What is incidence?Incidence is a measure of disease that allows us to determine a person's probability of being diagnosed with a disease during a given period of time. Therefore, incidence is the number of newly diagnosed cases of a disease. An incidence rate is the number of new cases of a disease divided by the number of persons at risk for the disease. If, over the course of one year, five women are diagnosed with breast cancer, out of a total female study population of 200 (who do not have breast cancer at the beginning of the study period), then we would say the incidence of breast cancer in this population was 0.025. (or 2,500 per 100,000 women-years of study) Show
What is prevalence?Prevalence is a measure of disease that allows us to determine a person's likelihood of having a disease. Therefore, the number of prevalent cases is the total number of cases of disease existing in a population. A prevalence rate is the total number of cases of a disease existing in a population divided by the total population. So, if a measurement of cancer is taken in a population of 40,000 people and 1,200 were recently diagnosed with cancer and 3,500 are living with cancer, then the prevalence of cancer is 0.118. (or 11,750 per 100,000 persons) What is morbidity?Morbidity is another term for illness. A person can have several co-morbidities simultaneously. So, morbidities can range from Alzheimer's disease to cancer to traumatic brain injury. Morbidities are NOT deaths. Prevalence is a measure often used to determine the level of morbidity in a population. What is mortality?Mortality is another term for death. A mortality rate is the number of deaths due to a disease divided by the total population. If there are 25 lung cancer deaths in one year in a population of 30,000, then the mortality rate for that population is 83 per 100,000. A vital statistics summary rate based on the number of deaths occurring in a population during a given period of time, usually a calendar year, i.e., the number of deaths occurring among the population of a given geographical area during a given year per 1,000 mid-year total population of the given geographical area during the same year. Download a zip filecontaining data for Lesson 2 in Excel and CSV formats. 2.1 Age-Specific Death Rate (ASDR)Formula 1 (1) Example A hypothetical country reported the following data:
The age-specific death rate for the age group 50-55 in 1998 is calculated using formula (1) above as: NotationIn this lesson we will denote the age-specific death rate as: = age-specific death rate for the age group (x, x + n)Note the subscripts in the notation: x stands for the beginning age of the age group and n stands for the length of the age interval. Using this notation, the age-specific death rate for the age group 50-55 is Effect of the MultiplierNote that the age-specific death rate in formula (1) has multiplier 1000. The resulting rate is interpreted as number of deaths in a year per 1000 people in the age group. In the computation of life table quantities, the rates are usually expressed as deaths in a year per person in the age group. This means that the rate will not be multiplied by 1000 as in formula (1). 2.2 Age-Cause-Specific Death Rate (ACSDRate)Formula (2) Example In the hypothetical country considered in the previous example, the number of deaths in the age group 50-55 due to cardiovascular disease in 1998 is reported to be 345. Using formula (2), one can calculate the age-cause-specific death rate for cardiovascular disease for the age group as: Notation for age-cause-specific death rate As in age-specific death rate, use the following notation: = age-cause-specific death rate in the age interval (x, x + n) Note that a specific cause is denoted as . 2.3 Age-Cause-Specific Death Ratio (ACSDRatio)Formula (3) Example In the hypothetical country referred to in the two previous examples, there were 1513 deaths in the age group 50-55 in 1998. Among these deaths, 345 were due to cardiovascular disease. The age-cause-specific death ratio for cardiovascular deaths in the age group 50-55 is calculated using formula (3) as: This ratio indicates that in 1998 for the hypothetical country considered, 22.8% of all deaths in the age group 50-55 were due to cardiovascular disease. Notation for age-cause-specific death ratio: cause-specific death ratio for disease in the age interval (x, x + n) Exercise 3Question 1 If last year a region in your country had an age-specific death rate of 4.4 per 1000 people in the age group 20-24, and the mid-year population for that group was 50,000, how many deaths occurred in that group last year?
Question 2 If half of the deaths in Question 1 were due to a deadly epidemic, what is the age-cause-specific death rate (ACSDRate) for that epidemic?
Question 3 If 11 of the deaths in Question 1 were due to dysentery, what is the age-cause-specific death ratio (ACSDRatio) for dysentery?
