49.57 (29.32–78.88)0.00.00.00.38.840.516.36 (8.17–30.95)33.21 (16.15–60.01)388.35 (250.38–588.8)156.64 (84.08–278.6)231.71 (129.37–389.33)
 Aortic aneurysm22.1 (16.23–29.05)0.00.00.11.89.810.216.99 (11.53–23.56)5.11 (3.65–8.83)308.17 (224.6–403.06)251.95 (169.97–345.83)56.22 (45.13–84.66)
 Peripheral vascular disease13.51 (7.89–21.83)0.00.00.00.12.810.54.27 (1.77–8.98)9.24 (4.84–16.38)113.92 (69.2–182.18)49.4 (20.22–100.5)64.52 (37.27–112.09)
 Endocarditis4.85 (3.53–5.85)0.00.00.00.31.62.62.32 (1.68–2.94)2.53 (1.48–3.34)68.91 (52.71–80.35)39.65 (30.25–47.19)29.26 (17.32–36.84)
 Other cardiovascular and circulatory diseases114.69 (103.64–128.09)0.00.01.15.231.876.342.9 (38.16–47.72)71.79 (61.6–84.61)1,232.26 (1,151.54 – 1,317.41)583.36 (538.22–631.15)648.9 (582.6–724.27)
Chronic respiratory diseases314.29 (290.3–340.56)0.00.00.97.785.1220.4184.71 (168.12–201.48)129.58 (112.04–149.2)3,042.65 (2,862.02 – 3,232.05)1,988.91 (1,853.32 – 2,124.11)1,053.75 (943.48 – 1,173.44)
 Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease186.69 (161.55–210.12)0.00.00.14.154.2128.0127.89 (102.9–151.05)58.8 (51.86–66.3)1,816.89 (1,581.96 – 2,035.79)1,350.53 (1,113.46 – 1,566.59)466.36 (424.85–510.99)
 Pneumoconiosis14.55 (9.49–21.14)0.00.00.00.34.110.18.41 (4.68–13.84)6.14 (3.08–10.78)142.94 (95.3–207.26)95.76 (55.91–154.49)47.18 (24.97–78.07)
 Asthma10.82 (8.31–14.66)0.00.00.00.53.07.02.48 (1.66–5.71)8.34 (5.6–10.39)126.37 (103.62–173.86)39.76 (28.92–83.48)86.61 (61.65–101.64)
 Interstitial lung disease and pulmonary sarcoidosis19.91 (12.32–29.59)0.00.00.01.08.910.010.94 (5.81–19.32)8.98 (4.04–15.82)246.47 (167.1–353.69)145.14 (85.09–237.34)101.33 (52.57–165.72)
 Other chronic respiratory diseases82.32 (60.89–108.12)0.00.00.21.614.965.334.99 (24.62–53.3)47.32 (30.81–69.1)709.98 (577.64–969.25)357.72 (274.56–541.95)352.26 (248.4–502.74)
Cirrhosis of the liver88.53 (77.98–111.17)0.00.02.121.537.627.354.89 (46.88–74.57)33.64 (27.92–44.82)1,735.13 (1,547.01 – 2,184.28)1,222.34 (1,061.28 – 1,660.84)512.79 (438.15–732.49)
 Cirrhosis of the liver secondary to hepatitis B3.68 (3.06–4.61)0.00.00.00.81.61.21.93 (1.5–2.69)1.74 (1.33–2.27)66.56 (55.74–85.12)40.9 (31.63–56.41)25.66 (19.88–34.09)
 Cirrhosis of the liver secondary to hepatitis C38.7 (32.55–49.19)0.00.00.47.217.513.618.92 (14.59–26.86)19.78 (15.03–26.26)672.7 (569.42–857.44)389.74 (303.2–550.58)282.96 (221.68–386.87)
 Cirrhosis of the liver secondary to alcohol use38.53 (32.41–50.61)0.00.01.110.915.910.629.81 (23.69–41.15)8.72 (6.93–11.34)812.93 (675.37 – 1,067.51)676.87 (540.63–931.27)136.05 (110.95–182.42)
 Other cirrhosis of the liver7.62 (6.34–9.58)0.00.00.42.72.51.94.24 (3.29–6)3.39 (2.63–4.49)182.95 (152.89–235.21)114.82 (89.6–162.57)68.12 (53.84–96.43)
Digestive diseases (except cirrhosis)129.05 (111.24–145.99)0.00.00.96.135.486.554.43 (41.68–65.06)74.62 (62.01–87.51)1,367.61 (1,200.26 – 1,524.33)712.46 (566.44–835.42)655.16 (575.25–735.08)
 Peptic ulcer disease7.94 (6.12–12.78)0.00.00.00.52.35.03.91 (2.75–6.09)4.03 (2.78–7.21)94.36 (78.41–133.23)56.52 (42.89–76.76)37.84 (29.6–60.57)
 Gastritis and duodenitis0.7 (0.38–1.34)0.00.00.00.00.00.50.33 (0.15–0.79)0.37 (0.17–0.83)7.71 (4.66–14)4.37 (2.43–9.64)3.34 (1.85–6.94)
 Appendicitis2.27 (1.25–3.37)0.00.00.00.00.81.20.99 (0.39–1.73)1.28 (0.51–2.11)29.43 (17.11–40.96)15.49 (6.22–24.66)13.94 (5.89–20.06)
 Paralytic ileus and intestinal obstruction without hernia18.65 (11.22–27.18)0.00.00.00.34.213.96.75 (3.24–10.65)11.89 (6.27–19.31)168.81 (105.79–226.43)73.98 (37.43–107.19)94.82 (52.72–141.84)
 Inguinal or femoral hernia1.98 (1.78–2.05)0.00.00.00.00.41.40.87 (0.67–0.91)1.11 (1.07–1.16)19.83 (17.64–20.41)10.61 (8.46–10.99)9.22 (9–9.53)
 Non-infective inflammatory bowel disease3.44 (2.08–4.92)0.00.00.00.01.02.11.38 (0.77–2.01)2.05 (1.08–3.31)42.73 (27.98–55.05)21.53 (12.89–28.54)21.2 (12.37–30.96)
 Vascular disorders of intestine31.9 (17.39–57.23)0.00.00.00.98.921.914.29 (3.42–38.48)17.61 (7.83–28.97)311.86 (164.05–601.7)170.18 (41.36–457.84)141.68 (65.87–231.55)
 Gall bladder and bile duct disease17.51 (12.19–24.68)0.00.00.00.33.913.06.69 (3.94–10.06)10.82 (6.51–17.59)162.17 (122.46–210.64)74.29 (46.15–103.25)87.88 (57.82–129.7)
 Pancreatitis13.45 (9.97–17.26)0.00.00.21.54.77.06.36 (4.13–9.22)7.08 (4.72–10.08)190.96 (146.04–250.94)113.47 (77.21–169.87)77.5 (54.84–111.18)
 Other digestive diseases31.22 (21.1–39.68)0.00.00.11.68.920.412.85 (8.58–16.52)18.36 (9.95–26.55)339.75 (246.38–418.1)172.02 (118.95–215.82)167.73 (90.77–234.96)
Neurological disorders298.8 (200.34–394.65)0.30.71.76.564.8224.8109.69 (77.39–153.19)189.11 (95.13–279.64)2,744.5 (2,092.35 – 3,423.72)1,220.72 (953.14 – 1,606.4)1,523.78 (921.34 – 2,077)
 Alzheimer's disease and other dementias243.35 (144.54–342.54)0.00.00.01.044.2198.081.11 (52.94–126.3)162.24 (67.03–254.46)1,877.24 (1,253.43 – 2,491)729.99 (507.22 – 1,079.75)1,147.26 (548.76 – 1,699.76)
 Parkinson's disease29.53 (18.66–40.27)0.00.00.00.19.319.814.86 (7.69–21.9)14.67 (7.22–22.47)274.27 (188.02–366.69)151.03 (87.14–227.06)123.24 (69.48–176.67)
 Epilepsy4.82 (3.25–6.35)0.00.00.40.81.22.02.47 (1.6–3.31)2.36 (1.25–3.71)108.12 (77.25–127.15)64.85 (42.33–82.13)43.27 (27.22–55.03)
 Multiple sclerosis1.95 (1.42–2.48)0.00.00.00.80.70.20.83 (0.54–1.11)1.12 (0.7–1.57)54.54 (39.84–70)23.21 (15.26–31.31)31.33 (19.49–44.75)
 Other neurological disorders19.16 (12.14–26.18)0.30.30.93.59.24.710.43 (5.95–15.79)8.73 (3.82–14.32)430.33 (278.35–593.29)251.65 (149.6–392.18)178.69 (80.22–282.85)
Mental and behavioral disorders13.49 (9.72–21.5)0.00.13.94.23.22.210.37 (7.15–18.63)3.13 (1.83–4.34)453.07 (323.04–797.96)375.8 (253.67–729)77.26 (48.94–109.57)
 Schizophrenia1.17 (0.61–1.69)0.00.00.00.00.40.40.61 (0.27–0.9)0.56 (0.22–0.99)22.53 (12.28–29.9)13.51 (6.02–19.24)9.02 (3.73–13.98)
 Alcohol use disorders4.36 (2.61–8.97)0.00.00.22.01.70.43.82 (2.05–8.28)0.55 (0.22–1.13)124.99 (77.51–260.19)109.43 (61.15–243.7)15.57 (6.05–31.99)
 Drug use disorders6.98 (3.87–12.75)0.00.13.32.00.60.85.52 (2.66–10.82)1.47 (0.54–2.24)291.52 (165.61–588.06)245.59 (124.78–541.19)45.92 (21.12–72.44)
 Eating disorders0.29 (0.09–0.53)0.00.00.00.00.00.20.1 (0.02–0.2)0.19 (0.05–0.39)4.53 (2.04–6.56)1.77 (0.6–2.79)2.76 (1.07–4.43)
 Other mental and behavioral disorders0.69 (0.22–1.23)0.00.00.00.00.00.40.32 (0.08–0.59)0.37 (0.08–0.77)9.5 (3.94–14.28)5.5 (1.79–8.61)3.99 (1.36–7.01)
Diabetes, urogenital, blood, and endocrine diseases280.14 (242.63–353.84)0.30.92.211.279.6185.6122.76 (103.65–167.15)157.38 (128.53–205.29)3,032.98 (2,645.05 – 4,078.86)1,571.2 (1,318.85 – 2,311.61)1,461.78 (1,239.48–1,988.42)
 Diabetes mellitus112.02 (93.98–151.69)0.00.00.23.934.773.344.69 (36.31–64.25)67.33 (53.47–95.38)1,146.26 (995.43 – 1,592.83)561.77 (479.06–867.39)584.49 (484.08–889.93)
 Acute glomerulonephritis0.12 (0.06–0.2)0.00.00.00.00.0<0.10.07 (0.03–0.13)0.05 (0.02–0.1)2.5 (1.13–3.85)1.55 (0.61–2.75)0.95 (0.33–1.55)
 Chronic kidney diseases84.59 (67.95–110.54)0.00.00.22.421.660.040.03 (32.54–56.18)44.56 (30.42–67.37)819.87 (698.77 – 1,098.83)434.71 (369.26–647.87)385.15 (289.79–590.98)
 Urinary diseases and male infertility44.35 (26.86–63.32)0.00.00.01.110.832.021.01 (10.9–33.29)23.34 (11.35–38.22)422.38 (270.67–566.13)222.07 (121.63–335.67)200.31 (108.39–294.38)
 Gynecological diseases0.35 (0.3–0.39)0.00.00.00.00.00.2–*0.35 (0.3–0.39)5.16 (3.99–6.54)–*5.16 (3.99–6.54)
 Hemoglobinopathies and hemolytic anemia5.12 (3.77–7.24)0.00.00.00.01.33.31.89 (1.27–3.33)3.23 (2.15–4.79)63.28 (49.79–89.97)28.65 (21.48–47.37)34.63 (24.75–52.35)
 Other endocrine, nutritional, blood, and immune disorders33.6 (20.57–84.45)0.30.81.33.411.016.815.07 (7.43–50.5)18.52 (9.54–47.65)573.52 (378.68–1356.21)322.44 (178.48–991.18)251.08 (145.49–542.18)
Musculoskeletal disorders39.06 (25.64–66.48)0.00.00.31.57.929.313.39 (7.92–29.58)25.67 (14.36–48.24)375.55 (268.26–613.79)143.94 (96.43–294.08)231.6 (141.74–414.1)
 Rheumatoid arthritis2.89 (1.98–4.19)0.00.00.00.11.51.10.65 (0.36–0.91)2.24 (1.42–3.54)44.56 (31.57–68.08)11.65 (6.79–15.99)32.91 (22–57.69)
 Other musculoskeletal disorders36.17 (23.93–62.55)0.00.00.21.36.528.212.74 (7.32–28.65)23.43 (13.07–42.38)330.99 (241.09–564.59)132.3 (86.48–278.21)198.69 (129.47–310.74)
Other non-communicable diseases26.82 (21.12–32.38)4.91.31.11.74.113.710.76 (8.68–13.33)16.06 (11.32–21.15)793.69 (700.07–998.5)408.18 (349.11–554.42)385.51 (323.19–522.23)
 Congenital anomalies15.23 (12.89–18.32)4.21.31.11.52.05.36.84 (5.66–8.92)8.38 (6.41–10.77)637.65 (561.04–826.64)336.37 (283.44–482.44)301.28 (254.05–437.58)
 Skin and subcutaneous diseases10.88 (6.36–15.66)0.00.00.00.02.28.43.53 (1.83–5.17)7.36 (3.26–11.69)94.99 (60.79–124.7)37.8 (22.51–50.55)57.19 (28.45–83.86)
 Sudden infant death syndrome0.71 (0.37–1.3)0.70.00.00.00.00.00.4 (0.16–0.89)0.31 (0.12–0.74)61.05 (31.43–111.36)34 (14.13–76.52)27.04 (10–63.55)
Injuries 170.04 (148.35–187.71)0.36.129.534.141.758.4106.22 (90.64–120.45)63.81 (51.39–76.28)4,467.58 (3,963.64 – 4,986.31)3,292.76 (2,796.78 – 3,744.15)1,174.82 (1,034.86 – 1,351.47)
Transport injuries43.13 (37.17–58.97)0.13.612.611.010.45.431.86 (25.72–45.25)11.27 (9.3–16.49)1,619.03 (1,392.59 – 2,120.51)1,251.7 (1,009.35 – 1,695.55)367.33 (311.6–513.85)
 Road injury39.5 (34.03–54.39)0.03.511.99.99.34.928.91 (23.7–41.92)10.59 (8.9–16.96)1,495.72 (1,292.76 – 1,960.84)1,151.98 (940.51 – 1,613.62)343.74 (298.04–519.39)
 Other transport injury3.63 (2.55–4.38)0.00.10.91.11.20.52.95 (1.89–3.64)0.68 (0.41–0.94)123.31 (84.2–148.87)99.72 (65–123.8)23.59 (13.19–31.95)
Unintentional injuries other than transport injuries86.75 (66.99–104.08)0.21.57.110.120.647.244.43 (34.25–53.05)42.32 (29.03–55.39)1,528.68 (1,254.66 – 1,728.1)1,042.66 (815 – 1,229.43)486.02 (376.59–575.11)
 Falls30.18 (18.17–39.84)0.00.11.52.97.518.014.31 (7.51–19.64)15.87 (8.02–23.56)447.58 (283.13–557.46)290.71 (160.9–367.9)156.87 (86.49–210.64)
 Drowning6 (4.88–7.84)0.00.51.31.61.80.84.75 (3.71–6.73)1.24 (0.93–1.72)211.72 (171.89–283.97)174.93 (136.46–247.02)36.79 (28.15–50.44)
 Fire, heat, and hot substances3.68 (2.88–5.15)0.00.00.10.40.91.91.91 (1.41–2.8)1.78 (1.2–2.94)70.8 (57.89–97.19)45.6 (33.42–69.01)25.2 (18.93–38.16)
 Poisoning4.4 (2.11–6.11)0.00.01.61.20.60.82.98 (1.07–4.44)1.42 (0.61–1.99)158.83 (71.04–225.89)120.96 (40.98–185.67)37.88 (18.83–49.55)
 Exposure to mechanical forces3.13 (1.83–4.37)0.00.00.71.10.70.42.59 (1.37–3.91)0.54 (0.21–0.84)110.16 (64.39–170.53)97.15 (52.91–157.16)13.01 (6.3–17.41)
 Adverse effects of medical treatment9.25 (5.89–14.86)0.00.00.00.83.05.23.72 (2.85–4.92)5.53 (2.38–11.18)124.7 (92.38–189.32)61.82 (50.93–75.98)62.88 (32.01–124.6)
 Animal contact0.23 (0.16–0.33)0.00.00.00.00.0<0.10.17 (0.1–0.25)0.06 (0.03–0.1)6.95 (4.67–10.13)5.57 (3.3–8.48)1.38 (0.82–2.26)
Unintentional injuries not classified elsewhere29.87 (20.72–40.43)0.10.11.42.26.020.114 (10.17–19.39)15.87 (7.88–25.14)397.93 (328.14–565.3)245.92 (194.62–407.48)152.01 (106.27–205.69)
 Self-harm and interpersonal violence40.16 (29.92–51.78)0.00.69.912.910.75.829.94 (20.81–40.68)10.22 (7.11–14.48)1,319.87 (925.79 – 1,566.26)998.4 (662.08–1251.41)321.47 (206.88–412.94)
 Self-harm35.73 (25.84–47.01)0.00.58.211.510.05.426.91 (17.67–37.57)8.82 (5.95–13.1)1,139.19 (743.97 – 1,364.03)870.51 (539.56 – 1,112.22)268.69 (162.15–360.64)
 Interpersonal violence4.43 (3.28–6.27)0.00.11.71.40.70.43.03 (1.99–4.87)1.4 (1–1.69)180.68 (131.92–255.73)127.9 (81.49–197.53)52.78 (36.94–63.05)

