| Literature DB >> 27006644 |
Inna Danilova1, Vladimir M Shkolnikov2, Dmitri A Jdanov2, France Meslé3, Jacques Vallin3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Reliable and comparable data on causes of death are crucial for public health analysis, but the usefulness of these data can be markedly diminished when the approach to coding is not standardized across territories and/or over time. Because the Russian system of producing information on causes of death is highly decentralized, there may be discrepancies in the coding practices employed across the country. In this study, we evaluate the uniformity of cause-of-death coding practices across Russian regions using an indirect method.Entities:
Keywords: Causes of death; Coding; Mortality statistics; Russia; Validation
Year: 2016 PMID: 27006644 PMCID: PMC4802884 DOI: 10.1186/s12963-016-0078-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Popul Health Metr ISSN: 1478-7954
Prior research on the topic
| Studies | Time and location | Purpose | Data and methods | Findings |
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| 1. Bystrova (1965); | 1. Cities of Tula, Novomoskovsk, Tambov, Michurinsk in the early 1960s | To assess the accuracy of cause-of-death diagnostics and coding in the USSR. | - Re-inspection of medical death certificates. | - Against a widely held view, no evidence was found of substantial overestimation of cardiovascular mortality in the USSR and Russia. |
| Shkolnikov, Chervyakov et al. (2000) [ | Cities of Udmurt Republic, 1998-1999 | To inspect the quality of cause-of-death coding under the conditions of the “mortality crisis” of the 1990s. | - Analysis of 1,023 medical death certificates of males aged 20–55. | - For 98 % of deaths the ICD chapter of the initial underlying cause coincided with the cause specified by the expert. |
| Vaysman (2013) [ | Tula obl., 2008, 2012 | To analyze the accuracy of the reporting of causes of death in the Tula region. | - Re-coding of a sample of 148 medical death certificates. | - Share of deaths was attributed to circulatory diseases decreased from 66.2 % to 56.8 % after re-coding. |
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| 1. Meslé et al. (1996) [ | 1. Russia as a whole, 1965–1994 | To analyze the different aspects of mortality for a long-term period, and to explore the components of the health crisis in Russia (USSR). | - The method of reconstruction [ | - Overestimation of the cardiovascular deaths total was not confirmed. |
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| Shkolnikov et al. (2002) [ | Izhevsk, 1998-1999 | To determine whether deaths from alcohol poisoning were being misclassified as cardiovascular deaths. | - 309 deaths of males aged 20–55 with necropsy records were checked for blood alcohol concentration (BAC). | - No evidence that alcohol poisonings were misclassified as cardiovascular deaths was found. |
| Zaridze et al. (2009) [ | Barnaul, 1990-2004 | To determine the role of alcohol in unusual fluctuations in mortality in Russia. | - Inspection of cause-specific mortality trends in Russia in 1991–2006. | - A post-mortem potentially lethal BAC (>4 g/L) found for 14 % of deaths of males aged 35–69 officially recorded as deaths from cardiovascular causes. |
