Gulácsi László, Májer István, Kárpáti Krisztián, Brodszky Valentin, Boncz Imre, Nagy Attila, Bereczki Dániel
Budapesti Corvinus Egyetem, Közszolgálati Tanszék, Egészség-gazdaságtani és Technológiaelemzési Kutatóközpont, HunHTA, Budapest.
Ideggyogy Sz. 2007 Jul 30;60(7-8):321-8.
The aim of our research was to assess the incidence and the 12- and 24-month mortality of hospitalized stroke in Hungary. We analyzed the rate of mortality after stroke and compared it to the standard mortality rate of the population. To assess the incidence we extracted the data of "new" stroke patients (ICD-10 diagnoses: 160-64) hospitalized in May 2003 from the database of the National Health Insurance Fund Administration. We regarded those as "new" patients who had not been treated with these primary or secondary diagnoses in the previous 24 months. Data were collected by sex and age (age groups: 25-44, 45-64, 65 and over). We analyzed the patients' survival on the basis of their April 2004 and April 2005 data. The incidence of the "new" hospitalized stroke patients was higher in men than in women; the incidence in the age group of 65 and over was 2112/100.000 in males and 1582/100.000 in females, the corresponding values in the 45-64 age group were 623 vs. 366 per 100.000, respectively. In 2003 more than 42 thousand "new" stroke patients were hospitalized in Hungary of whom over 10 thousand died in the first year, followed by a further 2 thousand in the second year. Women's survival is more favourable than men's: in the first year it is 71.47% vs. 69.24% (65+ group), and 88.18% vs. 83.16% (45-64 group); in the second year the corresponding values are 66.95% vs. 61.62% (65+), and 85.45% vs. 80.90% (45-64), respectively. The risk of death in the first year after stroke, compared to the standard population, is 5.17-fold in women and 4.70-fold in men in the total sample, and 10-15-fold in the 45-64 group. There are large differences by gender, particularly in men of the working age groups (25-44, 45-64), whose mortality is twice as high as that of women of the same age.
我们研究的目的是评估匈牙利住院中风患者的发病率以及12个月和24个月的死亡率。我们分析了中风后的死亡率,并将其与总体人群的标准死亡率进行比较。为评估发病率,我们从国家健康保险基金管理局的数据库中提取了2003年5月住院的“新发”中风患者(ICD - 10诊断编码:I60 - I64)的数据。我们将那些在过去24个月内未因这些原发性或继发性诊断接受治疗的患者视为“新发”患者。数据按性别和年龄(年龄组:25 - 44岁、45 - 64岁、65岁及以上)进行收集。我们根据2004年4月和2005年4月的数据分析患者的生存情况。“新发”住院中风患者的发病率男性高于女性;65岁及以上年龄组男性的发病率为2112/100,000,女性为1582/100,000,45 - 64岁年龄组相应的值分别为每100,000人中有623例和366例。2003年,匈牙利有超过4.2万名“新发”中风患者住院,其中超过1万人在第一年死亡,第二年又有2000人死亡。女性的生存情况比男性更有利:在第一年,65岁及以上年龄组中女性为71.47%,男性为69.24%;45 - 64岁年龄组中女性为88.18%,男性为83.16%。在第二年,相应的值分别为66.95%对61.62%(65岁及以上),以及85.45%对80.90%(45 - 64岁)。与标准人群相比,中风后第一年女性的死亡风险是总体样本中女性的5.17倍,男性是4.70倍,在45 - 64岁年龄组中则为10 - 15倍。不同性别之间存在很大差异,特别是在工作年龄组(25 - 44岁、45 - 64岁)的男性中,其死亡率是同年龄女性的两倍。