Data are presented as mean values and uncertainty intervals (Lower, Upper).

Mortality’s uncertainty intervals in the six age groups (original age groups are 20) are not included in the table and will be given upon request.

*– not applicable.

Main causes of mortality and years of life lost (YLLs) by age groups and by gender, for the Spanish population in 2010 Data are presented as mean values and uncertainty intervals (Lower, Upper). Mortality’s uncertainty intervals in the six age groups (original age groups are 20) are not included in the table and will be given upon request. *– not applicable. Age-specific analysis revealed that non-communicable diseases remained the major cause of mortality except for children below 1 year of age. Cardiovascular- and circulatory-related mortality raised with ageing, from 6% of deaths in individuals younger than 20 years old to almost 41% in those 80 years old and over. Neoplasm-related mortality was almost 22% of deaths in individuals aged up to 40 years, nearly doubled in the group aged 40–79 years and finally dropped to 17% in the group of octogenarians. On the contrary, the main cause of mortality in newborns was communicable diseases, which accounted for 61.5% of all deaths within the group. In regard to gender differences, the main cause of male mortality was neoplasms (33%), followed by cardiovascular diseases (30.3%), chronic respiratory diseases (9.5%), neurological diseases (5.3%), and injuries (5.2%). On the other hand, the main cause of female mortality were cardiovascular diseases (39.4%) followed by neoplasms (21.4%), neurological disorders (9.4%), and the group formed by diabetes, urogenital, blood, and endocrine diseases (7.8%) (Figure 1).
Figure 1

Spanish deaths in 2010 for males (204,990 total deaths) and females (200,750 total deaths) at all ages.

Spanish deaths in 2010 for males (204,990 total deaths) and females (200,750 total deaths) at all ages. As shown in Table 2, 86% of total YLLs were due to non-communicable diseases, with injuries and communicable diseases accounting for 8% and 6%, respectively (see specific ranking in Figure 2). In 2010, regardless of gender, the leading specific cause for YLLs was neoplasms followed by cardiovascular and circulatory diseases.
Figure 2

Spanish years of life lost (YLLs) ranks for the top 20 main causes in 1990 and 2010, and the percentage change between 1990 and 2010. Solid line for increase or equal position. Continuous line represents an ascending order in rank and the broken line represents a descending order. (Δ%) = % of change in absolute numbers of DALYs.

Spanish years of life lost (YLLs) ranks for the top 20 main causes in 1990 and 2010, and the percentage change between 1990 and 2010. Solid line for increase or equal position. Continuous line represents an ascending order in rank and the broken line represents a descending order. (Δ%) = % of change in absolute numbers of DALYs. In the top twenty causes of YLLs, the ranking (% of change between the number of YLLs) changed between 1990 and 2010 (Figure 2). Remarkably, due to a large decrease in the number of YLLs, cardiovascular and circulatory diseases dropped from the first cause in 1990 to the second cause of YLLs in 2010 (decreased by 18%). Neoplasms were the leading cause in 2010 (the second in 1990), and increased almost 12% in 2010 compared to 1990. Transport injuries were the seventh cause (third in 1990), and the chronic respiratory diseases were the third cause (fourth in 1990). Unintentional injuries other than transport injuries were the eighth cause (fifth in 1990), and decreased by approximately 46% since 1990. Diabetes, urogenital, blood, and endocrine diseases were the fourth cause (sixth in 1990), increasing by almost 10%. The burden of YLLs in 2010, attributable to cirrhosis of the liver as well as diarrhea, lower respiratory infections, meningitis, and other common infectious diseases, decreased compared with 1990 (seventh to sixth cause and eight to ninth position, respectively). The percentage of YLLs attributable to self-harm and interpersonal violence, neonatal disorders, other non-communicable diseases, and HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis, decreased by almost 9%, 32%, 35%, and 55% between 1990 and 2010, respectively. In contrast, YLLs attributable to neurological disorders increased by 134% and were the fifth leading cause in 2010, while YLLs due to mental and behavioral disorders increased by 29% between 1990 and 2010 (Figure 2). Table 3 presents all causes of DALYs and YLDs in the Spanish population between 1990 and 2010. In this 20-year period, there was an increase in the overall burden of YLDs of almost 26%. In the broader classification terms (between 1990 and 2010), musculoskeletal disorders, mental and behavioral disorders, and diabetes, urogenital, blood, and endocrine diseases were the three main contributors to the years lived with disability in Spain. Focusing only in 2010, the largest contributors to the burden of YLDs, were the musculoskeletal disorders (26%) and the mental and behavioral disorders (22%). The group of diabetes, urogenital, blood, and endocrine disorders had an important contribution to the burden of disability (10%), followed by the group of other non-communicable disorders (9%), neurological disorders (8%), and other unintentional injuries except for transportation injuries (7%).
Table 3

Comparison of the main causes of disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) and years lived with disability (YLDs), in 1990 and 2010, for the Spanish population

