Identifying a single disease as the underlying cause of death (UCOD) is an oversimplification of the clinical-pathological process leading to death. The multiple causes of death (MCOD) approach examines any mention of a disease in death certificates. Taking diabetes as an example, the study investigates: patterns of death certification, differences in mortality figures based on the UCOD and on MCOD, factors associated to the mention of diabetes in death certificates, and potential of MCOD in the analysis of the association between chronic diseases
Foundation: mortality study usually shows death as a single-caused phenomenon, so it is considered n...
AIMS Deaths attributable to diabetes may be underestimated using an underlying cause of death (CO...
OBJECTIVE — To determine the frequency of reporting of diabetes on death certificates of decedents w...
Background: Identifying a single disease as the underlying cause of death (UCOD) is an oversimplific...
Using multiple-cause-of-death data, this study examines diabetes mellitus as a cause of mortality. D...
Death rarely results from only one cause, and it can be caused by a variety of factors. Multiple cau...
Abstract Background There is analytical potential for multiple cause of death data collected from de...
Cause-specific mortality analysis is based predominantly on examination of the underlying cause of d...
Progress in life expectancy and the growing number of people living to old age intensify the phenome...
The authors have created US mortality rates (age, sex, race, and calendar-time specific) and proport...
ObjectiveTo determine the frequency of reporting of diabetes on death certificates of decedents with...
To investigate the spectrum of diseases seen in diabetes mellitus in a forensic context, all autopsy...
Mortality data are routinely tabulated utilizing a single underlying cause of death which identifies...
AIMS: Mortality statistics have customarily been coded and analysed using only one underlying cause ...
OBJECTIVE—To determine the frequency that diabetes is reported on death certificates of decedents wi...
Foundation: mortality study usually shows death as a single-caused phenomenon, so it is considered n...
AIMS Deaths attributable to diabetes may be underestimated using an underlying cause of death (CO...
OBJECTIVE — To determine the frequency of reporting of diabetes on death certificates of decedents w...
Background: Identifying a single disease as the underlying cause of death (UCOD) is an oversimplific...
Using multiple-cause-of-death data, this study examines diabetes mellitus as a cause of mortality. D...
Death rarely results from only one cause, and it can be caused by a variety of factors. Multiple cau...
Abstract Background There is analytical potential for multiple cause of death data collected from de...
Cause-specific mortality analysis is based predominantly on examination of the underlying cause of d...
Progress in life expectancy and the growing number of people living to old age intensify the phenome...
The authors have created US mortality rates (age, sex, race, and calendar-time specific) and proport...
ObjectiveTo determine the frequency of reporting of diabetes on death certificates of decedents with...
To investigate the spectrum of diseases seen in diabetes mellitus in a forensic context, all autopsy...
Mortality data are routinely tabulated utilizing a single underlying cause of death which identifies...
AIMS: Mortality statistics have customarily been coded and analysed using only one underlying cause ...
OBJECTIVE—To determine the frequency that diabetes is reported on death certificates of decedents wi...
Foundation: mortality study usually shows death as a single-caused phenomenon, so it is considered n...
AIMS Deaths attributable to diabetes may be underestimated using an underlying cause of death (CO...
OBJECTIVE — To determine the frequency of reporting of diabetes on death certificates of decedents w...