Abstract Background There is analytical potential for multiple cause of death data collected from death certificates. This study examines relationships of multiple causes of death as a function of factors available on the death certificate (demographics of decedent, place of death, type of certifier, disposal method, whether an autopsy was performed, and year of death). Methods Data from 326,332 Minnesota death certificates from 1990–1998 are examined. Underlying and non-underlying causes of death are examined (based on record axis codes) as well as demographic and death-related covariates. Associations between covariates and prevalence of multiple causes of death and conditional probability of underlying compared to non-underlying causes o...
In low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), the burden of non-communicable diseases is increasing d...
Foundation: mortality study usually shows death as a single-caused phenomenon, so it is considered n...
Progress in life expectancy and the growing number of people living to old age intensify the phenome...
Death rarely results from only one cause, and it can be caused by a variety of factors. Multiple cau...
The authors have created US mortality rates (age, sex, race, and calendar-time specific) and proport...
BACKGROUND: Data on long-term trends in mortality are generally unavailable for multiple-cause codin...
Background: Identifying a single disease as the underlying cause of death (UCOD) is an oversimplific...
Identifying a single disease as the underlying cause of death (UCOD) is an oversimplification of the...
Mortality data are routinely tabulated utilizing a single underlying cause of death which identifies...
ABSTRACT. Background: Despite the widespread interest in competing causes of death, empirical inform...
Presented here are summary data on multiple causes of death in the United States for 1978. These sta...
Importance: In aetiological research, investigators using death certificate data have traditionally ...
Cause-specific mortality analysis is based predominantly on examination of the underlying cause of d...
Objectives: To investigate to what extent underlying and multiple causes of death represent end-of-l...
OBJECTIVE: To investigate a new approach to calculating cause-related standardized mortality rates t...
In low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), the burden of non-communicable diseases is increasing d...
Foundation: mortality study usually shows death as a single-caused phenomenon, so it is considered n...
Progress in life expectancy and the growing number of people living to old age intensify the phenome...
Death rarely results from only one cause, and it can be caused by a variety of factors. Multiple cau...
The authors have created US mortality rates (age, sex, race, and calendar-time specific) and proport...
BACKGROUND: Data on long-term trends in mortality are generally unavailable for multiple-cause codin...
Background: Identifying a single disease as the underlying cause of death (UCOD) is an oversimplific...
Identifying a single disease as the underlying cause of death (UCOD) is an oversimplification of the...
Mortality data are routinely tabulated utilizing a single underlying cause of death which identifies...
ABSTRACT. Background: Despite the widespread interest in competing causes of death, empirical inform...
Presented here are summary data on multiple causes of death in the United States for 1978. These sta...
Importance: In aetiological research, investigators using death certificate data have traditionally ...
Cause-specific mortality analysis is based predominantly on examination of the underlying cause of d...
Objectives: To investigate to what extent underlying and multiple causes of death represent end-of-l...
OBJECTIVE: To investigate a new approach to calculating cause-related standardized mortality rates t...
In low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), the burden of non-communicable diseases is increasing d...
Foundation: mortality study usually shows death as a single-caused phenomenon, so it is considered n...
Progress in life expectancy and the growing number of people living to old age intensify the phenome...