YLDs (hundreds) DALYs (hundreds)
1990 2010 % Δ 1990 2010 % Δ
All causes44,316.855,706.625.7%104,615.9110,269.45.4%
Communicable, maternal, neonatal, and nutritional disorders 1,914.7 (1,415.3–2,628.9)1,942.5 (1,377.8–2,767.8)1%6,394.8 (5,773.6–7,126)5,067.4 (4,450.8–5,848.2)−21%
HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis285.4 (202.5–384.5)183 (128.5–248.3)−36%1,532.1 (1,356.2–1,720.5)738.3 (643.6–844.3)−52%
  Tuberculosis114.8 (71.7–171.8)84.4 (50.8–129.2)−26%340.6 (274–409.3)175.9 (136.8–230.7)−48%
  HIV/AIDS170.6 (123.2–223.1)98.6 (70.8–131.4)−42%1,191.6 (1,042–1,360.4)562.4 (478.8–651.9)−53%
  HIV disease resulting in mycobacterial infection12.1 (6.7–19.4)4.7 (2–8.3)−62%59.8 (51.5–69.1)19.6 (16–24.1)−67%
  HIV disease resulting in other specified or unspecified diseases158.4 (114.2–206.7)93.9 (67.9–125.4)−41%1,131.7 (993.6–1,271.3)542.8 (469.8–629.4)−52%
Diarrhea, lower respiratory infections, meningitis, and other common infectious diseases858.5 (590.7–1249)925.1 (621.7–1339.5)8%2,555.5 (2,206.4–3,004.8)2,358.1 (1,992.4–2,814.4)−8%
  Diarrheal diseases306.2 (201.3–440.4)363.2 (238.6–520.2)19%358.6 (252.5–493.1)428.9 (305.6–585.7)20%
  Typhoid and paratyphoid fevers0 (0–0.1)0 (0–0.1)27%1.1 (0.1–2)1 (0.1–2)−4%
  Lower respiratory infections44.3 (29.7–62)48.4 (33–66.8)9%1391.6 (1227.5–1612.5)1,275.9 (1,096–1,523.9)−8%
  Upper respiratory infections219.3 (106.2–390.9)227.8 (110.9–429.7)4%221 (107.8–392.7)228.4 (111.5–430.3)3%
  Otitis media211.6 (127.1–339.9)211.9 (120.7–361)0.2%213.6 (127.9–341.7)213.3 (123–363.3)0%
  Meningitis52.1 (33.7–77.9)46.8 (29–71.8)−10%261.9 (229.8–309)153.7 (129.1–183.3)−41%
  Pneumococcal meningitis10.2 (6.2–15.4)6.7 (3.8–10.6)−34%39.8 (33.2–47.3)21.8 (17.6–26.7)−45%
  H influenza type B meningitis7.4 (4.3–11.8)3.1 (1.6–5.1)−58%33.7 (27.2–42.1)13.6 (10.8–17.3)−60%
  Meningococcal infection16.6 (10.2–25.7)14.6 (8.4–23.2)−12%88.8 (75.5–106.7)50.1 (40.9–61.3)−44%
  Other meningitis17.2 (10.9–26.6)21.8 (13.3–33.6)27%99 (86–116.3)67.7 (55.6–82.7)−32%
  Encephalitis5.6 (3.3–8.7)5.5 (3.2–9)−1%28.5 (24.7–32.7)17.9 (14.7–21.8)−37%
  Diphtheria0 (0–0)0 (0–0)−82%0.9 (0–7.3)0.3 (0–2.5)−66%
  Whooping cough2.4 (1.3–3.8)0.6 (0.3–1.1)−74%47.8 (2.3–221.4)9.3 (0.6–40.9)−81%
  Tetanus0 (0–0)0 (0–0)−69%3.4 (0.4–13)0.7 (0.1–2.6)−80%
  Measles0.8 (0.3–1.4)0 (0–0.1)−99%4 (2.2–6.4)1.5 (0.7–3.9)−62%
  Varicella16.2 (8.2–29.1)20.8 (10.1–39.2)29%23.3 (9.2–63.2)27.3 (11.6–67.5)18%
Neglected tropical diseases and malaria8.5 (2.3–21.8)15.6 (2.5–51.2)83%69.6 (39.7–120.3)64.9 (35.1–120.1)−7%
  Malaria0.5 (0–3.9)0.1 (0–0.8)−75%0.5 (0–3.9)0.1 (0–0.8)−75%
  Leishmaniasis1.3 (0.6–2.7)1.4 (0.6–2.9)6%10.6 (7.4–14.7)8.4 (5.8–11.5)−21%
  *Cysticercosis0 (0–0)–*–*0.6 (0–2.2)–*–*
  Echinococcosis5.3 (0.8–18.1)7 (1–25.6)32%15.6 (2.2–47.7)12.1 (2.1–35.5)−22%
  Dengue0 (0–0)0 (0–0)–*31.8 (9.6–70.5)30.9 (12.5–68.8)−3%
  Rabies0 (0–0)0 (0–0)13%5.6 (2.7–12.4)2 (1.1–3.9)−64%
  Food-borne trematodiases0.1 (0–0.4)0.1 (0–0.3)−31%0.1 (0–0.4)0.1 (0–0.3)−31%
  Other neglected tropical diseases1.3 (0.1–1.6)7 (0.2–6.2)425%4.8 (2.5–7)11.3 (3–11.7)133%
Maternal disorders14.1 (8.9–21.7)12.5 (7.5–19.6)−11%37 (29–47.5)28.7 (21.7–37.2)−22%
  Maternal hemorrhage5.9 (3.4–9.5)5.3 (3–8.5)−11%10.3 (7.4–14)8.5 (6–11.9)−17%
  Maternal sepsis0.3 (0–1)0.3 (0–1)−9%1.3 (0.8–2.1)0.9 (0.5–1.6)−33%
  Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy0.6 (0.3–1.1)0.7 (0.3–1.2)9%3.9 (3–5.1)2.9 (2.1–3.8)−26%
  Obstructed labor1.1 (0–3.4)1.1 (0–3.4)−2%2 (0.9–4.3)1.8 (0.7–4.2)−12%
  Abortion2 (1.1–3.4)1.4 (0.7–2.5)−29%5.2 (3.9–6.8)3.4 (2.4–4.6)−35%
  Other maternal disorders4.1 (2.6–6.2)3.8 (2.3–5.8)−8%14.2 (11.1–18.1)11.3 (8.4–14.4)−21%
Neonatal disorders224.6 (164.9–300.8)218.4 (162.3–282.8)−3%1,468.3 (1,242.3–1,668.6)1,061.2 (934.7–1,183)−28%
  Preterm birth complications96.4 (66.9–136.9)109.4 (75.9–149.6)13%788.4 (627.9–938.5)533 (433–665.9)−32%
  Neonatal encephalopathy (birth asphyxia and birth trauma)126.6 (89.5–172.7)107 (77.3–143.6)−15%425.4 (336.5–527.3)297.5 (235.6–375)−30%
  Sepsis and other infectious disorders of the newborn baby0.1 (0.1–0.3)0.3 (0.2–0.6)140%110.1 (60.9–192.3)111.2 (60–197.5)1%
  Other neonatal disorders1.4 (1–2)1.7 (1.2–2.3)16%144.3 (91.2–262.3)119.5 (67.1–179.2)−17%
Nutritional deficiencies444.6 (269.2–712.5)507.8 (314.2–801.1)14%524.2 (347–797.2)590.7 (394.4–885)13%
  Protein-energy malnutrition14.3 (9.3–21.2)22.7 (14.8–31.8)59%46.2 (38.5–57.6)75 (52.4–93.8)62%
  Iodine deficiency427.1 (251.8–694)480.5 (285–763.7)13%428.8 (253.7–695.7)482.4 (286.9–765.8)13%
  Iron-deficiency anemia1.1 (0.5–2)3 (1–3.2)171%41.8 (35.4–54.5)27.9 (16.9–33.7)−33%
  Other nutritional deficiencies2.2 (1.8–2.8)1.5 (0.9–2)−29%7.5 (6.3–9.8)5.3 (3.2–6.9)−29%
Other communicable, maternal, neonatal, and nutritional disorders79 (38.7–149.3)80.1 (35.6–168.3)1%208 (161.6–281.2)225.5 (162.4–323.7)8%
  Sexually transmitted diseases excluding HIV64.3 (29.6–128.4)56.9 (26–114)−11%91.6 (56.3–157.8)66.6 (35.2–123.7)−27%
  Syphilis3.9 (0.2–8.7)4.8 (0.3–10.7)21%25.4 (15.7–39.3)10.9 (5–18)−57%
  Sexually transmitted chlamydial diseases25.3 (8.7–60)22.4 (7.6–53.6)−12%26.7 (10.1–61.5)23.2 (8.3–54.3)−13%
  Gonococcal infection13.7 (5.2–30.2)14.5 (5–32.7)6%14.8 (6.1–31.3)15.1 (5.6–33.5)2%
  Trichomoniasis13.3 (0.1–41.8)9.2 (0.1–29.1)−31%13.3 (0.1–41.8)9.2 (0.1–29.1)−31%
  Other sexually transmitted diseases8 (2.9–18.1)6 (2.5–12)−25%11.5 (6.2–21.5)8.2 (4.5–14.2)−29%
  Hepatitis12.2 (6–21.9)12.9 (6.2–22.8)6%67.3 (57.9–79)66 (55.8–77.8)−2%
  Acute hepatitis A8.3 (3.9–14.7)7.5 (3.7–13)−9%17 (11.2–24.8)11 (6.5–17.6)−35%
  Acute hepatitis B2.8 (0.2–9.2)3.4 (0.2–10.6)21%42.8 (26.3–55.3)24 (12.6–43.4)−44%
  Acute hepatitis C1 (0.2–2.1)2 (0.4–4.1)87%7.6 (2.8–15.8)31 (10.5–53.4)308%
  Leprosy0.1 (0–0.1)0 (0–0)−87%0.1 (0–0.1)0 (0–0)−87%
  Other infectious diseases2.5 (0–0.3)10.3 (0–0.4)314%49 (37.6–81.3)92.8 (39.3–114.7)89%
Non-communicable diseases 38,528.9 (32,278.2–45,503.6)48,269.1 (40,257.6–56,616.6)25%86,260 (79,823.1–93,301.2)95,239.4 (87,522.2–10,3475.6)10%
Neoplasms474.2 (349.1–630.6)816.4 (597.6–1074.5)72%16,917.3 (16,102.7–17,858.3)19,304.5 (18,003–20,302.6)14%
  Esophageal cancer3.2 (1.6–5.3)3.6 (1.8–6.2)10%413.9 (310.3–535.2)392.1 (290.6–538.8)−5%
  Stomach cancer24.3 (15.3–35.6)21.2 (12.9–33)−13%1,443.2 (1,131–1,931.8)1,007.9 (765–1,402.6)−30%
  Liver cancer6.5 (3.9–9.8)9.6 (5.8–14.8)47%720 (581.5–818.5)846.8 (712.5–1,044.6)18%
  Liver cancer secondary to hepatitis B0.9 (0.3–1.8)1.3 (0.4–2.4)38%100.9 (80.1–116.3)119.2 (97.8–152.4)18%
  Liver cancer secondary to hepatitis C2.8 (1.5–4.7)3.9 (2–6.6)40%287.9 (236.3–332.2)331.9 (277.3–427.1)15%
  Liver cancer secondary to alcohol use2.2 (1.1–3.7)3.6 (1.9–5.9)64%253 (201.7–291.3)301 (253–381)19%
  Other liver cancer0.6 (0.1–1.4)0.8 (0.1–1.6)26%78.2 (62.9–90.4)94.7 (74.6–116.3)21%
  Larynx cancer14 (7.3–24.9)12.3 (6.5–23.3)−12%498.7 (252.2–859.6)373.9 (202.3–685.2)−25%
  Trachea, bronchus, and lung cancers34.1 (22.3–49.5)45.5 (25.9–64.2)34%3,138.8 (2,541.8–3,982.3)3,686.7 (2,408.1–4,161.1)17%
  Breast cancer122.7 (80.8–187.9)188.1 (120.8–277.2)53%1,496.8 (1,400.8–1,611.5)1,469.4 (1,340.6–1,619.2)−2%
  Cervical cancer5.4 (2.9–8.7)5.2 (2.7–8.6)−4%226.8 (143.3–321.6)212.3 (135.6–306.1)−6%
  Uterine cancer10.9 (5.7–20.1)13.6 (5.7–23.1)24%174.1 (100.8–316.1)194.6 (93.5–271.9)12%
  Prostate cancer40.2 (27–60)120.3 (78.9–185.9)199%609 (373.5–941.4)939.3 (572.7–1,489.8)54%
  Colon and rectum cancers63.1 (44.8–85.4)128.7 (90.3–171.7)104%1,675.7 (1,476.6–1,895.5)2,452.4 (2,019.5–2,711)46%
  Mouth cancer12.4 (8.2–17.8)13.8 (8.9–20.3)12%307.3 (257.8–337.4)296.6 (250.1–367.2)−3%
  Nasopharynx cancer0.9 (0.3–1.9)1 (0.3–2)5%70.2 (40.1–94.4)63.2 (40.4–88.2)−10%
  Cancer of other part of pharynx and oropharynx4.1 (2–7)5.8 (2.8–9.4)42%172.5 (100.3–251.3)211.9 (125.8–299.5)23%
  Gallbladder and biliary tract cancer3.6 (1.9–6.1)5.1 (2.5–9)41%253.9 (169.6–370.5)274.3 (193–414.1)8%
  Pancreatic cancer3.9 (2–6.5)6.3 (3.4–10.4)63%627.8 (480.8–812.9)881.8 (646.5–1120.7)40%
  Malignant melanoma of skin4.2 (2.3–7.9)8.6 (4.7–13.7)103%140.1 (94.4–223.2)207.1 (133–294.9)48%
  Non-melanoma skin cancer15.6 (10.7–21.9)38 (25.9–52.8)143%89.4 (55.1–125.3)110.9 (80.5–165.1)24%
  Ovarian cancer6.2 (3.6–9.8)9.4 (5.2–14.5)52%336.7 (252.6–453.1)425.2 (287.4–561.8)26%
  Testicular cancer0.8 (0.2–1.6)1.4 (0.5–2.9)86%22.9 (13.7–34.8)22.7 (12.9–32.9)−1%
  Kidney and other urinary organ cancers5.6 (3.1–8.6)17.7 (10.2–30.6)218%255.5 (178.9–327.2)592.6 (435.2–958.7)132%
  Bladder cancer31.7 (21.7–43.9)49.8 (32.2–69.6)57%617 (491.5–789.2)704.1 (508.2–824.7)14%
  Brain and nervous system cancers11.5 (6.6–17.9)17.4 (8.7–27.2)51%716.6 (488.1–1,011.1)848.3 (492.4–1,050.7)18%
  Thyroid cancer2.5 (1.3–4.4)4.1 (2.2–6.8)63%51.9 (40.5–66.8)61.5 (45.7–78.9)18%
  Hodgkin’s disease2.4 (1–4.2)2.1 (0.9–3.9)−11%112.8 (73.1–166.8)72.3 (47.9–109.7)−36%
  Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma9.4 (6–13.8)16.1 (10–23.9)72%417.3 (366.4–493.7)503.5 (364.3–578.3)21%