| Leon et al. (2010) [ | Izhevsk, 2003-2005 | To find a link between alcohol and mortality among men of working age. | - Inspection of cause-specific mortality trends in Russia in 1980–2007. | - Criticism of the results of Barnaul study (Zaridze et al., 2009): 1) mortality from cerebrovascular diseases fluctuated significantly in the 1980s and the 1990s, in tandem with mortality from alcohol causes; yet the percentages of deaths with BAC >4 g/L were very low for this group of causes in both Barnaul and Izhevsk. These findings contradict the evidence from the Barnaul study; 2) during the years immediately following the transition to the RC-1999 there was an artificial conflation of mortality from ischemic and non-ischemic heart diseases in Barnaul. Thus, the mortality trends in Barnaul were not nationally representative. |
| Sidorenkov et al. (2011) [ | Arkhangelsk, 2008-2009 | To determine whether deaths from alcohol poisoning were misclassified as cardiovascular deaths. | - All deaths at ages 30–70 from cardiovascular diseases subjected to forensic autopsy checked for BAC. | - No evidence of alcohol poisonings being misclassified as cardiovascular deaths was found. |
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| Gavrilova et al. (2008) [ | Russia as a whole, 1991–2005; Kirov and Smolensk regions, the city of Moscow, 2003 | To investigate which causes of death are hidden under ill-defined conditions. | - Descriptive statistical analysis of mortality from ill-defined conditions in Russia. | - The instructions on death certification in Russia encourage medical practitioners to use unspecified diagnosis in medical death certificates. |
| Lopakov (2011) [ | Kaluga region, 2002 | To find mistakes in medical death certificates. | - Analysis of 419 medical death certificates. | - Mistakes in medical death certificates were found. |
| Roschin et al. (2013) [ | - Three hospitals in the Moscow region, 2002 | To assess the accuracy of reporting diabetes in medical death certificates. | - Comparison of medical death certificates and medical records for individuals who died in hospitals. | - While 25 % of the deceased in hospitals had diabetes, this diagnosis was not specified in death certificates (other than in a few cases in which diabetes was selected as an underlying cause of death). The frequency of the reporting of diabetes in medical death certificates did not correspond to its real prevalence in the population. |
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| Pridemore (2003) [ | Russia as a whole 1987–1998; 78 regions of Russia 1994-1998 | To evaluate the homicide reporting in Russia. | - Comparison of two sources of homicide estimates in Russia: data from the vital statistics and data from the Ministry of the Interior. | - Disparities across regions in the reporting of homicides were found in the mortality and crime data. |
| Nemtsov (2003) [ | 77 regions of Russia, 1990-2001 | To estimate alcohol-related mortality in the Russian regions. | - Analyzing the mortality from alcohol-related causes in regions. | - Among all alcohol-related causes of death acute alcohol poisonings had the highest variability across regions. |
Regions under study, by federal district of Russia
| Central Federal District | Belgorod Oblast, Belgorod Oblast, Vladimir Oblast, Voronezh Oblast, Ivanovo Oblast, Tver Oblast, Kaluga Oblast, Kursk Oblast, Lipetzk Oblast, the city of Moscow, Moscow Oblast, Ryazan Oblast, Saratov Oblast, Smolensk Oblast, Tambov Oblast, Tula Oblast, Yaroslavl Oblast |
| Northwestern Federal District | Arkhangelsk Oblast, Vologda Oblast, the city of Sankt-Petersburg, Leningrad Oblast |
| Volga Federal District | Nizhny Novgorod Oblast, Kirov Oblast, Samara Oblast, Orenburg Oblast, Penza Oblast, Perm Kray, Ulyanovsk Oblast, Republic of Bashkortostan, Republic of Tatarstan, Udmurt Republic, Chuvash Republic |
