印度老年人中按年龄和性别分列的疾病负担。

IF 3.4 2区 医学 Q2 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY
G Anil Kumar, Anamika Pandey, Sailesh Mohan, Dorairaj Prabhakaran, Rakhi Dandona
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:在印度60岁以上人口数量和比例不断增加的背景下,了解他们的健康需求是确保健康老龄化的当务之急。方法:使用2019年全球疾病、伤害和风险因素负担研究(GBD)的数据,我们确定了2019年印度按性别和年龄组(60-64岁、65-69岁、70-74岁、75-79岁和≥80岁)分类的残疾调整生命年(DALYs)、生命损失年(YLLs)和残疾生活年(YLDs)的十大原因。我们分析了按年龄和性别分类的传染性疾病(CMNNDs)、非传染性疾病(NCDs)和伤害导致的个人原因对DALYs总数的比例贡献。我们报告了按性别分类的老年人cmnds、NCDs和损伤的粗DALY率在州一级的异质性。此外,我们还审查了卫生保健中心(HWCs)和旨在老年人保健(NPHCE)、预防和控制非传染性疾病(NP-NCD)、控制失明和视力障碍(NPCBVI)、预防和控制耳聋(NPPCD)、精神卫生计划(NMPH)、以及疾病负担范围内的AYUSH肌肉骨骼疾病项目(MSDP)。结果:2019年老年人DALYs总数为1.361亿人(占DALYs总数的29.1%),其中非传染性疾病占77.9%,CMNNDs占14.8%,伤害占7.3%,其中yll占近三分之二。在非传染性疾病中,心血管疾病、慢性呼吸系统疾病、肿瘤、糖尿病和肾脏疾病以及肌肉骨骼疾病占男女伤残调整生命年的近80%。疾病负担的大小因男女之间的特定疾病和状况而异,也因男女之间的年龄组而异,特别是在受伤和慢性疾病和非慢性疾病方面。伤害占比按照10,介于-17.3% 5.9% -15.2%女性和15.3%男性,女性有更高的贡献总损伤相关残疾由于瀑布比男性(54.4% vs 36.6%),而男性有更高的贡献残疾由于道路伤害(33.8% vs 19.4%)。2019年,印度各邦男女主要疾病组的粗DALY率存在很大差异。cmnnd的粗DALY率在女性和男性之间分别为3.6 -3.7倍;非传染性疾病的变化在1.3倍至1.9倍之间,伤害变化在2.0倍至1.7倍之间。在NPHCE、NPCBVI、NMHP、MSDP和HWCs中,服务利用指标的捕获没有按年龄或性别分类;NP-NCD有性别分类,但没有年龄分类;NPPCD的许多服务指标有按性别分列的数据,但没有50岁及以上的年龄分列数据。只有NP-NCD和NPPCD允许按老年人的疾病/状况或疾病/状况严重程度收集数据,而包括NPHCE在内的其他项目不允许按所提供的服务类型进行分类理解。结论:这项对印度不同年龄、性别和各邦老年人疾病负担差异的综合评估,以及国家卫生方案中老年人按年龄和性别获取的服务利用数据所确定的差距,可以为加强现行的公共卫生政策和旨在改善印度日益增长的老年人口的健康和福祉的规划工作提供重要投入。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Age- and sex-disaggregated disease burden among the older persons in India.

Background: In the context of the increasing number and proportion of population aged 60 years or more in India, it is imperative to understand their health needs for ensuring healthy ageing.

Methods: Using data from the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD) 2019, we identified the top ten causes of disability-adjusted life years (DALYs), years of life lost (YLLs), and years lived with disability (YLDs) disaggregated by sex and age groups (60-64 years, 65-69 years, 70-74 years, 75-79 years, and ≥ 80 years) for India in 2019. We analysed the proportional contribution of individual causes to the total DALYs due to communicable diseases (CMNNDs), non-communicable diseases (NCDs), and injuries disaggregated by age and sex. We report the state-level heterogeneity in the crude DALY rate for CMNNDs, NCDs, and injuries for older persons disaggregated by sex. Additionally, we reviewed if the data capture of service delivery indicators on older persons were age- and sex-disaggregated in the Health and Wellness Centres (HWCs), and in the National Programs aimed at the Health Care for the Elderly (NPHCE), Prevention and Control of Non-communicable Diseases (NP-NCD), Control of Blindness and Visual Impairment (NPCBVI), Prevention & Control of Deafness (NPPCD), the Mental Health Program (NMPH), and the AYUSH Musculoskeletal Disorders Program (MSDP) within the context of disease burden.

Results: The older persons accounted for a total of 136.1 million DALYs (29.1% of the total DALYs) in 2019 of which 77.9% were from NCDs, 14.8% from CMNNDs, and 7.3% from injuries, and nearly two-thirds of DALYs were accounted by YLLs. In NCDs, cardiovascular diseases, chronic respiratory diseases, neoplasms, diabetes and kidney diseases, and musculoskeletal disorders accounted for nearly 80% of DALYs for both sexes. There were variations in the magnitude of disease burden by specific diseases and conditions between females and males, and by age groups within both sexes particularly for injuries and CMNNDs. Injuries accounted for more YLDs than YLLs, ranging between 5.9%-15.2% for females and 15.3%-17.3% for males, with the females having a higher contribution to total injury related DALYs due to falls as compared to the males (54.4% vs 36.6%), whereas the males had a higher contribution to total DALYs due to road injuries (33.8% vs 19.4%). There was substantial variation in the crude DALY rates of major disease groups by the two sexes across the states of India in 2019. The crude DALY rate for CMNNDs varied between 3.6 times -3.7 times between the states for females and males, respectively; NCDs varied between 1.3 times -1.9 times, and injuries varied 2.0 times -1.7 times. The capture of service utilisation indicators was not age- or sex-disaggregated in NPHCE, NPCBVI, NMHP, MSDP, and HWCs; sex-disaggregation was available in NP-NCD but not age-disaggregation; sex-disaggregated data was available for many service indicators in NPPCD but with no age disaggregation beyond 50 years and more. Only NP-NCD and NPPCD allowed for data capture by disease/condition or severity of disease/condition for the older persons whereas the other programs including NPHCE did not allow for much disaggregated understanding by the type of services availed.

Conclusions: This comprehensive assessment of the differentials in disease burden among older persons across age, sex and states of India, and the gaps identified in the service utilisation data capture by age and sex for the older persons in the national health programs can provide crucial inputs for strengthening the on-going public health policy and programmatic efforts aimed at improving the health and well-being of the growing older population in India.

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来源期刊
BMC Geriatrics
BMC Geriatrics GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY-
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
7.30%
发文量
873
审稿时长
20 weeks
期刊介绍: BMC Geriatrics is an open access journal publishing original peer-reviewed research articles in all aspects of the health and healthcare of older people, including the effects of healthcare systems and policies. The journal also welcomes research focused on the aging process, including cellular, genetic, and physiological processes and cognitive modifications.
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