  Multiple myeloma5.4 (2.8–9)8.3 (4.3–13.5)55%212.7 (146.8–305.2)275.6 (182.9–388.8)30%
  Leukemia10.4 (6.7–15.4)16.1 (10–23.5)55%705.9 (575.5–880)688.4 (544.1–817)−2%
  Other neoplasms19.2 (12.4–28.5)47.2 (30–69.8)145%1,409.8 (1,108.1–1,845.1)1,489.3 (1,190.5–2,016.9)6%
Cardiovascular and circulatory diseases1,911.6 (1,475.9–2,423)2,864.9 (2,268.9–3,499.4)50%20,076.7 (18,998.5–20,904.2)17,802 (16,834.2–19,181.8)−11%
  Rheumatic heart disease125.4 (77.4–198.2)139.1 (93.2–207.5)11%823.4 (745.2–933.8)507.3 (429.5–599)−38%
  Ischemic heart disease737.6 (477.9–1108)974.8 (636–1420.7)32%9,202.7 (8,705.1–9,952.4)8,055.8 (7,462.7–8,876.3)−12%
  Cerebrovascular disease337.1 (278.1–393.5)640.5 (529.3–755.2)90%6,437.3 (5,648.1–6,783.7)4,752.8 (4,252.9–5,829.1)−26%
  Ischemic stroke271.4 (225–318.7)515.9 (426.9–609.4)90%4,130.9 (3,546.5–4,389.3)3,011 (2,635.2–4,183.6)−27%
  Hemorrhagic and other non-ischemic stroke65.6 (54.3–77.7)124.6 (102.1–147.8)90%2,306.5 (2,058.8–2,601.6)1,741.8 (1,502.3–1,936)−24%
  Hypertensive heart disease28.3 (17.3–42.8)46.5 (28.8–71.4)65%531.9 (432.3–671.4)613 (490.4–764.1)15%
  Cardiomyopathy and myocarditis17.5 (10.3–27.4)26.6 (16.3–40.9)52%537.7 (496.6–569.2)723.9 (634–857.1)35%
  Atrial fibrillation and flutter278.3 (186.1–398)460.9 (306.5–658)66%363.2 (269.6–484.1)849.2 (631.8–1127.7)134%
  Aortic aneurysm0 (0–0)0 (0–0)–*261.2 (199.7–339.1)308.2 (224.6–403.1)18%
  Peripheral vascular disease39.5 (20.1–70.8)60.7 (30.8–109.7)54%83.5 (54.6–124.9)174.6 (116.3–253.8)109%
  Endocarditis4.2 (2.4–6.8)7.4 (4.5–11.6)75%74.6 (64–86.9)76.3 (59.9–88)2%
  Other cardiovascular and circulatory diseases343.8 (182.1–561.1)508.7 (275.7–807.5)48%1,761.1 (1,592.8–1,992.2)1,740.9 (1,496.8–2,046.5)−1%
Chronic respiratory diseases1,935.1 (1,247–2,764.6)22,17.7 (14,39.4–31,23.6)15%5,623.2 (4,907.3–6,436.1)5,260.3 (4,434.9–6,184.9)−6%
  Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease860.7 (5,23.1–1,276.8)10,99.1 (683–15,94.7)28%3,030.1 (2,586.4–3,515.9)2,916 (2,423.7–3,483.1)−4%
  Pneumoconiosis8.3 (5.3–12)15.9 (10–23.7)92%195.7 (134.5–283)158.8 (112.5–223.2)−19%
  Asthma749.4 (411.4–1,203.2)791.4 (443–1,253.1)6%969.4 (632.4–1423.6)917.8 (564.5–1377.3)−5%
  Interstitial lung disease and pulmonary sarcoidosis8.9 (5.9–13.3)16.1 (10.4–24.3)81%158.8 (118.1–251.5)262.6 (181.8–373)65%
  Other chronic respiratory diseases307.9 (187–458.9)295.2 (183.7–431.1)−4%1,269.2 (988–1,483.8)1,005.2 (819.7–1,264)−21%
Cirrhosis of the liver34.4 (21.9–49.6)37.6 (24.3–54)9%2,358.1 (1,931.4–2,609.8)1,772.7 (1585.9–2,231.2)−25%
  Cirrhosis of the liver secondary to hepatitis B1.3 (0.5–2.5)1.3 (0.5–2.6)4%89.4 (70.2–105.5)67.9 (57–86.1)−24%
  Cirrhosis of the liver secondary to hepatitis C13.2 (7.4–21.5)14.4 (7.7–23.3)9%895 (711.6–1049.2)687.1 (582–870.4)−23%
  Cirrhosis of the liver secondary to alcohol use15.8 (8.9–25)17.5 (9.9–28.4)11%1,105.7 (847.2–1295.5)830.5 (694.9–1,084.7)−25%
  Other cirrhosis of the liver4.1 (2–6.9)4.3 (2.1–7.6)4%268 (211.1–313.4)187.2 (156.9–238.2)−30%
Digestive diseases (except cirrhosis)423.2 (248.1–730.7)492.4 (313.7–755.8)16%1,683 (1,452.6–2,012.8)1,860 (1,610.1–2,164.5)11%
  Peptic ulcer disease34 (17.9–64.8)21.8 (11–46.2)−36%251.8 (202.3–293.9)116.2 (95–164.7)−54%
  Gastritis and duodenitis29.9 (19.3–44.6)38.8 (25.8–56.3)30%46.9 (33.4–62.6)46.5 (32.1–65)−1%
  Appendicitis7.8 (2.8–16.7)8.3 (3–17.8)6%43.7 (30.9–65.7)37.7 (22.8–52.5)−14%  
  Paralytic ileus and intestinal obstruction without hernia0.6 (0–2.7)0.6 (0–2.6)3%123.3 (96.4–175.4)169.4 (106.6–226.9)37%
  Inguinal or femoral hernia28.3 (6.6–84)28.9 (5.7–81.8)2%55.8 (33.9–110.3)48.7 (25.4–101.4)−13%
  Non-infective inflammatory bowel disease205.8 (88.9–434.4)214.3 (109.5–390.4)4%243.3 (127.2–473.9)257 (151.9–435.7)6%
  Vascular disorders of intestine1 (0.2–2.4)1.6 (0.3–3.9)70%232.9 (117.1–468.5)313.5 (166–604)35%
  Gall bladder and bile duct disease36.4 (24.5–51.6)45.6 (30.7–64.3)25%189.2 (161.3–229.6)207.8 (164.8–260.5)10%
  Pancreatitis16.3 (5.8–38.3)37.2 (12.8–83.9)128%224.4 (164.8–275.8)228.1 (177–303.9)2%
  Other digestive diseases63.2 (37–108.4)95.3 (60.6–146.9)51%271.7 (228–356.4)435.1 (337.6–529.1)60%
Neurological disorders3,407 (2,631.9–4,321.9)4,627.9 (3,616.3–5,804.5)36%4,581 (3,789.1–5,481.9)7,372.4 (6,127.5–8,666.4)61%
  Alzheimer's disease and other dementias858.3 (612.7–1,136)1,640.7 (1,185–2,196.8)91%1,433.9 (1,138.4–1,754.3)3,518 (,2707.8–4,334.5)145%
  Parkinson's disease71.8 (46–114.3)115.7 (72.9–189)61%230.4 (180.8–300.8)390 (290.8–496.1)69%
  Epilepsy292 (215.3–381.1)324 (242.9–425.2)11%399.4 (320.1–491.9)432.1 (343–538.1)8%
  Multiple sclerosis37.7 (26.5–51)54.5 (37.3–74.1)45%82.1 (67.6–98.9)109 (86.3–133.8)33%
  Migraine1,893.5 (1,198.1–2,731.1)2,146 (1,339.7–3,101.9)13%1893.5 (1198.1–2731.1)2146 (1339.7–3101.9)13%
  Tension-type headache117.1 (65.8–188)144.1 (82.7–233.9)23%117.1 (65.8–188)144.1 (82.7–233.9)23%
  Other neurological disorders136.7 (102.7–176.2)202.8 (153.7–261.7)48%424.5 (336.1–567.1)633.1 (480.2–802.4)49%
Mental and behavioral disorders10,177.2 (8,247.3–12,325.7)12,464.1 (10,170.8–15,032.3)22%10,528.7 (8,600.5–12,716.4)12,917.2 (10,630.6–15,432.4)23%
  Schizophrenia771.1 (443.1–1,144.3)1,052.2 (583.9–1,591.4)36%781.6 (453.6–1,153.9)1,074.7 (606.8–1,614.1)37%
  Alcohol use disorders691 (381.2–1156.4)757.1 (401.2–1,235.8)10%797 (482.4–1,257.7)882.1 (514.8–1,385.4)11%
  Drug use disorders1,644.7 (1,176.5–2,156.1)1,784.5 (1,277.6–2,334.5)9%1,873.5 (1,391–2,416.5)2,076 (1,536.1–2,677.5)11%
  Opioid use disorders746.5 (502.9–1003.1)844.4 (571.9–1,134.8)13%886.9 (629.1–1,165.1)1,016.2 (728.8–1,339.5)15%
  Cocaine use disorders195.6 (112.9–306.5)216.7 (124.3–335)11%199.3 (117.2–313.6)218.6 (124.8–338.9)10%
  Amphetamine use disorders155.2 (86.9–249.2)162.1 (91.4–255.5)4%157.2 (88.8–251.8)164.5 (92.3–262.9)5%
  Cannabis use disorders213.6 (107.1–377.3)201.5 (100.3–367.1)−6%213.6 (107.1–377.3)201.5 (100.3–367.1)−6%
  Other drug use disorders333.8 (205.6–499.4)359.8 (226.7–523.5)8%416.4 (280.9–592.2)475.1 (327–669.2)14%
  Unipolar depressive disorders4,011.1 (2,829.7–5,395.6)5,308.1 (3,910.9–7,025.8)32%4,011.1 (2,829.7–5,395.6)5,308.1 (3,910.9–7,025.8)32%
  Major depressive disorder3,352.4 (2,332.1–4,626.6)4,521.8 (3,227.7–6,093.6)35%3,352.4 (2,332.1–4,626.6)4,521.8 (3,227.7–6,093.6)35%
  Dysthymia658.7 (426.3–922.7)786.3 (508.1–1,094.9)19%658.7 (426.3–922.7)786.3 (508.1–1,094.9)19%
  Bipolar affective disorder696.1 (425.1–1051)835.3 (510.6–1,251.2)20%696.1 (425.1–1051)835.3 (510.6–1251.2)20%
  Anxiety disorders1,213.6 (826.9–1,673.9)1331.1 (906.8–1,856.4)10%1,213.6 (826.9–1,673.9)1,331.1 (906.8–1,856.4)10%
  Eating disorders296.4 (171.5–476.8)570.1 (334.2–924.9)92%298.7 (174.6–479.3)574.6 (339.7–929.5)92%
  Pervasive development disorders399.8 (269.4–578.2)452.2 (302.8–648.9)13%399.8 (269.4–578.2)452.2 (302.8–648.9)13%
  Autism188.8 (122.7–275.7)216.3 (140.4–317.6)15%188.8 (122.7–275.7)216.3 (140.4–317.6)15%
  Asperger’s syndrome211.1 (134.8–319.5)235.8 (154.4–352.7)12%211.1 (134.8–319.5)235.8 (154.4–352.7)12%
  Childhood behavioral disorders291.8 (171.3–450.9)209.7 (120.2–323.4)−28%291.8 (171.3–450.9)209.7 (120.2–323.4)−28%
  Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder27 (15.2–43.6)20.8 (11.8–33.8)−23%27 (15.2–43.6)20.8 (11.8–33.8)−23%
  Conduct disorder264.7 (151–419.6)188.9 (105–299.2)−29%264.7 (151–419.6)188.9 (105–299.2)−29%
  Idiopathic intellectual disability92 (53.5–142.5)74.1 (38–123.4)−19%92 (53.5–142.5)74.1 (38–123.4)−19%
  Other mental and behavioral disorders69.5 (41–108.2)89.7 (52–143.5)29%73.4 (44.8–112.2)99.2 (60.1–152.2)35%
Diabetes, urogenital, blood, and endocrine diseases4,245.7 (3,050.2–5,693.7)5,381.9 (3,956.8–7,145.9)27%7,013.4 (5,814.5–8,532.3)8,414.8 (6,968.8–1,0395.6)20%
  Diabetes mellitus2,207.8 (1461.1–3173)2,807.9 (1,906.5–4,022.5)27%3,490.7 (2,731.4–4,487.2)3,954.2 (3,014.9–5,187.7)13%
  Acute glomerulonephritis0 (0–0.1)0 (0–0)−9%3.8 (2.4–6.7)2.5 (1.1–3.9)−34%
  Chronic kidney diseases537.1 (370.6–805.8)770.3 (538.4–1101)43%1,371.7 (1,146.5–1,649.9)1,590.2 (1,313.1–1,967.6)16%
  Chronic kidney disease due to diabetes mellitus80.8 (52.9–117.2)119.3 (78.1–172.1)48%214.8 (173.7–261.2)242 (190.6–308.7)13%
  Chronic kidney disease due to hypertension99.2 (66.2–147.1)143.9 (97.4–204.3)45%264.7 (219.2–322.4)315.3 (257.2–393.6)19%
  Chronic kidney disease unspecified357.1 (240.4–547.6)507.1 (352.2–735)42%892.2 (740.5–1101.4)1,032.9 (841.5–1,303.6)16%
  Urinary diseases and male infertility395.5 (254.4–603.1)541.2 (347.1–812.7)37%604.2 (451.8–809.5)963.5 (717.5–1,265.4)59%
  Tubulointerstitial nephritis, pyelonephritis, and urinary tract infections5.9 (2.6–11.2)7.4 (3.5–14.3)27%156.5 (124.4–229.1)328.8 (177.1–474.9)110%
  Urolithiasis50 (27.3–81.3)72.6 (40.1–114.7)45%59.1 (36–91.8)78.8 (46.4–122.1)33%
  Benign prostatic hyperplasia319.6 (201.5–487.1)431.8 (270.1–654.1)35%319.6 (201.5–487.1)431.8 (270.1–654.1)35%
