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What kills us?: Yesterday, today & tomorrow

What kills us?: Yesterday, today & tomorrow. How much have mortality patterns changed and why? R.Fielding. Learning objectives. Define incidence, prevalence, morbidity and mortality Give examples of major ratios used to define morbidity and mortality

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What kills us?: Yesterday, today & tomorrow

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  1. What kills us?: Yesterday, today & tomorrow How much have mortality patterns changed and why? R.Fielding

  2. Learning objectives • Define incidence, prevalence, morbidity and mortality • Give examples of major ratios used to define morbidity and mortality • Describe changes in cause of death in HK over the past century • Give valid explanations for these changes

  3. Learning objectives • Describe the allocation of mortality to different categories of biology, environment, lifestyle, health care and contrast this with the expenditure in these areas; • Describe the major determinants of health at the community level

  4. Definitions • Morbidity: all ill-health, sickness, etc. • Mortality: all deaths. • Incidence: (number of new cases of a disease) / (popn. at risk) per unit time. • Prevalence: all cases (new and old) of a disease/ total population per unit time. • Ratio: proportion of those affected relative to a given unit of population or events

  5. Common ratios • Mortality rate: Number of deaths per unit of population (10,000 or 100,000) • Infant Mortality Rate: deaths among children < 1 year old total number of children < 1 year. • Standardized Mortality Ratio (SMR): product of (number of observed deaths x100)/(number of expected deaths). >100 indicates excess deaths, < 100 indicates a lower mortality.

  6. Leading causes of death, HK.

  7. Expectation of life at birth, men, 1871-1971 (UK)

  8. Age-standardized annual mortality rates 1851-1930 (UK) 10,000 TB B, P, I 1,000 Whooping cough Measles 100 '51 '61 ''71 '81 '91 '01 '11 '21

  9. Epidemiological model for disease evaluation

  10. Comparison of US Federal expenditure to allocation of mortality according to epidemiological model

  11. Questions 1. How has mortality changed in HK since 1900? 2. Why have these changes occurred? 3. What does this tell us about the important influences on mortality? 4. How should we be spending our health budget?

  12. 1. How has the pattern of mortality changed? • From acute to chronic degenerative causes and (in children and younger adults) accidents. • Life expectancy at adulthood little changed, but childhood survival improved during last 100 years.

  13. How has mortality changed? (cont.) • Infectious disease mortality declined before causes (and Rx) were identified, • so medical interventions not responsible • what else happened in Europe 1830-1930 and HK 50 years later?

  14. 2. What has contributed to these changes? (a) • Changes in the nature of work • Food hygiene laws, improved income => better nutrition • Infrastructure development => • better living conditions • clean drinking water • sewage disposal

  15. 2. What has contributed to these changes?(a) • Decline in fertility rate altered family size, birth spacing and age distribution; => • increase in median age of infection and lower case fatality rate; => • More children survived, so the mean age of the population increased.

  16. Expectation of life at birth, men, 1871-1971 (UK)

  17. 2. What has contributed to these changes?(b) • From W.W.II onwards change in activity levels: less manual labour more motorized transport. • Increases in • disposable income • food availability & marketing strategies • dietary and other substance intake

  18. 2. What has contributed to these changes?(b) • Increase in body mass (DM, CHD, HT) • Tobacco / alcohol use / environmental degradation > rise in chronic disease prevalence. • Economic developments, loss of control, competitiveness.

  19. 3. What does this tell us about important influences on mortality? • Improvements in life expectancy small despite massive expenditure on health care delivery. • Most mortality declines due to economic, cultural, behavioral and domestic changes • Societal, cultural and behavioural influences have been more important that medical care.

  20. 4.How should we be spending our health budget to improve health further? • Many current causes of mortality incurable. • Prevention best approach to further reductions in mortality • Economic and occupational improvements are among most important developments. • Environmental degradation (consumer behaviour) is now most important threat.

  21. Mortality from coronary heart disease, men (20-64) UK

  22. phenotype genotype behaviour environment

  23. Conclusions • Economic/political, social & individual behaviour impacts on environment and behaviour, disturbing systemic homeostasis (ecosystem), • result is increased risk exposure and heightened vulnerability.

  24. Conclusions • Mortality primarily influenced by socio-economic factors through opportunity and personal behaviour. • Future declines in mortality will derive mostly from social-level changes (e.g. legislation on drink-driving, smoking, pollution, education) and personal behaviour. • Preventive measures offer better value for money.

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