2.4 Relationships among ASDR, ACSDRate, and ACSDRatio Age-Specific Death Rate and Age-Cause-Specific Death RateRecall that total number of deaths in an age group is the sum of deaths due to each cause. Suppose there are rcauses of death operating in a population. Then in a specific age group: Total deaths in the age interval = deaths due to cause 1 + deaths due to cause 2 +...+ deaths due to cause r. When we divide both sides of the above equation by the mid-year population of the age group we get: The equation above shows that the age-specific death rate is equal to the sum of the age-cause-specific death rates in that age interval. In the notations given above, this relation can be expressed as: Age-Specific Death Rate, Age-Cause-Specific Death Rate, and Age-Cause-Specific Death RatioRemember that the age-cause-specific death ratio is defined as the percentage of deaths due to a particular cause among all deaths in the age interval. This ratio can also be expressed as the ratio of an age-cause-specific death rate and the age-specific death rate: Because both age-specific death rate and age-cause-specific death rate have mid-year population as the denominator, the ratio on the right-hand side reduces to the ratio of the age-cause-specific death rate to total deaths in the age interval. When published reports provide the age-specific death rate and the age-cause-specific death rate, you can use those numbers to obtain the age-cause-specific death ratio. In the notations introduced above: Age-cause-specific death ratio Also note that the age-cause-specific death rate can be obtained from the age-specific death rate by multiplying the age-specific death rate by the corresponding age-cause-specific death ratio: Cautionary NoteThe advantage of the age-cause-specific death ratio is that it does not require knowledge of the mid-year population in computing it. Therefore, it is often seen as a measure of relative significance of causes of death across subgroups of a population. The age-cause-specific death rate is considered a measure of occurrence of death and is used to compute relative risk of death from a specific cause . However, one needs to be careful in interpreting the age-cause-specific death ratio and age-cause-specific death rate. The following hypothetical example for cancer mortality will illustrate this point. In a hypothetical country, age-specific death rates and age-cause-specific death ratios for cancer death for the age groups 55-64 and 65-74 in a given year are as follows:
The data show that while the incidence of death from cancer is higher in the 65-74 age group than in the 55-64 age group, the ratio of cancer deaths relative to other cause-specific death ratios is smaller in that group. These data show that the cause-specific death rate is not always a good indicator of relative risk and in order to identify causes of death in specific subgroups as priorities for research or prevention, it is necessary to examine both the ratio and rate of occurrence. Exercise 4This is an open-ended question to stimulate thinking. Write down your own answer before you look at the answer key.
After writing down your answer, see the answer key below and discussion. 2.5 An Example with Real DataIn this section we look at data from Costa Rican males in 1960 and learn to compute age-cause-specific death rates and age-cause-specific death ratios. The basic data needed to compute the age-cause-specific death rates and age-cause-specific death ratios are the mid-year population and the number of deaths by cause in specific age groups. The data presented below are also available to download as a single zip file so students may examine and work with the data in their own spreadsheet software.
Age-Cause-Specific Death RatesData in Table 2.5.1 can be used to compute the age-cause-specific death rates by simply dividing the number of deaths by cause in a particular age group by the corresponding mid-year population and multiplying by 1000. The resulting calculations are given in Table 2.5.2.
Figure 2.5.1 below shows the age patterns of mortality in the population. Note that it is a U-shaped (or J-shaped) curve with high infant mortality and high death rates at older ages. Figure 2.5.1: Mortality Pattern across the Life Span (All Causes): 1960 Costa Rican Males Figures 2.5.2 - 2.5.4 below show the age pattern of mortality for various causes in the population. Note the difference in the shape of the curves. The curves for cancer and CVD mortality show a steady increase with age. The diarrhea mortality is very high among the youngest and oldest groups. Figure 2.5.2: Cancer Mortality Pattern across the Life Span: 1960 Costa Rican Males Figure 2.5.3: Diarrhea Mortality Pattern across the Life Span: 1960 Costa Rican Males Figure 2.5.4: CVD Mortality Pattern across the Life Span: 1960 Costa Rican Males Age-Cause-Specific Death RatiosWe use the data in Table 2.5.1 to compute the age-specific death ratios. They are computed by dividing the number of deaths due to a specific cause by the total deaths in the same interval (and multiplying by 100). Table 2.5.3 shows the computed age-cause-specific death ratios for 1960 Costa Rican males.