  Male infertility3.2 (1.2–7.1)4.2 (1.6–9)32%3.2 (1.2–7.1)4.2 (1.6–9)32%
  Other urinary diseases16.9 (9.5–27.4)25.1 (14.1–40.3)49%65.9 (51.6–86)119.8 (87.9–155.5)82%
  Gynecological diseases464.2 (258.8–797)585.2 (325.2–999)26%468.9 (263.7–801.4)590.4 (330–1,004)26%
  Uterine fibroids96.8 (43.5–190.7)139.2 (60.2–268.9)44%97.2 (43.9–191.1)139.7 (60.8–269.4)44%
  Polycystic ovarian syndrome142.4 (66.4–265.2)170.3 (77.9–324.2)20%142.4 (66.4–265.2)170.3 (77.9–324.2)20%
  Female infertility2.5 (0.9–5.4)3.1 (1.1–6.7)24%2.5 (0.9–5.4)3.1 (1.1–6.7)24%
  Endometriosis27.1 (9–52.7)34.3 (12.4–66.5)27%27.1 (9–52.7)34.3 (12.4–66.5)27%
  Genital prolapse123.8 (49.5–259.5)156.3 (62.6–339.3)26%124.2 (49.9–259.9)156.7 (63–339.7)26%
  Premenstrual syndrome71.7 (0–200.2)82.1 (0–213.6)14%71.7 (0–200.2)82.1 (0–213.6)14%
  Other gynecological diseases0 (0–0)0 (0–0)–*3.9 (3.4–4.6)4.2 (3.3–5.4)10%
  Hemoglobinopathies and hemolytic anemia498.7 (296.2–1080.4)477.4 (291.8–935)−4%599.4 (393.7–1,169.3)540.7 (350.5–997.4)−10%
  Thalassemia161.4 (102.1–247.1)156.1 (99.3–254.6)−3%174.9 (115.5–260.7)162.3 (105.8–260.9)−7%
  Sickle cell disorders309.9 (171.6–832.4)296.2 (172.1–703.8)−4%338.4 (199.5–859.6)309.3 (184.8–715.3)−9%
  G6PD deficiency24.8 (11.7–93.6)18.3 (9.3–58.9)−26%32.5 (19–101.1)22.5 (13.2–62.6)−31%
  Other hemoglobinopathies and hemolytic anemia2.5 (0.5–1.8)6.7 (0.9–9.3)169%53.6 (36.2–64.7)46.6 (31.4–79.2)−13%
  Other endocrine, nutritional, blood, and immune disorders142.4 (83.1–228.4)199.8 (115.9–362)40%474.8 (329.2–710.6)773.4 (529.7–1,539.3)63%
Musculoskeletal disorders11,220.4 (,8585.2–14,277.6)14,278.5 (10,905.8–17,775.5)27%11,469.4 (88,29.8–14,558.2)14,654.1 (11,291.8–18,160.2)28%
  Rheumatoid arthritis477.5 (345.2–636.5)665.5 (465.5–881)39%519.4 (384.9–684.3)710.1 (509.5–925.6)37%
  Osteoarthritis1,055.3 (648.4–1,604.3)1,407.1 (877.8–2,066.2)33%1,055.3 (648.4–1,604.3)1,407.1 (877.8–2,066.2)33%
  Low back and neck pain7,363.4 (5,148.2–9,886.3)9,178.1 (6,357.5–12,295.1)25%7,363.4 (5,148.2–9,886.3)9,178.1 (6,357.5–1,2295.1)25%
  Low back pain4,784.5 (3,305.8–6,484.6)6,011.7 (4,104.5–8,080.9)26%4,784.5 (3,305.8–6,484.6)6,011.7 (4,104.5–8,080.9)26%
  Neck pain2,578.9 (1,769.5–3,608.8)3,166.3 (2,193.9–4,438)23%2,578.9 (1,769.5–3,608.8)3,166.3 (2,193.9–4,438)23%
  Gout21.6 (13.4–32.1)30.2 (19–45.1)40%21.6 (13.4–32.1)30.2 (19–45.1)40%
  Other musculoskeletal disorders2,302.7 (1,585.5–3,228.6)2,997.7 (2,089.4–4,136.6)30%2,509.7 (1,803.7–3,433.4)3,328.7 (2,440.8–4,471.4)33%
Other non-communicable diseases4,700.2 (3,172.4–6,899.1)5,087.8 (3,400.3–7,616.6)8%6,009.2 (4,467.8–8,218.2)5,881.5 (4,184.3–8,375.2)−2%
  Congenital anomalies130.9 (93.7–182.5)141 (101.2–201.8)8%1,278.3 (1,065.6–1,416.6)778.7 (685.8–973.5)−39%
  Neural tube defects11.6 (6.4–18.7)8.2 (4.4–13.6)−29%99.4 (58.5–126.5)18.5 (12.5–28)−81%
  Congenital heart anomalies34.2 (17.6–66.8)32.4 (15.9–67.4)−5%566.6 (460.8–650.2)321.4 (254.9–411.9)−43%
  Cleft lip and cleft palate5.4 (2.7–9.7)6 (3.1–10.5)12%7.9 (4.9–12.4)7.4 (4.3–12.1)−6%
  Down’s syndrome38.1 (21.6–61.4)46.5 (27.1–74.6)22%104 (69.3–138.5)104.7 (80.1–136)1%
  Other chromosomal abnormalities14.5 (8–23.9)17.4 (10.1–29.2)19%59.4 (41.1–78.5)55 (39.2–77.1)−7%
  Other congenital anomalies27.1 (19.1–38.3)30.6 (21.8–44.9)13%441 (294.4–539.7)271.6 (215.5–397.8)−38%
  Skin and subcutaneous diseases1,989.9 (1,235.6–3,086)2,206.8 (1,347–3,476.9)11%2,058.2 (1,302–3,150.8)2,301.8 (1,445–3,558.5)12%
  Eczema462.2 (233.8–802)511.7 (252.5–845.6)11%462.2 (233.8–802)511.7 (252.5–845.6)11%
  Psoriasis87.3 (42.4–145.8)105.1 (50–172.9)20%87.3 (42.4–145.8)105.1 (50–172.9)20%
  Cellulitis11.1 (1.2–45.6)11 (1.3–45.3)−1%26.2 (15.7–60.2)29.6 (16.9–63.8)13%
  Abscess, impetigo, and other bacterial skin diseases41.8 (16.9–85.1)49.3 (19.8–101.3)18%63.3 (38–107.4)76 (45.7–129.6)20%
  Scabies22.9 (10.1–44.9)26.2 (11.8–49)15%22.9 (10.1–44.9)26.2 (11.8–49)15%
  Fungal skin diseases107.6 (33.8–246.6)128.2 (39.3–291.8)19%107.6 (33.8–246.6)128.2 (39.3–291.8)19%
  Viral skin diseases189.2 (72.5–359.4)182.5 (66.3–336.4)−4%189.2 (72.5–359.4)182.5 (66.3–336.4)−4%
  Acne vulgaris312.6 (139.6–589.8)237.6 (106.6–469.3)−24%312.6 (139.6–589.8)237.6 (106.6–469.3)−24%
  Alopecia areata78.7 (23–158.4)91.1 (25.1–182.4)16%78.7 (23–158.4)91.1 (25.1–182.4)16%
  Pruritus179.4 (82.5–347.4)244.2 (110.2–489.4)36%179.4 (82.5–347.4)244.2 (110.2–489.4)36%
  Urticaria137.4 (55.3–236.9)159 (65–271)16%137.4 (55.3–236.9)159 (65–271)16%
  Decubitus ulcer30 (9.8–69.2)40.3 (12.9–96.9)34%61.5 (39.8–101.6)89.7 (55–150.1)46%
  Other skin and subcutaneous diseases329.6 (155.1–610.6)420.8 (193.8–806.2)28%329.8 (155.2–610.6)421 (193.9–806.3)28%
Sense organ diseases1637 (1164–2335)1,850.2 (1291.1–2,656.9)13%1,637 (1,164–2,335)1,850.2 (1,291.1–2,656.9)13%
  Glaucoma36 (23–54.9)56.9 (37.6–82.7)58%36 (23–54.9)56.9 (37.6–82.7)58%
  Cataracts193.1 (136.8–261.7)170.7 (116.3–233.8)−12%193.1 (136.8–261.7)170.7 (116.3–233.8)−12%
  Macular degeneration58.4 (37.5–87.3)107.8 (71.8–152.9)85%58.4 (37.5–87.3)107.8 (71.8–152.9)85%
  Refraction and accommodation disorders84 (61.3–110.7)107.9 (77.6–142.3)28%84 (61.3–110.7)107.9 (77.6–142.3)28%
  Other hearing loss926.8 (541.4–1480.3)962.7 (554.5–1598.5)4%926.8 (541.4–1,480.3)962.7 (554.5–1,598.5)4%
  Other vision loss329.9 (174.9–586)433.2 (222–771)31%329.9 (174.9–586)433.2 (222–771)31%
  Other sense organ diseases8.8 (3–19.8)11 (3.7–25.4)25%8.8 (3–19.8)11 (3.7–25.4)25%
Oral disorders942.4 (564.3–1507.7)889.8 (519.4–1403.9)−6%942.4 (564.3–1,507.7)889.8 (519.4–1,403.9)−6%
Dental caries110.2 (45–216.1)130.4 (52.8–250.1)18%110.2 (45–216.1)130.4 (52.8–250.1)18%
Periodontal disease143 (54.8–312.3)193.8 (72.6–400.1)36%143 (54.8–312.3)193.8 (72.6–400.1)36%
Edentulism689.2 (394.8–1103.5)565.6 (322–903)−18%689.2 (394.8–1103.5)565.6 (322–903)−18%
Sudden infant death syndrome0 (0–0)0 (0–0)–*93.3 (40.6–150.8)61 (31.4–111.4)−35%
Injuries 3,873.3 (2,679.9–5,500.9)5,495 (3,846.6–7,727.1)42%11,961.1 (10,559.1–13,749.9)9,962.5 (8,154–12,170.7)−17%
Transport injuries1,134 (763.2–1,670.3)1,428.6 (975–2,074.9)26%4,925.5 (4,315.5–5,683.5)3,047.6 (2,494.2–3,809.3)−38%
  Road injury982.9 (659–1,450.2)1,197.1 (810.2–1,745.7)22%4,671.5 (4,049.7–5,342.3)2,692.9 (2,226.1–3,328.1)−42%
  Pedestrian injury by road vehicle169 (113.6–248.3)243.2 (165–350.8)44%580.3 (487.4–761.5)464.4 (372.3–584.4)−20%
  Pedal cycle vehicle18.8 (12.7–27.8)50.5 (34.2–74.1)169%71.2 (53.8–110.9)107.2 (75.3–136.5)51%
  Motorized vehicle with two wheels232.4 (155.6–347.3)172.6 (116.1–252.7)−26%1,423.3 (1,009.6–1,638.8)436 (360.3–539.5)−69%
  Motorized vehicle with three or more wheels576.6 (386.6–852.7)779.7 (527.3–1134.8)35%2,579.1 (2,156.9–3,157.2)1,722.1 (1,368.2–2,279.8)−33%
  Road injury other13 (8.8–19.2)12.1 (8.2–17.4)−7%44.6 (31.7–60)24 (17.7–33.7)−46%
  Other transport injury151.1 (102.4–223)231.5 (157.9–331.2)53%254 (189.8–359.6)354.8 (275.4–460.4)40%
Unintentional injuries other than transport injuries2,638 (1,821–3,727.8)3,944 (2,760.5–5,515.8)50%5,486.5 (4,503.8–6,659)5,472.7 (4,205.3–7,082.7)0%
  Falls2,150.2 (1,471.2–3043.3)3,315.8 (2,316.6–4,644.3)54%2,462.8 (1,754.8–3,385.5)3,763.4 (2,726.7–5,125)53%
  Drowning9.7 (6.1–14.5)11.1 (7–16.8)14%404.4 (312.7–497.3)222.8 (181–295.5)−45%
  Fire, heat and hot substances57 (30.5–106.3)70.2 (37.6–127.1)23%158.1 (122.4–213)141 (105.1–202.2)−11%
  Poisonings9.2 (5.6–14.6)7.1 (4.3–11.3)−23%220.6 (153.6–338.5)165.9 (79.7–233.9)−25%
  Exposure to mechanical forces72.6 (45.5–114)75.2 (47.8–113.9)4%269.1 (212.6–366.4)185.4 (130.8–252.4)−31%
  Mechanical forces (firearm)26.9 (17–42.2)14.6 (9.4–22.2)−46%94.8 (56.5–123)31.6 (22.7–47.7)−67%
  Mechanical forces (other)56.5 (35.4–88.2)79.1 (50.2–119.5)40%185.1 (147.6–282.1)172.3 (131.7–241.7)−7%
  Adverse effects of medical treatment45.3 (29.2–68.3)102.6 (66–151.3)127%143.5 (115.6–181.7)227.3 (174.5–307.9)58%
  Animal contact21.9 (14.2–32.8)11.7 (7.7–17.2)−47%35.3 (26.2–47.7)18.6 (14–25.1)−47%
  Animal contact (venomous)14.3 (8.7–22.3)6.8 (4.3–10.5)−53%16.4 (10.6–24.8)8.3 (5.6–12.2)−50%
  Animal contact (non-venomous)7.6 (4.8–11.8)4.9 (3–7.3)−36%18.9 (13.9–24.7)10.3 (7.8–13.9)−45%
  Unintentional injuries not classified elsewhere272.1 (185.1–396.4)350.3 (232.7–505.7)29%1,792.7 (1,054.8–2,031)748.2 (605.7–955.4)−58%
Self-harm and interpersonal violence101.3 (66.6–146.4)122.3 (81.1–173)21%1,549.1 (1,277.2–2,016.4)1,442.2 (1,051.7–1,690.9)−7%
  Self-harm12.6 (7.9–18.3)15.2 (9.7–23.1)21%1,244.6 (9,62.4–1,686.8)1,154.4 (7,59.7–1,377.5)−7%
  Interpersonal violence88.7 (58.4–129.4)107.1 (70.8–151.4)21%304.5 (241.9–403)287.8 (230.5–369.8)−5%
  Assault by firearm23.2 (15–34.3)30.1 (19.5–42.9)30%74.6 (59–105.3)74.2 (57.3–98.9)−1%
Assault by sharp object31.9 (20.9–46.9)56.2 (37–79.6)76%106.7 (79.1–175.7)143.2 (94.8–186.6)34%
  Assault by other means40.1 (26.5–57.7)31.3 (21–43.8)−22%129.7 (98.4–158.1)80.9 (65.5–106)−38%

