Ill-defined causes of death in Brazil: A redistribution method based on the investigation of such causes

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Abstract

Objective: To propose a method of redistributing ill-defined causes of death (IDCD) based on the investigation of such causes. Methods: In 2010, an evaluation of the results of investigating the causes of death classified as IDCD in accordance with chapter 18 of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10) by the Mortality Information System was performed. The redistribution coefficients were calculated according to the proportional distribution of ill-defined causes reclassified after investigation in any chapter of the ICD-10, except for chapter 18, and used to redistribute the ill-defined causes not investigated and remaining by sex and age. The IDCD redistribution coefficient was compared with two usual methods of redistribution: a) Total redistribution coefficient, based on the proportional distribution of all the defined causes originally notified and b) Non-external redistribution coefficient, similar to the previous, but excluding external causes. Results: Of the 97,314 deaths by ill-defined causes reported in 2010, 30.3% were investigated, and 65.5% of those were reclassified as defined causes after the investigation. Endocrine diseases, mental disorders, and maternal causes had a higher representation among the reclassified ill-defined causes, contrary to infectious diseases, neoplasms, and genitourinary diseases, with higher proportions among the defined causes reported. External causes represented 9.3% of the ill-defined causes reclassified. The correction of mortality rates by the total redistribution coefficient and non-external redistribution coefficient increased the magnitude of the rates by a relatively similar factor for most causes, contrary to the IDCD redistribution coefficient that corrected the different causes of death with differentiated weights. Conclusions: The proportional distribution of causes among the illdefined causes reclassified after investigation was not similar to the original distribution of defined causes. Therefore, the redistribution of the remaining ill-defined causes based on the investigation allows for more appropriate estimates of the mortality risk due to specific causes.

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APA

Franҫa, E., Teixeira, R., Ishitani, L., Duncan, B. B., Cortez-Escalante, J. J., Neto, O. L. de M., & Szwarcwald, C. L. (2014). Ill-defined causes of death in Brazil: A redistribution method based on the investigation of such causes. Revista de Saude Publica, 48(4), 671–681. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0034-8910.2014048005146

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