| Southern Federal District | Krasnodar Kray, Astrakhan Oblast, Volgograd Oblast, Rostov Oblast |
| North Caucasian Federal District | Republic of Dagestan, Stavropol Kray |
| Ural Federal District | Sverdlovsk Oblast, Tyumen Oblast, Chelyabinsk Oblast, Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Area |
| Siberian Federal District | Altai Kray, Krasnoyarsk Kray, Irkutsk Oblast |
| Far Eastern Federal District | Primorsky Kray, Khabarovsk Kray |
Causes of death under study
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|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Tuberculosis and its sequelae | 9-15, 54 | A15-A19, B90 |
| 2 | AIDS | 44 | B20-B24 |
| 3 | Other infectious and parasitic diseases | 1-8, 16–43, 45–53, 55 | A00-14, A20-99, B00-19, B25-89, B91-99 |
| 4 | Mouth and oropharynx cancers | 56 | C00-C14 |
| 5 | Esophagus cancer | 57 | C15 |
| 6 | Stomach cancer | 58 | C16 |
| 7 | Colon and rectum cancers | 60-61 | C18-C21 |
| 8 | Liver cancer | 62 | C22 |
| 9 | Pancreas cancer | 63 | C25 |
| 10 | Cancers of other digestive organs | 59,64 | C17, C23, C24, C26 |
| 11 | Trachea, bronchus and lung cancers | 66 | C33-C34 |
| 12 | Cancers of other respiratory, intrathoracic organs | 65,67 | C30-C32, C37-C39 |
| 13 | Melanoma and other skin cancers | 69-70 | C43-C44 |
| 14 | Mesothelial and soft tissue cancers | 71 | C45-C49 |
| 15 | Breast cancer | 72 | C50 |
| 16 | Cervix uteri cancer | 73 | C53 |
| 17 | Corpus uteri cancer | 74 | C54-C55 |
| 18 | Ovary cancer | 75 | C56 |
| 19 | Prostate cancer | 77 | C61 |
| 20 | Kidney cancer | 79 | C64 |
| 21 | Bladder cancer | 80 | C67 |
| 22 | Cancer of brain and central nervous system | 82 | C70-C72 |
| 23 | Other cancers | 68,76,78,81,83 | C40-41, C51-52, C57-58, C60-63, C65-66, C68-69, C73-80, C97 |
| 24 | Lymphomas and multiple myeloma | 84-86 | C81-C90, C96 |
| 25 | Leukemia | 87 | C91-C95 |
| 26 | Other neoplasms | 89 | D00-D48 |
| 27 | Endocrine, nutritional and metabolic diseases | 93-96 | E00-E99 |
| 28 | Mental and behavioral disorders | 97-103 | F00-F99 |
| 29 | Diseases of the nervous system | 104-111 | G00-G99 |
| 30 | Rheumatic diseases | 115-116 | I00-I09 |
| 31 | Hypertensive diseases | 117-120 | I11-I15 |
| 32 | Myocardial infarction | 121-123 | I21-I23 |
| 33 | Atherosclerotic heart disease | 125 | I25.1 |
| 34 | Other forms of ischemic heart diseases | 127-129 | I20, I24.1-9, I25.2-9 |
| 35 | Pulmonary heart and circulation diseases | 131 | I26-I28 |
| 36 | Other heart diseases | 132 | I30-I51 |
| 37 | Subarachnoid hemorrhage | 133 | I60 |
| 38 | Nontraumatic intracranial hemorrhage | 135 | I61-I62 |
| 39 | Cerebral infarction | 137 | I63 |
| 40 | Stroke, not specified as hemorrhage or infarction | 139 | I64 |
| 41 | Other cerebrovascular disorders | 141 | I67-I69 |
| 42 | Atherosclerosis | 143 | I70 |
| 43 | Other diseases of arteries, arterioles, and capillaries | 144 | I71-I79 |
| 44 | Disorders of veins and lymphatic vessels | 145-146 | I80-I89 |
| 45 | Pneumonia | 150-154 | J12-J18 |
| 46 | Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease | 156-158 | J40-J44 |
| 47 | Other respiratory diseases | 148-150, 154–155, 159-163 | J00-11, J19-39, J45-99 |
| 48 | Peptic ulcer disease | 165-167 | K25-K27 |
| 49 | Alcoholic liver disease | 173 | K70 |
| 50 | Fibrosis and cirrhosis of the liver | 174 | K74 |
| 51 | Other diseases of liver | 175 | K71-K73, K75-K76 |
| 52 | Diseases of pancreas | 178 | K85-K86 |
| 53 | Other digestive diseases | 168-172, 176–177, 179 | K00-24, K28-K69, K80-84, K87-93 |