Data are presented as mean values and uncertainty intervals (Lower, Upper).

*– not applicable.

Comparison of the main causes of disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) and years lived with disability (YLDs), in 1990 and 2010, for the Spanish population Data are presented as mean values and uncertainty intervals (Lower, Upper). *– not applicable. Putting premature mortality and disability together in terms of DALYs provides an overall picture of the leading health problems in Spain. Between 1990 and 2010, there was a slight increase (5.4%) in DALYs (i.e., overall health burden) in the overall Spanish population (from 104,615.9 in 1990 to 110,269.4 in 2010). The dominant causes of DALYs in 2010 were neoplasms, cardiovascular and circulatory diseases, musculoskeletal disorders, mental and behavioral disorders, and diabetes, urogenital, blood, and endocrine diseases, which accounted for nearly 59% of all DALYs (Table 3). The top five leading causes for DALYs remained similar in both 1990 and 2010, despite the decreases or increases in the number of DALYs for each cause (% of change between the numbers of DALYs). There was only a slight change in numerical order between the first two causes. Due to a large decrease in the number of DALYs (11%), cardiovascular and circulatory diseases dropped to the second cause of DALYs in 2010 and neoplasms reached the first position increasing by 14% from 1990. Between the sixth and the eleventh positions the causes for DALYs changed only slightly. The transport injuries dropped from the ninth position in 1990s to the tenth in 2010, due to a large decrease (38%) in the number of DALYs. The neurological disorders, with a 61% increase in DALYs, achieved the sixth position in 2010 from its tenth position in 1990. The HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis cause dropped one position and neonatal disorders increased one position in the list of causes for DALYs for the year 2010. Finally, the last four causes among the 20 top ranking of DALYs in Spain remained completely stable between 1990 and 2010, despite the changes in disability (Figure 3).
Figure 3

Spanish disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) ranks for the top 20 main causes in 1990 and 2010, and the percentage change between 1990 and 2010. Continuous line represents an ascending order in rank and the broken line represents a descending order. (Δ%) = % of change in absolute numbers of DALYs.

Spanish disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) ranks for the top 20 main causes in 1990 and 2010, and the percentage change between 1990 and 2010. Continuous line represents an ascending order in rank and the broken line represents a descending order. (Δ%) = % of change in absolute numbers of DALYs. Summarizing the above data, in 2010, the leading causes for DALYs among newborn children (0–1 years old) were neonatal disorders and the other communicable diseases group. The leading causes for DALYs in the younger group (5 to 44 years old) in the Spanish population were mental and behavioral disorders and musculoskeletal disorders, while in the middle aged and older adults groups the leading causes shifted to cardiovascular and circulatory diseases and neoplasms (Figure 4).
Figure 4

DALYs in Spain by cause and age in 2010. Adopted and modified from GBD data visualizations.

DALYs in Spain by cause and age in 2010. Adopted and modified from GBD data visualizations. In both 1990 and 2010, there was a high consistency across European countries regarding the top causes of YLDs being major depressive disorders, musculoskeletal disorders, low back and neck pain, and diabetes, as well as injuries (i.e., falls). YLDs caused by asthma, anxiety disorders, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ranked lower in Spain compared with other southern European countries, in both 1990 and 2010 (Figure 5).
Figure 5

Age-standardized YLDs ranking relative to comparator European countries by the top 20 causes in (A) 1990 and (B) 2010. Numbers in cells indicate the ranks by country for each cause, with 1 being the disorder with the highest impact. The presented causes are ordered by the 20 leading causes of YLDs in Spain. YLDs, Years lived with disability; COPD, Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Adopted and modified from GBD data visualizations.

Age-standardized YLDs ranking relative to comparator European countries by the top 20 causes in (A) 1990 and (B) 2010. Numbers in cells indicate the ranks by country for each cause, with 1 being the disorder with the highest impact. The presented causes are ordered by the 20 leading causes of YLDs in Spain. YLDs, Years lived with disability; COPD, Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Adopted and modified from GBD data visualizations. From 1990 to 2010 overall DALYs attributable to non-communicable diseases in Spain increased by 897,900 from 8,626,000 to 9,523,900. When standardizing the DALYs of 2010 to the 1990 population, the number of DALYs which would have increased was estimated to be 1,250,900. Thus, the actual population health improved since the demographic changes would have caused a higher increase in DALYs than the actual 2010 DALYs. Changes in DALYs mostly correspond to population increase and are secondary to population ageing. Moreover, the highest difference was attributed to those 40 years and older.

Discussion

During the past 20 years, substantial changes have taken place in the relative impact of burden of diseases in Spain: while musculoskeletal disorders have increased by 28% (rank 3 as major cause of DALYs), mental and behavioral disorders have increased by 23% (rank 4), neurological disorders by 61% (rank 6), and neoplasms by 14% (rank 1). On the other hand, cardiovascular and circulatory diseases have decreased by 11% (now rank 2), transport injuries by 38% (rank 10), and chronic respiratory diseases by 6% (rank 9). Despite the population growth of 15% between 1990 and 2010 and the ageing of the population, the burden of disease increased only by 5%. The analysis of changes by age and gender group denoted that DALYs decreased when analyzed as rates per 100,000 population. The relevance of neoplasms and cardiovascular and circulatory diseases on population health is mostly driven by mortality. Accordingly, the cardiovascular and circulatory diseases, neoplasms, and injuries due to transport reasons were the top three leading causes for the burden of YLLs. However, the impact of musculoskeletal disorders and mental disorders is mostly through YLDs, since they are the first and second causes in the ranking. Together, these two groups of disorders, accounted for almost the half (48%) of all YLDs in Spain. Additionally, depression, and other mental disorders (like anxiety, etc.) have been associated to various musculoskeletal disorders [17,18]. All these conditions are related to occupational risk, particularly low back pain [19], and absenteeism. The impact of these disorders and the need for mental health promotion and musculoskeletal health prevention may have been underestimated by public health authorities and policies [20]. Other studies have previously evaluated the burden of morbidity and mortality in Spain [8,9]. According to these, in 2008, the major causes for mortality in males and females were also cardiovascular diseases and malignant neoplasms [8]. Furthermore, a recent study in Valencia reported similar results in mortality rates in the local population (i.e., 26% of all deaths due to malignant tumors and 34% due to cardiovascular diseases [9]). Clear gender differences emerged in the analyses. Specifically, in males, cancer (i.e., neoplasms) was the main mortality cause followed by cardiovascular diseases, while in females the order was reversed. Risk factor differences may be causing the increased impact of cancer in males: they still have higher rates of smoking and heavy alcohol consumption [21,22]. The increased mortality of cardiovascular diseases in females is due to cerebro-vascular problems. Further, hormonal factors (disappearance of the protective role of estrogens after menopause) have been associated to the increased risk of stroke in females [23]. The top five causes for the burden of YLDs in Spain are similar to those in the other Mediterranean countries (except for slight differences with France) [24-26]. Similar results appeared also in the burden of DALYs comparing Spain to other European countries [24-26]. These similarities in the Mediterranean population’s health could be a result of the common lifestyle habits (dietary habits, smoking, physical activity, etc.) [27], as well as shared genetic traits within the region [28]. Spain, as well as other Mediterranean countries, has to shift the provided health care services from curative to preventive [29,30] and to identify the priority diseases for health research funding and prevention policies development [8]. When comparing the results among all European countries, some remarkable results have also been found. While there are substantial differences in the rank order of diseases regarding DALY’s [7], there are much less differences in the first five causes of YLDs across European countries. Country differences may be mostly caused by differences in mortality instead of differences in YLDs. Whether this can be attributed to mortality figures being recorded more systematically in each country than prevalence figures should still be clarified. In 2010, Spain presented the same leading conditions for YLLs compared to other Mediterranean countries, such as Greece, France, and Italy [24-26]. In 2010, Spain, France, and Italy showed age-standardized YLL rates for liver cancers significantly higher than the overall mean rate. Spain and Greece showed significantly higher rates of age-standardized YLL rates for bladder cancers [7]. Besides, the leading causes for premature mortality in the UK seem to be similar with those in Spain (i.e., cardiovascular and circulatory diseases and trachea, bronchus, and lung cancers [24-26]). Globally, there is continuous shift from communicable to non-communicable diseases as the leading causes of mortality and DALYs [2,5]. According to the latest data for 2010, in the top ten leading causes of population’s mortality, five were classified as non-communicable [2]. Global DALYs remained stable from 1990 to 2010 [5]. However, the global age-standardized DALY rates [5] actually decreased, which is consistent with our findings in Spain. Ischemic heart disease was the leading cause of DALYs worldwide in 2010, followed by lower respiratory infections, stroke, diarrheal diseases, and HIV/AIDS. Depressive disorders, also climbed from the fifteenth to the eleventh rank and road injury from twelfth to tenth rank [2,5]. However, in Spain the major causes for DALYs were neoplasms followed by cardiovascular diseases, musculoskeletal disorders, and mental disorders. Neurological disorders moved from the tenth to sixth rank; this high ranking in musculoskeletal disorders was quite similar with the global estimates [5] – low back pain and neck pain are the most important contributors accompanied by osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, and gout [5,31]. The pathophysiology of chronic diseases, especially cardiovascular diseases and cancers, is complex, with the interaction of new environmental risk factors (e.g., multimorbidity, financial status, etc.), in addition to the classical modifiable risk factors (i.e., cognition reserve, smoking, unhealthy diet, physical activity, hypertension, etc.), making the prevention of chronic diseases in older adults quite difficult. Efforts to improve and protect health, prevent disease and injury, and deliver high-quality health care to the population must be tailored to address the causes associated with the greatest burden mainly of chronic diseases [32]. It is expected that preventive strategies can influence many of the aforementioned chronic conditions and non-communicable causes and increase the quality of life, while averting or minimizing the need for expensive medical care [33,34]. Furthermore, the engagement with the GBD collaborative group will provide more and better analysis data of the global burden of disease and, specifically, in Spain – a fact that will contribute to continuous improvements of the health estimates in future iterations of the GBD study.

Limitations

The previous results should be considered taking into account the following limitations. Although Spain follows the European Statistics Code of Practice of 2006–2008 and data is collected in a consistent way across the country, there are a number of issues that should be considered when analyzing the results. Regarding mortality, the GBD project defined a number of garbage codes, which are causes of death that should not be identified as underlying causes of death but have been entered as the underlying causes of death on death certificates. Garbage codes were substituted by underlying causes based on pathophysiology. The fraction of garbage codes in Spain was within the world average. The substitution of garbage codes has impact on mortality causes. For example, in 2010, transport injury deaths based on raw data from Spain were 2,257. After correction for garbage codes and other adjustments, this number increased to 3,657 deaths. Following the modeling process, it further increased to 3,950. In this study, the calculation of DWs were based on surveys including several countries, and not just Spain. However, according to recent results [10], the DW assessments appeared to be consistent even among different cultural environments. Another aspect is the prevalence of the referred health conditions, which was based on epidemiological studies, a fact that may create uncertainty depending on the quality of the primary data. To overcome this issue, some expert groups developed tools to assess the risk of bias in the selected studies and sensitivity analyses were performed to weight study sizes according to their quality, or even to eliminate them from the final analysis [10]. As referred in previous works of the GBD study [10], Bayesian statistical models were used to estimate prevalence of conditions in each country by age, sex, and year. The nature of this estimation process implies that, in some cases, depending on the covariates, estimated variance might be smaller than the real variance across countries in a region, and in some other cases, uncertainty intervals for a specific estimate might be exaggerated. Furthermore, the calculation of uncertainty intervals throughout the Bayesian model analysis has provided some information on the extent of available information for Spain. However, the nature of the estimation process for causes of death and the prevalence of sequelae more generally lead to exaggerated uncertainty intervals in a high-income country such as Spain [12]. These wide uncertainty intervals may limit the number of the detected significant changes in the burden of disease between 1990 and 2010.

Conclusions

The present findings, together with previous work [5], suggest that cardiovascular and circulatory diseases, neoplasms, and mental and neurological disorders seem to be the leading causes of mortality as well as for YLDs and DALYs in Spain. Although several health promotion action plans have taken place globally [35,36] in the past few years, morbidity throughout non-communicable diseases is increasing at alarming rates. Public health care systems have to focus further on the quality of health care services [37]. Furthermore, health promotion strategies should focus on health education programs that could improve quality of life. Public health care services have to shift from being curative to being preventive; in Spain, a strong emphasis should be given on health promotion, disease prevention, and rehabilitation.
  26 in total

Review 1.  Contribution of primary care to health systems and health.

