Gusmano M K, Rodwin V G, Weisz D
Department of Health Systems and Policy, School of Public Health, Rutgers University, 112 Paterson Street, Room 424, New Brunswick, NJ, USA; The Hastings Center, Garrison, NY, USA.
Health Policy and Management, Wagner School of Public Service, New York University, USA.
Public Health. 2017 Apr;145:23-29. doi: 10.1016/j.puhe.2016.12.023. Epub 2017 Jan 17.
India has proclaimed commitment to the goal of Universal Health Coverage and Delhi, the National Capital Territory, has increased investment in public health and other health services over the past decade. The research investigates whether Delhi's increased investment in health over this period is associated with a reduction in premature deaths, after the age of 1 year, which could have been avoided with better access to effective health care interventions (amenable mortality).
A population-based study of changes in amenable mortality (AM) in Delhi over the 2003-2013 period.
To calculate AM, a list of International Classification of Disease (ICD) codes from the published literature was relied upon. In defining AM in India, an upper age limit of 69 years was adopted, rather than the more common limit of 74 years. Population estimates and vital statistics were downloaded from the Delhi Statistical Handbook. Deaths by cause and age, including medical certification, are from the Vital Statistics site of the Delhi Government. To age-adjust these data, the direct method was employed, using weights derived from the 2010 United Nations world standard population.
The research found that, between 2004 and 2013, the age-adjusted rate of AM rose from 0.87 to 1.09. The leading causes of death in both years were septicemia and tuberculosis. Maternal mortality is well above the global level for middle-income countries.
Recent investments in public health and health care and the capacity to leverage them to improve access to effective care have not been sufficient to overcome the crushing poverty and inequalities within Delhi. Large and growing numbers of residents die prematurely each year due to causes that are amenable to public health and health care interventions.
印度已宣布致力于实现全民健康覆盖目标,在过去十年中,首都德里国家首都辖区增加了对公共卫生和其他卫生服务的投资。本研究调查了德里在此期间增加的卫生投资是否与1岁以后过早死亡人数的减少相关,而这些过早死亡本可通过更好地获得有效的医疗保健干预措施(可避免死亡)来避免。
一项基于人群的关于德里2003 - 2013年期间可避免死亡率(AM)变化的研究。
为计算可避免死亡率,依据已发表文献中的国际疾病分类(ICD)编码列表。在印度定义可避免死亡率时,采用了69岁的年龄上限,而非更常见的74岁上限。人口估计数和生命统计数据从《德里统计手册》下载。按病因和年龄分类的死亡数据,包括医学认证,来自德里政府的生命统计网站。为对这些数据进行年龄调整,采用了直接法,使用从2010年联合国世界标准人口得出的权重。
研究发现,2004年至2013年期间,年龄调整后的可避免死亡率从0.87上升至1.09。这两年的主要死因是败血症和结核病。孕产妇死亡率远高于中等收入国家的全球水平。
近期对公共卫生和医疗保健的投资以及利用这些投资改善获得有效护理机会的能力,不足以克服德里严重的贫困和不平等问题。每年有大量且不断增加的居民因可通过公共卫生和医疗保健干预措施避免的原因而过早死亡。