Policy & Implementation Research, Cancer Research UK, London, UK.
Education Centre, Basildon University Hospital, Mid and South Essex NHS Foundation Trust, Basildon, UK.
BMJ Open. 2021 Jun 25;11(6):e048592. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-048592.
Cardiovascular diseases are the second leading cause of mortality behind HIV/AIDS in South Africa. This study investigates cardiovascular disease mortality trends in rural South Africa over 20+ years and the associated barriers to accessing care, using verbal autopsy data.
A mixed-methods approach was used, combining descriptive analysis of mortality rates over time, by condition, sex and age group, quantitative analysis of circumstances of mortality (CoM) indicators and free text narratives of the final illness, and qualitative analysis of free texts.
This study was done using verbal autopsy data from the Health and Socio-Demographic Surveillance System site in Agincourt, rural South Africa.
Deaths attributable to cardiovascular diseases (acute cardiac disease, stroke, renal failure and other unspecified cardiac disease) from 1993 to 2015 were extracted from verbal autopsy data.
Between 1993 and 2015, of 15 305 registered deaths over 1 851 449 person-years of follow-up, 1434 (9.4%) were attributable to cardiovascular disease, corresponding to a crude mortality rate of 0.77 per 1000 person-years. Cardiovascular disease mortality rate increased from 0.34 to 1.12 between 1993 and 2015. Stroke was the dominant cause of death, responsible for 41.0% (588/1434) of all cardiovascular deaths across all years. Cardiovascular disease mortality rate was significantly higher in women and increased with age. The main delays in access to care during the final illness were in seeking and receiving care. Qualitative free-text analysis highlighted delays not captured in the CoM, principally communication between the clinician and patient or family. Half of cases initially sought care outside a hospital setting (50.9%, 199/391).
The temporal increase in deaths due to cardiovascular disease highlights the need for greater prevention and management strategies for these conditions, particularly for the women. Strategies to improve seeking and receiving care during the final illness are needed.
心血管疾病是南非继艾滋病之后的第二大死亡原因。本研究使用死因推断数据,调查了 20 多年来南非农村地区心血管疾病的死亡趋势,以及获得医疗的相关障碍。
采用混合方法,对随时间变化的死亡率、按疾病、性别和年龄组进行描述性分析,对死亡情况(CoM)指标进行定量分析,对临终疾病的自由文本叙述进行定性分析。
本研究使用南非农村阿格因库尔健康和社会人口监测系统地点的死因推断数据。
从死因推断数据中提取了 1993 年至 2015 年归因于心血管疾病(急性心脏病、中风、肾衰竭和其他未特指的心脏疾病)的死亡人数。
在 15 305 例注册死亡中,有 1434 例(9.4%)归因于心血管疾病,在 1851 449 人年的随访中,粗死亡率为 0.77/1000 人年。1993 年至 2015 年期间,心血管疾病死亡率从 0.34 上升至 1.12。中风是主要的死亡原因,占所有年份所有心血管疾病死亡人数的 41.0%(588/1434)。心血管疾病死亡率在女性中显著更高,且随年龄增长而增加。在最后疾病期间获得医疗的主要延误是寻求和接受治疗。定性的自由文本分析强调了 CoM 中未捕获的延误,主要是临床医生与患者或家属之间的沟通。有一半的病例最初在医院以外的地方寻求治疗(50.9%,199/391)。
心血管疾病死亡人数的增加凸显了需要制定更多的预防和管理策略来治疗这些疾病,特别是对女性而言。需要制定改善最后疾病期间寻求和接受治疗的策略。