Table 2.5.3 shows the relative significance of various diseases at specific age intervals. It clearly shows that among children, diarrhea is the leading cause of death, while among the elderly, deaths by cardiovascular disease are most common. Exercise 5Note to students: This exercise is lengthy but essential to the mastery of these concepts. Work through these examples on your own. Just reading this material will not be enough. Good luck! Use the data on "Age-Specific Deaths by Cause for 1960 Costa Rican Females." Using your spreadsheet software, do the following with the data you have downloaded:
The data in your spreadsheet should look something like this:
After you have completed the exercise, compare your calculations, graphs, and descriptions to the answer key below. Answers to ExercisesExercise 3Question 1 If last year a region in your country had an age-specific death rate of 4.4 per 1000 people in the age group 20-24, and the mid-year population for that group was 50,000, how many deaths occurred in that group last year? B. 220,
calculated as follows (solving for X, the number of deaths):
Exercise 3Question 2 If half of the deaths in Question 1 were due to a deadly epidemic, what is the age-cause-specific death rate (ACSDRate) for that epidemic? B. 2.2. Just as 220 deaths produced an ASDR(20-24) of 4.4, then the 110 deaths due to the epidemic yield an age-cause-specific death rate of 2.2 (half of 4.4). Exercise 3Question 3 If 11 of the deaths in Question 1 were due to dysentery, what is the age-cause-specific death ratio (ACSDRatio) for dysentery? A. 5.0%. The age-cause-specific death ratio is the percentage of all the deaths were due to a particular cause. If 11 out of the 220 deaths were due to dysentery, then 5% (11/220 = .05) of the deaths were due to dysentery. Exercise 4Assume you are presenting your research to government officials to help them determine the number one reason a child might not survive its first year of life. In this lesson, you have learned about three different summary measures describing causes of death. Which of these measures would you focus on in your presentation and why? Answer: The age-cause-specific death rate (ACSDRate) for all the major causes would reveal which cause is producing the most deaths; this is an acceptable answer. The best answer would be the age-cause-specific death ratios (ACSDRatios) for all the major causes. Not only would ACSDRatios demonstrate (in easy-to-understand percentages) which cause is number one, they would also show the significance of the number one cause in relation to other causes. The age-specific death rate (ASDR) for age group 0-1 measures overall infant mortality from all causes. ASDR would not distinguish among causes of death; therefore it is not a correct answer. Exercise 5Using your spreadsheet software, do the following with the data you have downloaded:
1. Compute age-specific death rates (overall and for each cause).
2. Compute age-specific death ratios (for each cause).
3. Draw graphs of age-specific death rates and age-cause-specific death rates. Mortality Pattern across the Life Span (All Causes): 1960 Costa Rican Females Diarrhea Mortality Pattern across the Life Span: 1960 Costa Rican Females Cancer Mortality Pattern across the Life Span: 1960 Costa Rican Females CVD Mortality Pattern across the Life Span: 1960 Costa Rican Females 4. Describe the age patterns of mortality (overall and for each cause). Overall mortality is high for children under 5 years old, low and flat from age 5 up to about age 45, and steadily increasing after that. The highest mortality from diarrhea is that of children under 1 year old. Mortality from diarrhea remains very low from age 5 through age 69, then slowly increases. Mortality from cancer is low until about age 30 when it starts rising. It increases sharply until age 84, when there is a sharp decline. Mortality from CVD is low and flat until about age 45 and then it rises steadily and increases sharply at age 85. 5. Describe the relative significance of the three causes of death in two age intervals: 1-4 and 85+. It helps to look at this graph of age-cause-specific death ratios: Comparison of Age-Cause-Specific Death Ratios across the Life Span: 1960 Costa Rican Females In the 1-4 age group, diarrhea is the most significant cause of death. In the 85+ group, CVD is by far the most significant. Lesson 3: Life Tables Back to Multiple-Decrement Life Tables Course Home Is the number of deaths per 1000 people in a population in a given year?Crude death rate indicates the number of deaths occurring during the year, per 1,000 population estimated at midyear.
What is the number of deaths per 1000 people called?Crude death rate (per 1000 population)
What is the death rate of a population called?A mortality rate is the number of deaths due to a disease divided by the total population. If there are 25 lung cancer deaths in one year in a population of 30,000, then the mortality rate for that population is 83 per 100,000.
What is called birth rate and death rate?The number of live births per thousand of population per year. (b) Death rate. The ratio of deaths to the population of a particular area or during a particular period of time, usually calculated as the number of deaths per one thousand people per year.
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