Authors:  Barbara Starfield; Leiyu Shi; James Macinko
Journal:  Milbank Q       Date:  2005       Impact factor: 4.911

2.  The Mediterranean Sea as a barrier to gene flow: evidence from variation in and around the F7 and F12 genomic regions.

Authors:  Georgios Athanasiadis; Emili González-Pérez; Esther Esteban; Jean-Michel Dugoujon; Mark Stoneking; Pedro Moral
Journal:  BMC Evol Biol       Date:  2010-03-27       Impact factor: 3.260

Review 3.  Health at advanced age: social inequality and other factors potentially impacting longevity in nine high-income countries.

Authors:  José A Tapia Granados
Journal:  Maturitas       Date:  2012-12-28       Impact factor: 4.342

Review 4.  Measuring the burden of disease and injury in Spain using disability-adjusted life years: an updated and policy-oriented overview.

Authors:  R Gènova-Maleras; E Álvarez-Martín; C Morant-Ginestar; N Fernández de Larrea-Baz; F Catalá-López
Journal:  Public Health       Date:  2012-10-09       Impact factor: 2.427

5.  Mortality by cause for eight regions of the world: Global Burden of Disease Study.

Authors:  C J Murray; A D Lopez
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  1997-05-03       Impact factor: 79.321

6.  Burden of disease assessment with summary measures of population health for the Region of Valencia, Spain: a population-based study.

Authors:  Ferrán Catalá-López; Ricard Gènova-Maleras; Manuel Ridao; Elena Álvarez; Gabriel Sanfélix-Gimeno; Consuelo Morant; Salvador Peiró
Journal:  Med Clin (Barc)       Date:  2012-04-11       Impact factor: 1.725

7.  Are current dietary habits in Mediterranean islands a reflection of the past? Results from the MEDIS study.

Authors:  Eleni Tourlouki; Antonia-Leda Matalas; Vassiliki Bountziouka; Stefanos Tyrovolas; Akis Zeimbekis; Efthimios Gotsis; Ioanna Tsiligianni; Ioanna Protopapa; Constantinos Protopapas; George Metallinos; Christos Lionis; Suzanne Piscopo; Evangelos Polychronopoulos; Demosthenes B Panagiotakos
Journal:  Ecol Food Nutr       Date:  2013       Impact factor: 1.692

8.  Common values in assessing health outcomes from disease and injury: disability weights measurement study for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2010.

Authors:  Joshua A Salomon; Theo Vos; Daniel R Hogan; Michael Gagnon; Mohsen Naghavi; Ali Mokdad; Nazma Begum; Razibuzzaman Shah; Muhammad Karyana; Soewarta Kosen; Mario Reyna Farje; Gilberto Moncada; Arup Dutta; Sunil Sazawal; Andrew Dyer; Jason Seiler; Victor Aboyans; Lesley Baker; Amanda Baxter; Emelia J Benjamin; Kavi Bhalla; Aref Bin Abdulhak; Fiona Blyth; Rupert Bourne; Tasanee Braithwaite; Peter Brooks; Traolach S Brugha; Claire Bryan-Hancock; Rachelle Buchbinder; Peter Burney; Bianca Calabria; Honglei Chen; Sumeet S Chugh; Rebecca Cooley; Michael H Criqui; Marita Cross; Kaustubh C Dabhadkar; Nabila Dahodwala; Adrian Davis; Louisa Degenhardt; Cesar Díaz-Torné; E Ray Dorsey; Tim Driscoll; Karen Edmond; Alexis Elbaz; Majid Ezzati; Valery Feigin; Cleusa P Ferri; Abraham D Flaxman; Louise Flood; Marlene Fransen; Kana Fuse; Belinda J Gabbe; Richard F Gillum; Juanita Haagsma; James E Harrison; Rasmus Havmoeller; Roderick J Hay; Abdullah Hel-Baqui; Hans W Hoek; Howard Hoffman; Emily Hogeland; Damian Hoy; Deborah Jarvis; Ganesan Karthikeyan; Lisa Marie Knowlton; Tim Lathlean; Janet L Leasher; Stephen S Lim; Steven E Lipshultz; Alan D Lopez; Rafael Lozano; Ronan Lyons; Reza Malekzadeh; Wagner Marcenes; Lyn March; David J Margolis; Neil McGill; John McGrath; George A Mensah; Ana-Claire Meyer; Catherine Michaud; Andrew Moran; Rintaro Mori; Michele E Murdoch; Luigi Naldi; Charles R Newton; Rosana Norman; Saad B Omer; Richard Osborne; Neil Pearce; Fernando Perez-Ruiz; Norberto Perico; Konrad Pesudovs; David Phillips; Farshad Pourmalek; Martin Prince; Jürgen T Rehm; Guiseppe Remuzzi; Kathryn Richardson; Robin Room; Sukanta Saha; Uchechukwu Sampson; Lidia Sanchez-Riera; Maria Segui-Gomez; Saeid Shahraz; Kenji Shibuya; David Singh; Karen Sliwa; Emma Smith; Isabelle Soerjomataram; Timothy Steiner; Wilma A Stolk; Lars Jacob Stovner; Christopher Sudfeld; Hugh R Taylor; Imad M Tleyjeh; Marieke J van der Werf; Wendy L Watson; David J Weatherall; Robert Weintraub; Marc G Weisskopf; Harvey Whiteford; James D Wilkinson; Anthony D Woolf; Zhi-Jie Zheng; Christopher J L Murray; Jost B Jonas
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2012-12-15       Impact factor: 79.321

9.  Disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) for 291 diseases and injuries in 21 regions, 1990-2010: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2010.

Authors:  Christopher J L Murray; Theo Vos; Rafael Lozano; Mohsen Naghavi; Abraham D Flaxman; Catherine Michaud; Majid Ezzati; Kenji Shibuya; Joshua A Salomon; Safa Abdalla; Victor Aboyans; Jerry Abraham; Ilana Ackerman; Rakesh Aggarwal; Stephanie Y Ahn; Mohammed K Ali; Miriam Alvarado; H Ross Anderson; Laurie M Anderson; Kathryn G Andrews; Charles Atkinson; Larry M Baddour; Adil N Bahalim; Suzanne Barker-Collo; Lope H Barrero; David H Bartels; Maria-Gloria Basáñez; Amanda Baxter; Michelle L Bell; Emelia J Benjamin; Derrick Bennett; Eduardo Bernabé; Kavi Bhalla; Bishal Bhandari; Boris Bikbov; Aref Bin Abdulhak; Gretchen Birbeck; James A Black; Hannah Blencowe; Jed D Blore; Fiona Blyth; Ian Bolliger; Audrey Bonaventure; Soufiane Boufous; Rupert Bourne; Michel Boussinesq; Tasanee Braithwaite; Carol Brayne; Lisa Bridgett; Simon Brooker; Peter Brooks; Traolach S Brugha; Claire Bryan-Hancock; Chiara Bucello; Rachelle Buchbinder; Geoffrey Buckle; Christine M Budke; Michael Burch; Peter Burney; Roy Burstein; Bianca Calabria; Benjamin Campbell; Charles E Canter; Hélène Carabin; Jonathan Carapetis; Loreto Carmona; Claudia Cella; Fiona Charlson; Honglei Chen; Andrew Tai-Ann Cheng; David Chou; Sumeet S Chugh; Luc E Coffeng; Steven D Colan; Samantha Colquhoun; K Ellicott Colson; John Condon; Myles D Connor; Leslie T Cooper; Matthew Corriere; Monica Cortinovis; Karen Courville de Vaccaro; William Couser; Benjamin C Cowie; Michael H Criqui; Marita Cross; Kaustubh C Dabhadkar; Manu Dahiya; Nabila Dahodwala; James Damsere-Derry; Goodarz Danaei; Adrian Davis; Diego De Leo; Louisa Degenhardt; Robert Dellavalle; Allyne Delossantos; Julie Denenberg; Sarah Derrett; Don C Des Jarlais; Samath D Dharmaratne; Mukesh Dherani; Cesar Diaz-Torne; Helen Dolk; E Ray Dorsey; Tim Driscoll; Herbert Duber; Beth Ebel; Karen Edmond; Alexis Elbaz; Suad Eltahir Ali; Holly Erskine; Patricia J Erwin; Patricia Espindola; Stalin E Ewoigbokhan; Farshad Farzadfar; Valery Feigin; David T Felson; Alize Ferrari; Cleusa P Ferri; Eric M Fèvre; Mariel M Finucane; Seth Flaxman; Louise Flood; Kyle Foreman; Mohammad H Forouzanfar; Francis Gerry R Fowkes; Marlene Fransen; Michael K Freeman; Belinda J Gabbe; Sherine E Gabriel; Emmanuela Gakidou; Hammad A Ganatra; Bianca Garcia; Flavio Gaspari; Richard F Gillum; Gerhard Gmel; Diego Gonzalez-Medina; Richard Gosselin; Rebecca Grainger; Bridget Grant; Justina Groeger; Francis Guillemin; David Gunnell; Ramyani Gupta; Juanita Haagsma; Holly Hagan; Yara A Halasa; Wayne Hall; Diana Haring; Josep Maria Haro; James E Harrison; Rasmus Havmoeller; Roderick J Hay; Hideki Higashi; Catherine Hill; Bruno Hoen; Howard Hoffman; Peter J Hotez; Damian Hoy; John J Huang; Sydney E Ibeanusi; Kathryn H Jacobsen; Spencer L James; Deborah Jarvis; Rashmi Jasrasaria; Sudha Jayaraman; Nicole Johns; Jost B Jonas; Ganesan Karthikeyan; Nicholas Kassebaum; Norito Kawakami; Andre Keren; Jon-Paul Khoo; Charles H King; Lisa Marie Knowlton; Olive Kobusingye; Adofo Koranteng; Rita Krishnamurthi; Francine Laden; Ratilal Lalloo; Laura L Laslett; Tim Lathlean; Janet L Leasher; Yong Yi Lee; James Leigh; Daphna Levinson; Stephen S Lim; Elizabeth Limb; John Kent Lin; Michael Lipnick; Steven E Lipshultz; Wei Liu; Maria Loane; Summer Lockett Ohno; Ronan Lyons; Jacqueline Mabweijano; Michael F MacIntyre; Reza Malekzadeh; Leslie Mallinger; Sivabalan Manivannan; Wagner Marcenes; Lyn March; David J Margolis; Guy B Marks; Robin Marks; Akira Matsumori; Richard Matzopoulos; Bongani M Mayosi; John H McAnulty; Mary M McDermott; Neil McGill; John McGrath; Maria Elena Medina-Mora; Michele Meltzer; George A Mensah; Tony R Merriman; Ana-Claire Meyer; Valeria Miglioli; Matthew Miller; Ted R Miller; Philip B Mitchell; Charles Mock; Ana Olga Mocumbi; Terrie E Moffitt; Ali A Mokdad; Lorenzo Monasta; Marcella Montico; Maziar Moradi-Lakeh; Andrew Moran; Lidia Morawska; Rintaro Mori; Michele E Murdoch; Michael K Mwaniki; Kovin Naidoo; M Nathan Nair; Luigi Naldi; K M Venkat Narayan; Paul K Nelson; Robert G Nelson; Michael C Nevitt; Charles R Newton; Sandra Nolte; Paul Norman; Rosana Norman; Martin O'Donnell; Simon O'Hanlon; Casey Olives; Saad B Omer; Katrina Ortblad; Richard Osborne; Doruk Ozgediz; Andrew Page; Bishnu Pahari; Jeyaraj Durai Pandian; Andrea Panozo Rivero; Scott B Patten; Neil Pearce; Rogelio Perez Padilla; Fernando Perez-Ruiz; Norberto Perico; Konrad Pesudovs; David Phillips; Michael R Phillips; Kelsey Pierce; Sébastien Pion; Guilherme V Polanczyk; Suzanne Polinder; C Arden Pope; Svetlana Popova; Esteban Porrini; Farshad Pourmalek; Martin Prince; Rachel L Pullan; Kapa D Ramaiah; Dharani Ranganathan; Homie Razavi; Mathilda Regan; Jürgen T Rehm; David B Rein; Guiseppe Remuzzi; Kathryn Richardson; Frederick P Rivara; Thomas Roberts; Carolyn Robinson; Felipe Rodriguez De Leòn; Luca Ronfani; Robin Room; Lisa C Rosenfeld; Lesley Rushton; Ralph L Sacco; Sukanta Saha; Uchechukwu Sampson; Lidia Sanchez-Riera; Ella Sanman; David C Schwebel; James Graham Scott; Maria Segui-Gomez; Saeid Shahraz; Donald S Shepard; Hwashin Shin; Rupak Shivakoti; David Singh; Gitanjali M Singh; Jasvinder A Singh; Jessica Singleton; David A Sleet; Karen Sliwa; Emma Smith; Jennifer L Smith; Nicolas J C Stapelberg; Andrew Steer; Timothy Steiner; Wilma A Stolk; Lars Jacob Stovner; Christopher Sudfeld; Sana Syed; Giorgio Tamburlini; Mohammad Tavakkoli; Hugh R Taylor; Jennifer A Taylor; William J Taylor; Bernadette Thomas; W Murray Thomson; George D Thurston; Imad M Tleyjeh; Marcello Tonelli; Jeffrey A Towbin; Thomas Truelsen; Miltiadis K Tsilimbaris; Clotilde Ubeda; Eduardo A Undurraga; Marieke J van der Werf; Jim van Os; Monica S Vavilala; N Venketasubramanian; Mengru Wang; Wenzhi Wang; Kerrianne Watt; David J Weatherall; Martin A Weinstock; Robert Weintraub; Marc G Weisskopf; Myrna M Weissman; Richard A White; Harvey Whiteford; Natasha Wiebe; Steven T Wiersma; James D Wilkinson; Hywel C Williams; Sean R M Williams; Emma Witt; Frederick Wolfe; Anthony D Woolf; Sarah Wulf; Pon-Hsiu Yeh; Anita K M Zaidi; Zhi-Jie Zheng; David Zonies; Alan D Lopez; Mohammad A AlMazroa; Ziad A Memish
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2012-12-15       Impact factor: 79.321

10.  Years lived with disability (YLDs) for 1160 sequelae of 289 diseases and injuries 1990-2010: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2010.

