20年的观察研究显示,美国和特拉华州酒精导致的死亡人数上升。

Research in health science Pub Date : 2020-01-01 Epub Date: 2020-10-16 DOI:10.22158/rhs.v5n4p46
Malcolm J D'Souza, Riza C Li, Derald E Wentzien
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引用次数: 1

摘要

美国酒精导致的死亡负担使其成为可预防死亡的第三大原因。这项1999-2018年的观察性研究使用国际疾病分类代码第十版和酒精相关疾病影响(ARDI)死亡原因记录来追踪酒精的死亡率负担。疾病控制和预防中心为美国社区保留了广泛的流行病学研究在线数据(WONDER)死亡证明。有证据表明,美国ARDI死亡率呈逐渐上升趋势(53.73%)。男性的死亡率是女性的三倍,但女性死亡率的变化(90.03%)比男性更快。该研究还显示,中年人与酒精相关的死亡率百分比变化速度更快。相比之下,非裔美国人/黑人(AA/B)社区的年龄调整死亡率变化模式先下降后上升。1999年至2018年,AA/B的酒精归因于死亡率差异为-6.35%。特拉华州的人口约为100万,其中约23%是非洲裔美国人/黑人。特拉华州人口的亚组分析结果显示,酒精导致的死亡率高于全国平均水平。这一趋势在性别和种族上都很明显。总之,对美国和特拉华州来说,酒精使用障碍是导致死亡的一个危险因素,尤其是对男性而言。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Twenty-Year Observational Study Shows Rising Alcohol-Attributable Death Profiles in the U.S. and Delaware.

The U.S. alcohol-attributable mortality burden makes it the third-leading cause of preventable deaths. This 1999-2018 observational study used the Tenth Revision of the International Classification of Diseases codes and the alcohol-related disease impact (ARDI) causes of death records to track alcohol's mortality burden. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention keeps Wide-Ranging Online Data for Epidemiologic Research (WONDER) death certificates for the U.S. community. Evidence indicates that the U.S. ARDI mortality rates progressively trended upward (53.73%). Men were three times as likely as women to die, but female mortality rate changes (90.03%) advanced more rapidly than males. The study also revealed that the changes in alcohol-related death rate percentages for middle-age groups increased faster. In contrast, the African American/Black (AA/B) community's age-adjusted mortality rate change patterns first declined and then increased. The alcohol-attributable mortality rate (1999 to 2018) difference for AA/B was -6.35%. Delaware's population is around one million, and about 23% is African American/Black. The subgroup analysis for Delaware's population was robust and showed alcohol-attributable mortality rates above national averages. This trend was apparent for both gender and race. In conclusion, for both the U.S. and Delaware, alcohol use disorder is a risk factor for mortality, especially for males.

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