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新西兰严重传染病发病率上升和不平等现象加剧:一项全国性的流行病学研究。

Increasing incidence of serious infectious diseases and inequalities in New Zealand: a national epidemiological study.

机构信息

Department of Public Health, University of Otago, Wellington, New Zealand.

出版信息

Lancet. 2012 Mar 24;379(9821):1112-9. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(11)61780-7. Epub 2012 Feb 20.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Although the burden of infectious diseases seems to be decreasing in developed countries, few national studies have measured the total incidence of these diseases. We aimed to develop and apply a robust systematic method for monitoring the epidemiology of serious infectious diseases.

METHODS

We did a national epidemiological study with all hospital admissions for infectious and non-infectious diseases in New Zealand from 1989 to 2008, to investigate trends in incidence and distribution by ethnic group and socioeconomic status. We extended a recoding system based on the ninth revision of international classification of diseases (ICD-9) to the tenth revision (ICD-10), and applied this to data for hospital admissions from the New Zealand Ministry of Health, National Minimum Dataset. We filtered results to account for changes in health-care practices over time. Acute overnight admissions were the events of interest.

FINDINGS

Infectious diseases made the largest contribution to hospital admissions of any cause. Their contribution increased from 20·5% of acute admissions in 1989-93, to 26·6% in 2004-08. We noted clear ethnic and social inequalities in infectious disease risk. In 2004-08, the age-standardised rate ratio was 2·15 (95% CI 2·14-2·16) for Māori (indigenous New Zealanders) and 2·35 (2·34-2·37) for Pacific peoples compared with the European and other group. The ratio was 2·81 (2·80-2·83) for the most socioeconomically deprived quintile compared with the least deprived quintile. These inequalities have increased substantially in the past 20 years, particularly for Māori and Pacific peoples in the most deprived quintile.

INTERPRETATION

These findings support the need for stronger prevention efforts for infectious diseases, and reinforce the need to reduce ethnic and social inequalities and to address disparities in broad social determinants such as income levels, housing conditions, and access to health services. Our method could be adapted for infectious disease surveillance in other countries.

FUNDING

New Zealand Ministry of Health, New Zealand Health Research Council.

摘要

背景

尽管发达国家的传染病负担似乎正在减轻,但很少有国家研究测量过这些疾病的总发病率。我们旨在开发和应用一种强大的系统方法来监测严重传染病的流行病学。

方法

我们对 1989 年至 2008 年新西兰所有因传染病和非传染病住院的患者进行了一项全国性的流行病学研究,以调查按族裔和社会经济地位划分的发病率和分布趋势。我们扩展了基于国际疾病分类第 9 版(ICD-9)的重新编码系统,应用于新西兰卫生部国家最低数据集的住院数据。我们对结果进行了过滤,以说明随着时间的推移医疗保健实践的变化。急性过夜入院是我们关注的事件。

结果

传染病是导致任何原因住院的最大原因。它们的贡献从 1989-93 年的急性入院的 20.5%增加到 2004-08 年的 26.6%。我们注意到传染病风险存在明显的族裔和社会不平等。2004-08 年,毛利人(新西兰原住民)和太平洋岛民的年龄标准化率比为 2.15(95%CI 2.14-2.16),而欧洲和其他族裔的年龄标准化率比为 2.35(2.34-2.37)。与最贫困的五分位数相比,最贫困的五分位数的比率为 2.81(2.80-2.83)。在过去的 20 年中,这些不平等现象大幅增加,特别是对于最贫困的五分位数中的毛利人和太平洋岛民。

解释

这些发现支持需要加强传染病的预防工作,并加强减少族裔和社会不平等的必要性,以及解决收入水平、住房条件和获得卫生服务等广泛社会决定因素方面的差距。我们的方法可以适用于其他国家的传染病监测。

资助

新西兰卫生部,新西兰健康研究委员会。

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