Literature DB >> 8606820

Ethnic differences and recent trends in coronary heart disease incidence in New Zealand.

C Bell1, B Swinburn, A Stewart, R Jackson, C Tukuitonga, D Tipene-Leach.   

Abstract

AIMS: This study compares recent coronary heart disease morbidity and mortality rates and ten year trends for Maori, Pacific Islands people and Europeans living in New Zealand.
METHODS: Fatal coronary heart disease rates (mortality) and nonfatal hospitalisation rates for myocardial infarctions (morbidity) from 1983-92 were assessed and compared for males and females in each ethnic group, aged 35 to 64 years, using data from the Auckland Region Coronary or Stroke Study (ARCOS), a community-based coronary heart disease surveillance programme.
RESULTS: The recent 1990-2 mean coronary heart disease mortality rate for Maori men (232/100 000) was almost double the rate for Pacific Islands men (135/100 000 p=0.008) and more than double the rate for European men (103/100 000 p=0.001). Maori women had a three-fold higher mean mortality rate (85/100 000) than European women (25/100 000 p=0.02). The morality rate for Pacific Islands women (42/100 000) was midway between the other ethnic groups. Over the decade 1983-92 coronary heart disease mortality rates have decreased significantly by approximately 5% per year for European men and women. Rates for Maori and Pacific Islands people also appear to have fallen although the precision of these estimates are low. Morbidity rates in 1990-2 were similar among men in all three ethnic groups. Among women, morbidity was approximately half the male rates and there were no clear differences between the ethnic groups. Between 1983 and 1992 morbidity rates declined significantly for European men (p=0.008) and women (p=0.02) by approximately 5% per year. Among Maori and Pacific Islands people the trends were variable.
CONCLUSION: Maori men and women continue to experience more than double the coronary heart disease mortality rates than Europeans. Mortality rates for Pacific Islands people are intermediate between Maori and European. Both coronary heart disease mortality and morbidity rates are declining in Europeans; there appears to have been a decline in coronary heart disease mortality for Maori and Pacific Islands groups but not in morbidity rates which may have increased. Given the trend towards a decline in coronary heart disease mortality for Maori and Pacific Islands people, the most likely explanation for the apparent increase in morbidity is improved access to secondary health care services and greater awareness of coronary health disease symptoms.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8606820

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  N Z Med J        ISSN: 0028-8446


  2 in total

1.  Are mortality differences and trends by education any better or worse in New Zealand? A comparison study with Norway, Denmark and Finland, 1980-1990s.

Authors:  Jackie Fawcett; Tony Blakely; Anton Kunst
Journal:  Eur J Epidemiol       Date:  2005       Impact factor: 8.082

2.  30-Year Trends in Stroke Rates and Outcome in Auckland, New Zealand (1981-2012): A Multi-Ethnic Population-Based Series of Studies.

Authors:  Valery L Feigin; Rita V Krishnamurthi; Suzanne Barker-Collo; Kathryn M McPherson; P Alan Barber; Varsha Parag; Bruce Arroll; Derrick A Bennett; Martin Tobias; Amy Jones; Emma Witt; Paul Brown; Max Abbott; Rohit Bhattacharjee; Elaine Rush; Flora Minsun Suh; Alice Theadom; Yogini Rathnasabapathy; Braden Te Ao; Priya G Parmar; Craig Anderson; Ruth Bonita
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-08-20       Impact factor: 3.240

  2 in total

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