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Territorial gaps on quality of causes of death statistics over the last forty years in Spain

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dc.contributor.author Cirera, Lluis
dc.contributor.author Bañón, Rafael-María
dc.contributor.author Maeso, Sergio
dc.contributor.author Molina, Puri
dc.contributor.author Ballesta-Ruiz, Mónica
dc.contributor.author Chirlaque-López, María-Dolores
dc.contributor.author Salmerón-Martínez, Diego
dc.date.accessioned 2025-11-20T07:25:12Z
dc.date.available 2025-11-20T07:25:12Z
dc.date.issued 2024-02
dc.identifier.citation Cirera L, Bañón RM, Maeso S, Molina P, Ballesta M, Chirlaque MD, et al. Territorial gaps on quality of causes of death statistics over the last forty years in Spain. BMC Public Health. 3 de febrero de 2024;24(1):361.
dc.identifier.uri https://sms.carm.es/ricsmur/handle/123456789/21571
dc.description.abstract BACKGROUND: The quality of the statistics on causes of death (CoD) does not present consolidated indicators in literature further than the coding group of ill-defined conditions of the International Classification of Diseases. Our objective was to assess the territorial quality of CoD by reliability of the official mortality statistics in Spain over the years 1980-2019. METHODS: A descriptive epidemiological design of four decades (1980-, 1990-, 2000-, and 2010-2019) by region (18) and sex was implemented. The CoD cases, age-adjusted rates and ratios (to all-cause) were assigned by reliability to unspecific and ill-defined quality categories. The regional mortality rates were contrasted to the Spanish median by decade and sex by the Comparative Mortality Ratio (CMR) in a Bayesian perspective. Statistical significance was considered when the CMR did not contain the value 1 in the 95% credible intervals. RESULTS: Unspecific, ill-defined, and all-cause rates by region and sex decreased over 1980-2019, although they scored higher in men than in women. The ratio of ill-defined CoD decreased in both sexes over these decades, but was still prominent in 4 regions. CMR of ill-defined CoD in both sexes exceeded the Spanish median in 3 regions in all decades. In the last decade, women's CMR significantly exceeded in 5 regions for ill-defined and in 6 regions for unspecific CoD, while men's CMR exceeded in 4 and 2 of the 18 regions, respectively on quality categories. CONCLUSIONS: The quality of mortality statistics of causes of death has increased over the 40 years in Spain in both sexes. Quality gaps still remain mostly in Southern regions. Authorities involved might consider to take action and upgrading regional and national death statistics, and developing a systematic medical post-grade training on death certification.
dc.language.iso eng
dc.publisher BMC
dc.rights http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es/
dc.rights.uri Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 3.0 España *
dc.subject.mesh Male
dc.subject.mesh Humans
dc.subject.mesh Female
dc.subject.mesh Cause of Death
dc.subject.mesh Spain/epidemiology
dc.subject.mesh Reproducibility of Results
dc.subject.mesh Bayes Theorem
dc.subject.mesh Causality
dc.title Territorial gaps on quality of causes of death statistics over the last forty years in Spain
dc.type info:eu-repo/semantics/article
dc.identifier.pmid 38310211
dc.relation.publisherversion https://bmcpublichealth.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12889-023-17616-1
dc.identifier.doi 10.1186/s12889-023-17616-1
dc.journal.title Bmc Public Health
dc.identifier.essn 1471-2458


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