| 54 | Nephritis and nephrosis | 185-189 | N00-N15 |
| 55 | Other urinary diseases | 190-191 | N16-N39 |
| 56 | Conditions originating in the perinatal period | 206-216 | P05-P96 |
| 57 | Congenital malformations | 217-225 | Q00-Q99 |
| 58 | Senility | 226 | R54 |
| 59 | Other ill-defined and unspecified causes | 227-228 | R00-R53, R55-R99 |
| 60 | Road traffic accidents | 239-241, 272-274 | V01-V99 |
| 61 | Alcohol poisoning | 247 | X45 |
| 62 | Other accidental poisoning | 248 | X40-44, X46-X49 |
| 63 | Falls | 242 | W00-W19 |
| 64 | Fires | 246 | X00-X09 |
| 65 | Drowning | 243 | W65-W74 |
| 66 | Accidental inhalation | 244 | W75-W84 |
| 67 | Other unintentional injuries | 245, 254-255 | W20-W64, W85-W99, X10-X39, X50-X59, Y35, Y85-X89 |
| 68 | Suicide | 249 | X60-X84 |
| 69 | Homicide | 250 | X85-Y09 |
| 70 | Injuries with undetermined intent | 251 | Y10-Y34 |
Fig. 1Heatmap on inter-regional variability in causes of death. Each row corresponds to a particular cause of death and each column represents a region. The cells are colored according to the values of V
Estimates of the regression coefficients of the OLS model (3)
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| Sverdlovsk | −2.32 (−11.18, 6.54) | 0.61 | Stomach cancer | −0.67 (−10.94, 9.61) | 0.90 |
| Chelyabinsk | −2.31 (−11.17, 6.55) | 0.61 | Trachea, bronchus and lung cancers | [Ref] | — |
| Novosibirsk | −1.99 (−10.85, 6.87) | 0.66 | Kidney cancer | 2.93 (−7.34, 13.21) | 0.58 |
| Moscow Oblast | −1.45 (−10.31, 7.41) | 0.75 | Breast cancer | 2.98 (−7.29, 13.26) | 0.57 |
| Omsk | −0.87 (−9.73, 7.99) | 0.85 | Colon and rectum cancer | 3.21 (−7.07, 13.49) | 0.54 |
| ⁞ | ⁞ | ⁞ | Cancer of other and ill-defined respiratory and intrathoracic organs | 4.00 (−6.28, 14.28) | 0.45 |
| Kaluga | [Ref] | — | ⁞ | ⁞ | ⁞ |
| ⁞ | ⁞ | ⁞ | Atherosclerotic heart disease | 34.02 (23.74, 44.3) | <0.001 |
| Astrakhan | 11.5 (2.64, 20.36) | 0.01 | Other symptoms and signs | 34.16 (23.88, 44.43) | <0.001 |
| Samara | 11.7 (2.84, 20.56) | 0.01 | Other diseases of liver | 34.23 (23.95, 44.51) | <0.001 |
| Rostov | 12.12 (3.26, 20.98) | 0.01 | Stroke not specified as hemorrhage or infarction | 36 (25.72, 46.28) | <0.001 |
| Tomsk | 12.53 (3.67, 21.39) | 0.01 | Alcohol poisoning | 36.32 (26.04, 46.6) | <0.001 |
| Lipetzk | 13.58 (4.72, 22.44) | <0.001 | Fires | 36.74 (26.46, 47.02) | <0.001 |
| Chuvash | 16.74 (7.88, 25.6) | <0.001 | Alcoholic liver disease | 40.8 (30.52, 51.08) | <0.001 |
| Saint Petersburg | 19.93 (11.07, 28.79) | <0.001 | Chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases | 41.83 (31.55, 52.1) | <0.001 |
| City of Moscow | 29.78 (20.93, 38.64) | <0.001 | Pulmonary heart disease and diseases of pulmonary circulation | 43.29 (33.01, 53.57) | <0.001 |
| Dagestan | 32.69 (23.83, 41.55) | <0.001 | Hypertensive diseases | 51.4 (41.12, 61.68) | <0.001 |
| Atherosclerosis | 53.76 (43.48, 64.04) | <0.001 | |||
| Mental and behavioral disorders | 63.14 (52.86, 73.41) | <0.001 | |||
| Senility | 70.88 (60.6, 81.16) | <0.001 | |||
| AIDS | 71.37 (61.09, 81.65) | <0.001 |
The regions and the causes of death with the lowest/highest variability are presented
Fig. 2Examples of distributions of cause-specific shares of the all-cause SDR across 52 regions
Fig. 3Examples of rapid and contrasting changes in regional cause-specific shares of all-cause SDR (both sexes combined). The trend for Russia as a whole is provided for comparison
Fig. 4AIDS, standardized death rates per 100,000 (Russia, both sexes)