OBJECTIVE: To investigate a new approach to calculating cause-related standardized mortality rates that involves assigning weights to each cause of death reported on death certificates. METHODS: We derived cause-related standardized mortality rates from death certificate data for France in 2010 using: (i) the classic method, which considered only the underlying cause of death; and (ii) three novel multiple-cause-of-death weighting methods, which assigned weights to multiple causes of death mentioned on death certificates: the first two multiple-cause-of-death methods assigned non-zero weights to all causes mentioned and the third assigned non-zero weights to only the underlying cause and other contributing causes that were not part of the m...
Death rarely results from only one cause, and it can be caused by a variety of factors. Multiple cau...
In low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), the burden of non-communicable diseases is increasing d...
Background: Identifying a single disease as the underlying cause of death (UCOD) is an oversimplific...
Foundation: mortality study usually shows death as a single-caused phenomenon, so it is considered n...
Multiple cause of death (MCOD) data have been used to recalculate mortality levels attributed to a g...
Cause-specific mortality analysis is based predominantly on examination of the underlying cause of d...
Multiple cause of death (MCOD) data have been used to recalculate mortality levels attributed to a g...
Analysing causes of death provides a better understanding of long-term mortality trends. In France, ...
Importance: In aetiological research, investigators using death certificate data have traditionally ...
Objectives We investigate the reporting of obesity on death certificates in three countries (France...
BACKGROUND: Data on long-term trends in mortality are generally unavailable for multiple-cause codin...
BACKGROUND: Verbal autopsy is gaining increasing acceptance as a method for determining the underlyi...
Abstract Background There is analytical potential for multiple cause of death data collected from de...
The authors have created US mortality rates (age, sex, race, and calendar-time specific) and proport...
When a person dies, the certifying physician records the cause of death on the death certificate. In...
Death rarely results from only one cause, and it can be caused by a variety of factors. Multiple cau...
In low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), the burden of non-communicable diseases is increasing d...
Background: Identifying a single disease as the underlying cause of death (UCOD) is an oversimplific...
Foundation: mortality study usually shows death as a single-caused phenomenon, so it is considered n...
Multiple cause of death (MCOD) data have been used to recalculate mortality levels attributed to a g...
Cause-specific mortality analysis is based predominantly on examination of the underlying cause of d...
Multiple cause of death (MCOD) data have been used to recalculate mortality levels attributed to a g...
Analysing causes of death provides a better understanding of long-term mortality trends. In France, ...
Importance: In aetiological research, investigators using death certificate data have traditionally ...
Objectives We investigate the reporting of obesity on death certificates in three countries (France...
BACKGROUND: Data on long-term trends in mortality are generally unavailable for multiple-cause codin...
BACKGROUND: Verbal autopsy is gaining increasing acceptance as a method for determining the underlyi...
Abstract Background There is analytical potential for multiple cause of death data collected from de...
The authors have created US mortality rates (age, sex, race, and calendar-time specific) and proport...
When a person dies, the certifying physician records the cause of death on the death certificate. In...
Death rarely results from only one cause, and it can be caused by a variety of factors. Multiple cau...
In low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), the burden of non-communicable diseases is increasing d...
Background: Identifying a single disease as the underlying cause of death (UCOD) is an oversimplific...