| Literature DB >> 27048630 |
Esther de Vries1, Ivan Arroyave2, Constanza Pardo3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate trends in premature cancer mortality in Colombia by educational level in three periods: 1998-2002 with low healthcare insurance coverage, 2003-2007 with rapidly increasing coverage and finally 2008-2012 with almost universal coverage (2008-2012).Entities:
Keywords: EPIDEMIOLOGY; PUBLIC HEALTH; SOCIAL MEDICINE
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27048630 PMCID: PMC4823465 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-008985
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Trends in national healthcare insurance coverage (HIC), Colombia, 1998–2012. Other schemes primarily include members of the military and teacher and oil workers syndicate members. Based on Annual reports of the Ministry of Health and Social Protection. Source: Annual reports of the Ministry of Health and Social Protection to the Congress of the Republic of Colombia.
Figure 2Age-standardised cancer mortality trends, including APC based on joinpoint models, by sex and educational level. Markers: Observed age-standardised cancer mortality rates. Lines: modelled age-standardised cancer mortality trends. Estimates are results from five databases generated by multiple imputations, appropriately reflecting uncertainty attributable to missing values. The points represent ASMR; lines represent the trendlines between joinpoints. Blue, diamonds: maximum primary education; Red, triangles: secondary education; Green, circles: tertiary education. Numbers adjacent to the lines represent estimates annual percent change (EAPC) during the corresponding periods, based on joinpoint modelling; a star indicates statistical significance at α 0.05.
Descriptives of the study: numbers of deaths and population size and age-standardised mortality rates by sex and educational level, Colombia, 1998–2012
| Sex | Educational level* | Cancer deaths† | Population size | ASMR‡ (95% CIs) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Men | Primary | 50 126 | 67 815 336 | 54.0 (53.5 to 54.5) |
| Secondary | 22 273 | 67 742 806 | 45.1 (44.4 to 45.8) | |
| Tertiary | 9493 | 30 715 631 | 41.4 (40.5 to 42.3) | |
| Total | 81 892 | 166 273 773 | 48.9 (48.8 to 49.1) | |
| Women | Primary | 65 336 | 68 637 666 | 64.7 (64.2 to 65.2) |
| Secondary | 30 414 | 72 387 214 | 54.2 (53.5 to 54.9) | |
| Tertiary | 10 449 | 35 149 442 | 47.2 (46.2 to 48.3) | |
| Total | 106 199 | 176 174 322 | 57.8 (57.6 to 58.0) |
*Educational attainment values registered after final imputation. Primary=up to elementary or primary school; secondary=any level of high school; tertiary=any level of postsecondary education after high school including college and university.
†Cancer deaths after imputation.
‡ASMR: Age standardised mortality rates per 100 000 population; Estimates (WHO standard population, 1997) for educational level combine results from five databases generated by multiple imputations, appropriately reflecting uncertainty attributable to missing values.
Figure 3Sex-specific relative index of inequality by period and age group. Estimates from combined results from five databases resulting from multiple imputations, appropriately reflecting uncertainty attributable to missing values.
Figure 4Slope index of inequality (SII) for non-communicable diseases. See online appendix-table S1 for International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10) codes for non-communicable diseases.