Niti M, Ng T P
Department of Community, Occupational and Family Medicine, National University of Singapore, Singapore.
Int J Epidemiol. 2001 Oct;30(5):966-73. doi: 10.1093/ije/30.5.966.
Amenable mortality is used to assess the effects of health care services on gains in mortality outcomes. Possibly differing patterns of trends in amenable mortality may be expected in economically less developed countries, which have undergone rapid epidemiological transition and recent reforms in health care systems, but such studies are scarce. This study was set up to examine the trends in amenable mortality in Singapore from 1965 to 1994; to estimate the relative impact of medical care and primary preventive policy measures in terms of gains in mortality outcomes; to examine ethnic differences in amenable mortality among Chinese, Malays and Indians.
Age-standardized mortality rates were calculated for 16 amenable causes of death in Singapore for six 5-year periods (1965-1969,..., 1990-1994), and for each of the three main ethnic groups for three periods (1989-1991, 1992-1994, 1995- 1997). Amenable mortality rates were divided into those which can be reduced by timely therapeutic care for 'treatable' conditions (e.g. asthma and appendicitis), or by primary preventive measures for 'preventable' conditions (e.g. lung cancer and motor vehicle injury).
Amenable mortality was higher in males (age-standardized rate 109.7 per 100 000 population) than in females (age-standardized rate 60.7 per 100 000 population). Amenable mortality declined by 1.77% a year in males and 1.72% a year in females. By comparison, the average yearly decline in non-amenable mortality was 0.91% in males and 1.17% in females. The decline in amenable mortality was largely due to 'treatable' causes rather than a decline in mortality due to 'preventable' causes of death. Amenable mortality was lowest for Chinese and highest for Malays. Over the recent 9-year period from 1989 to 1997, amenable mortality declined more in Chinese than in Malays and Indians. However, Indian females showed by far the sharpest decline, whereas Indian males, by contrast, showed an increase in amenable mortality, due to both treatable and preventable causes.
In line with findings from European countries, amenable mortality in Singapore declined more than non-amenable mortality. There were more significant gains in mortality outcomes from medical care interventions than from primary preventive policy measures. Gender and ethnic differences in amenable mortality were also observed, highlighting issues of socioeconomic equities to be addressed in the financing and delivery of health care.
可避免死亡用于评估医疗服务对死亡率改善的影响。在经历了快速的流行病学转变和近期医疗体系改革的经济欠发达国家,可能会出现不同的可避免死亡趋势模式,但此类研究较少。本研究旨在考察1965年至1994年新加坡可避免死亡的趋势;估计医疗保健和初级预防政策措施在死亡率改善方面的相对影响;考察华裔、马来裔和印度裔在可避免死亡方面的种族差异。
计算了新加坡16种可避免死因在六个5年时间段(1965 - 1969年,……,1990 - 1994年)的年龄标准化死亡率,以及三个主要种族在三个时间段(1989 - 1991年、1992 - 1994年、1995 - 1997年)的年龄标准化死亡率。可避免死亡率分为可通过对“可治疗”疾病(如哮喘和阑尾炎)的及时治疗护理,或对“可预防”疾病(如肺癌和机动车伤害)的初级预防措施来降低的死亡率。
男性的可避免死亡率(年龄标准化率为每10万人口109.7)高于女性(年龄标准化率为每10万人口60.7)。男性的可避免死亡率每年下降1.77%,女性每年下降1.72%。相比之下,男性非可避免死亡率的年均下降率为0.91%,女性为1.17%。可避免死亡率的下降主要归因于“可治疗”原因,而非“可预防”死因导致的死亡率下降。华裔的可避免死亡率最低,马来裔最高。在1989年至1997年的近9年期间,华裔的可避免死亡率下降幅度大于马来裔和印度裔。然而,印度裔女性的下降幅度最为明显,而印度裔男性的可避免死亡率则因可治疗和可预防原因均有所上升。
与欧洲国家的研究结果一致,新加坡的可避免死亡率下降幅度大于非可避免死亡率。医疗保健干预措施在死亡率改善方面取得的成效比初级预防政策措施更为显著。还观察到可避免死亡率存在性别和种族差异,这凸显了在医疗保健筹资和提供过程中需要解决的社会经济公平问题。