Literature DB >> 34145332

The impact of inequalities and health expenditure on mortality due to oral and oropharyngeal cancer in Brazil.

Amanda Ramos da Cunha1, Alessandro Bigoni2, José Leopoldo Ferreira Antunes2, Fernando Neves Hugo3.   

Abstract

This study aims to assess the magnitude and trend of mortality rates due to oral (OC) and oropharyngeal cancer (OPC) in the 133 Intermediate Geographic Regions (IGR) of Brazil between 1996 and 2018 and to analyze its association with sociodemographic variables and provision of health services. It also aims to compare the trend of mortality from neoplasms that have been reported as associated with HPV (OPC) with the trend of neoplasms that have been reported as not associated with HPV (OC). We obtained mortality data from the Mortality Information System in Brazil and analyzed the trends using the Prais-Winsten method. Then, we assessed the relationship between mortality trends and socioeconomic, health spending, and health services provision variables. The median of the annual percent change of the country's mortality rates was 0.63% for OC and 0.83% for OPC. Trends in mortality in the IGRs correlated significantly with the Human Development Index and government expenditure on ambulatory health care and hospitalizations. Mortality from both types of cancer decreased in those IGR in which the government spent more on health and in the more socioeconomically developed ones. This study found no epidemiological indication that HPV plays the leading etiological factor in OPC in Brazil.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 34145332     DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-92207-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Rep        ISSN: 2045-2322            Impact factor:   4.379


  6 in total

1.  Mortality from oral and oropharyngeal cancer in Brazil: impact of the National Oral Health Policy.

Authors:  Amanda Ramos da Cunha; Taiane Schaedler Prass; Fernando Neves Hugo
Journal:  Cad Saude Publica       Date:  2019-11-28       Impact factor: 1.632

2.  Trends and spatial distribution of deaths of children aged 12-60 months in São Paulo, Brazil, 1980-98.

Authors:  José Leopoldo Ferreira Antunes; Eliseu Alves Waldman
Journal:  Bull World Health Organ       Date:  2002       Impact factor: 9.408

3.  Global burden of cancer attributable to infections in 2018: a worldwide incidence analysis.

Authors:  Catherine de Martel; Damien Georges; Freddie Bray; Jacques Ferlay; Gary M Clifford
Journal:  Lancet Glob Health       Date:  2019-12-17       Impact factor: 26.763

4.  Influence of municipal socioeconomic indices on mortality rates for oral and oropharyngeal cancer in older adults in the State of São Paulo, Brazil.

Authors:  Assahito Joel Sakamoto; Valéria Silva Candido Brizon; Jaqueline Vilela Bulgareli; Glaucia Maria Bovi Ambrosano; Eduardo Hebling
Journal:  Rev Bras Epidemiol       Date:  2019-03-21

5.  Spatial analysis of the death associated factors due oral cancer in Brazil: an ecological study.

Authors:  Gisele Pedroso Moi; Ageo Mário Cândido Silva; Noemi Dreyer Galvão; Marcelo de Castro Meneghim; Antonio Carlos Pereira
Journal:  BMC Oral Health       Date:  2018-01-23       Impact factor: 2.757

6.  Describing mortality trends for major cancer sites in 133 intermediate regions of Brazil and an ecological study of its causes.

Authors:  Alessandro Bigoni; José Leopoldo Ferreira Antunes; Elisabete Weiderpass; Kristina Kjærheim
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2019-10-11       Impact factor: 4.430

  6 in total

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