Authors:  Theo Vos; Abraham D Flaxman; Mohsen Naghavi; Rafael Lozano; Catherine Michaud; Majid Ezzati; Kenji Shibuya; Joshua A Salomon; Safa Abdalla; Victor Aboyans; Jerry Abraham; Ilana Ackerman; Rakesh Aggarwal; Stephanie Y Ahn; Mohammed K Ali; Miriam Alvarado; H Ross Anderson; Laurie M Anderson; Kathryn G Andrews; Charles Atkinson; Larry M Baddour; Adil N Bahalim; Suzanne Barker-Collo; Lope H Barrero; David H Bartels; Maria-Gloria Basáñez; Amanda Baxter; Michelle L Bell; Emelia J Benjamin; Derrick Bennett; Eduardo Bernabé; Kavi Bhalla; Bishal Bhandari; Boris Bikbov; Aref Bin Abdulhak; Gretchen Birbeck; James A Black; Hannah Blencowe; Jed D Blore; Fiona Blyth; Ian Bolliger; Audrey Bonaventure; Soufiane Boufous; Rupert Bourne; Michel Boussinesq; Tasanee Braithwaite; Carol Brayne; Lisa Bridgett; Simon Brooker; Peter Brooks; Traolach S Brugha; Claire Bryan-Hancock; Chiara Bucello; Rachelle Buchbinder; Geoffrey Buckle; Christine M Budke; Michael Burch; Peter Burney; Roy Burstein; Bianca Calabria; Benjamin Campbell; Charles E Canter; Hélène Carabin; Jonathan Carapetis; Loreto Carmona; Claudia Cella; Fiona Charlson; Honglei Chen; Andrew Tai-Ann Cheng; David Chou; Sumeet S Chugh; Luc E Coffeng; Steven D Colan; Samantha Colquhoun; K Ellicott Colson; John Condon; Myles D Connor; Leslie T Cooper; Matthew Corriere; Monica Cortinovis; Karen Courville de Vaccaro; William Couser; Benjamin C Cowie; Michael H Criqui; Marita Cross; Kaustubh C Dabhadkar; Manu Dahiya; Nabila Dahodwala; James Damsere-Derry; Goodarz Danaei; Adrian Davis; Diego De Leo; Louisa Degenhardt; Robert Dellavalle; Allyne Delossantos; Julie Denenberg; Sarah Derrett; Don C Des Jarlais; Samath D Dharmaratne; Mukesh Dherani; Cesar Diaz-Torne; Helen Dolk; E Ray Dorsey; Tim Driscoll; Herbert Duber; Beth Ebel; Karen Edmond; Alexis Elbaz; Suad Eltahir Ali; Holly Erskine; Patricia J Erwin; Patricia Espindola; Stalin E Ewoigbokhan; Farshad Farzadfar; Valery Feigin; David T Felson; Alize Ferrari; Cleusa P Ferri; Eric M Fèvre; Mariel M Finucane; Seth Flaxman; Louise Flood; Kyle Foreman; Mohammad H Forouzanfar; Francis Gerry R Fowkes; Richard Franklin; Marlene Fransen; Michael K Freeman; Belinda J Gabbe; Sherine E Gabriel; Emmanuela Gakidou; Hammad A Ganatra; Bianca Garcia; Flavio Gaspari; Richard F Gillum; Gerhard Gmel; Richard Gosselin; Rebecca Grainger; Justina Groeger; Francis Guillemin; David Gunnell; Ramyani Gupta; Juanita Haagsma; Holly Hagan; Yara A Halasa; Wayne Hall; Diana Haring; Josep Maria Haro; James E Harrison; Rasmus Havmoeller; Roderick J Hay; Hideki Higashi; Catherine Hill; Bruno Hoen; Howard Hoffman; Peter J Hotez; Damian Hoy; John J Huang; Sydney E Ibeanusi; Kathryn H Jacobsen; Spencer L James; Deborah Jarvis; Rashmi Jasrasaria; Sudha Jayaraman; Nicole Johns; Jost B Jonas; Ganesan Karthikeyan; Nicholas Kassebaum; Norito Kawakami; Andre Keren; Jon-Paul Khoo; Charles H King; Lisa Marie Knowlton; Olive Kobusingye; Adofo Koranteng; Rita Krishnamurthi; Ratilal Lalloo; Laura L Laslett; Tim Lathlean; Janet L Leasher; Yong Yi Lee; James Leigh; Stephen S Lim; Elizabeth Limb; John Kent Lin; Michael Lipnick; Steven E Lipshultz; Wei Liu; Maria Loane; Summer Lockett Ohno; Ronan Lyons; Jixiang Ma; Jacqueline Mabweijano; Michael F MacIntyre; Reza Malekzadeh; Leslie Mallinger; Sivabalan Manivannan; Wagner Marcenes; Lyn March; David J Margolis; Guy B Marks; Robin Marks; Akira Matsumori; Richard Matzopoulos; Bongani M Mayosi; John H McAnulty; Mary M McDermott; Neil McGill; John McGrath; Maria Elena Medina-Mora; Michele Meltzer; George A Mensah; Tony R Merriman; Ana-Claire Meyer; Valeria Miglioli; Matthew Miller; Ted R Miller; Philip B Mitchell; Ana Olga Mocumbi; Terrie E Moffitt; Ali A Mokdad; Lorenzo Monasta; Marcella Montico; Maziar Moradi-Lakeh; Andrew Moran; Lidia Morawska; Rintaro Mori; Michele E Murdoch; Michael K Mwaniki; Kovin Naidoo; M Nathan Nair; Luigi Naldi; K M Venkat Narayan; Paul K Nelson; Robert G Nelson; Michael C Nevitt; Charles R Newton; Sandra Nolte; Paul Norman; Rosana Norman; Martin O'Donnell; Simon O'Hanlon; Casey Olives; Saad B Omer; Katrina Ortblad; Richard Osborne; Doruk Ozgediz; Andrew Page; Bishnu Pahari; Jeyaraj Durai Pandian; Andrea Panozo Rivero; Scott B Patten; Neil Pearce; Rogelio Perez Padilla; Fernando Perez-Ruiz; Norberto Perico; Konrad Pesudovs; David Phillips; Michael R Phillips; Kelsey Pierce; Sébastien Pion; Guilherme V Polanczyk; Suzanne Polinder; C Arden Pope; Svetlana Popova; Esteban Porrini; Farshad Pourmalek; Martin Prince; Rachel L Pullan; Kapa D Ramaiah; Dharani Ranganathan; Homie Razavi; Mathilda Regan; Jürgen T Rehm; David B Rein; Guiseppe Remuzzi; Kathryn Richardson; Frederick P Rivara; Thomas Roberts; Carolyn Robinson; Felipe Rodriguez De Leòn; Luca Ronfani; Robin Room; Lisa C Rosenfeld; Lesley Rushton; Ralph L Sacco; Sukanta Saha; Uchechukwu Sampson; Lidia Sanchez-Riera; Ella Sanman; David C Schwebel; James Graham Scott; Maria Segui-Gomez; Saeid Shahraz; Donald S Shepard; Hwashin Shin; Rupak Shivakoti; David Singh; Gitanjali M Singh; Jasvinder A Singh; Jessica Singleton; David A Sleet; Karen Sliwa; Emma Smith; Jennifer L Smith; Nicolas J C Stapelberg; Andrew Steer; Timothy Steiner; Wilma A Stolk; Lars Jacob Stovner; Christopher Sudfeld; Sana Syed; Giorgio Tamburlini; Mohammad Tavakkoli; Hugh R Taylor; Jennifer A Taylor; William J Taylor; Bernadette Thomas; W Murray Thomson; George D Thurston; Imad M Tleyjeh; Marcello Tonelli; Jeffrey A Towbin; Thomas Truelsen; Miltiadis K Tsilimbaris; Clotilde Ubeda; Eduardo A Undurraga; Marieke J van der Werf; Jim van Os; Monica S Vavilala; N Venketasubramanian; Mengru Wang; Wenzhi Wang; Kerrianne Watt; David J Weatherall; Martin A Weinstock; Robert Weintraub; Marc G Weisskopf; Myrna M Weissman; Richard A White; Harvey Whiteford; Steven T Wiersma; James D Wilkinson; Hywel C Williams; Sean R M Williams; Emma Witt; Frederick Wolfe; Anthony D Woolf; Sarah Wulf; Pon-Hsiu Yeh; Anita K M Zaidi; Zhi-Jie Zheng; David Zonies; Alan D Lopez; Christopher J L Murray; Mohammad A AlMazroa; Ziad A Memish
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2012-12-15       Impact factor: 79.321

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  11 in total

1.  Educational attainment, gender and health inequalities among older adults in Catalonia (Spain).

Authors:  Aïda Solé-Auró; Manuela Alcañiz
Journal:  Int J Equity Health       Date:  2016-08-04

2.  The economic burden of mental disorders in China, 2005-2013: implications for health policy.

Authors:  Junfang Xu; Jian Wang; Anders Wimo; Chengxuan Qiu
Journal:  BMC Psychiatry       Date:  2016-05-11       Impact factor: 3.630

3.  Alcohol-attributed disease burden and alcohol policies in the BRICS-countries during the years 1990-2013.

Authors:  Rynaz Rabiee; Emilie Agardh; Matthew M Coates; Peter Allebeck; Anna-Karin Danielsson
Journal:  J Glob Health       Date:  2017-06       Impact factor: 4.413

4.  Hospitalization burden and comorbidities of patients with rheumatoid arthritis in Spain during the period 2002-2017.

Authors:  Mario Gil-Conesa; Juan Antonio Del-Moral-Luque; Ruth Gil-Prieto; Ángel Gil-de-Miguel; Ramón Mazzuccheli-Esteban; Gil Rodríguez-Caravaca
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2020-05-04       Impact factor: 2.655

5.  [Living with Chronic Illness Scale: Pilot study in patients with several chronic diseases].

Authors:  Leire Ambrosio; María Victoria Navarta-Sánchez; Alfonso Meneses; Carmen Rodríguez-Blázquez
Journal:  Aten Primaria       Date:  2018-12-07       Impact factor: 1.137

6.  Epidemiology and population structure of Haemophilus influenzae causing invasive disease.

Authors:  Anna Carrera-Salinas; Aida González-Díaz; Laura Calatayud; Julieta Mercado-Maza; Carmen Puig; Dàmaris Berbel; Jordi Càmara; Fe Tubau; Imma Grau; M Ángeles Domínguez; Carmen Ardanuy; Sara Martí
Journal:  Microb Genom       Date:  2021-12

7.  Implementing a Care Pathway for Complex Chronic Patients from a Nursing Perspective: A Qualitative Study.

Authors:  Rosario Fernández-Peña; Carmen Ortego-Maté; Francisco José Amo-Setién; Tamara Silió-García; Antoni Casasempere-Satorres; Carmen Sarabia-Cobo
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2021-06-11       Impact factor: 3.390

8.  On the road to universal health care in Indonesia, 1990-2016: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2016.

Authors:  Nafsiah Mboi; Indra Murty Surbakti; Indang Trihandini; Iqbal Elyazar; Karen Houston Smith; Pungkas Bahjuri Ali; Soewarta Kosen; Kristin Flemons; Sarah E Ray; Jackie Cao; Scott D Glenn; Molly K Miller-Petrie; Meghan D Mooney; Jeffrey L Ried; Dina Nur Anggraini Ningrum; Fachmi Idris; Kemal N Siregar; Pandu Harimurti; Robert S Bernstein; Tikki Pangestu; Yuwono Sidharta; Mohsen Naghavi; Christopher J L Murray; Simon I Hay
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2018-06-28       Impact factor: 79.321

9.  Skeletal muscle mass in relation to 10 year cardiovascular disease incidence among middle aged and older adults: the ATTICA study.

Authors:  Stefanos Tyrovolas; Demosthenes Panagiotakos; Ekavi Georgousopoulou; Christina Chrysohoou; Dimitrios Tousoulis; Josep Maria Haro; Christos Pitsavos
Journal:  J Epidemiol Community Health       Date:  2019-11-11       Impact factor: 3.710

10.  Importance of Social- and Health-Related Problems: Do Spaniards Give Them the Significance They Actually Deserve?

Authors:  Francisco Alonso; Cristina Esteban; Andrea Serge; Macarena Tortosa
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2019-10-24       Impact factor: 3.390

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