Lu T H, Hsu P Y, Bjorkenstam C, Anderson R N
Institute of Public Health, College of Medicine, National Cheng Kung University, Tainan, Taiwan.
Diabetologia. 2006 Dec;49(12):2878-81. doi: 10.1007/s00125-006-0470-6. Epub 2006 Oct 10.
AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: The aim of this study was to assess differences in the certification practices of physicians in Sweden, Taiwan and the USA with regard to diabetes-related cause-of-death (COD) statements.
Multiple-cause-of-death data from Sweden (2000), Taiwan (2001) and the USA (2001) were used for this study. All deaths with mention of diabetes anywhere on the death certificate were extracted for analysis. Two types of inappropriate COD statements were: (1) reporting two or more diagnoses per line; and (2) entering an incorrect causal sequence among reported diagnoses.
Of those deaths in which diabetes was reported in Part I of the death certificate, American physicians (19%) were less likely to report two or more diagnoses per line than physicians in Sweden (46%) and Taiwan (56%). On the other hand, Swedish physicians (5%) were less likely to report incorrect causal sequences than were their counterparts in Taiwan (21%) and the USA (28%).
CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: These findings reveal substantial differences in diabetes-related COD statements among physicians in Sweden, Taiwan and the USA, implying that caution should be used when interpreting differences in mortality statistics between these countries.
目的/假设:本研究旨在评估瑞典、台湾地区和美国医生在糖尿病相关死因声明方面的认证做法差异。
本研究使用了来自瑞典(2000年)、台湾地区(2001年)和美国(2001年)的多死因数据。提取死亡证明上任何位置提及糖尿病的所有死亡病例进行分析。两种不适当的死因声明类型为:(1)每行报告两个或更多诊断;(2)在所报告的诊断之间输入错误的因果顺序。
在死亡证明第一部分报告有糖尿病的死亡病例中,美国医生(19%)每行报告两个或更多诊断的可能性低于瑞典医生(46%)和台湾地区医生(56%)。另一方面,瑞典医生(5%)报告错误因果顺序的可能性低于台湾地区医生(21%)和美国医生(28%)。
结论/解读:这些发现揭示了瑞典、台湾地区和美国医生在糖尿病相关死因声明方面存在显著差异,这意味着在解释这些国家之间死亡率统计数据的差异时应谨慎。