25 research outputs found

    Determinants of the decline in mortality from acute myocardial infarction in England between 2002 and 2010: linked national database study

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    Objective To report trends in event and case fatality rates for acute myocardial infarction and examine the relative contributions of changes in these rates to changes in total mortality from acute myocardial infarction by sex, age, and geographical region between 2002 and 2010

    Linkage of Chronic Disease Data from Provincial Sources for Strategic Decision Support and Population Health Surveillance in British Columbia (BC)

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    Introduction BC Ministry of Health (MoH)’s health administrative data holdings for a variety of general health care data are not readily linked with various data registries maintained by specialized care agencies of the Provincial Health Services Authority (PHSA). These provincial data sources have rich chronic disease information for BC residents. Objectives and Approach The objective of this project is to develop a system for cross-agency linkage of provincial level chronic disease data to improve chronic disease information that would support the BC’s health system, MoH and PHSA agencies in particular, in healthcare delivery and chronic disease prevention planning. We aim to achieve linkage of data from various provincial chronic disease data sources of the MoH and PHSA, with further potential to link with variety of other external databases such as Census data for socio-economic determinants of health. We are reporting here the outcome of the first phase of this project. Results The outcomes from the project to date were as follows: Data linkage between the MoH’s administrative databases, Chronic Disease Registries (CDRs) in particular and Census based socio-economic status (SES) data was achieved, providing the population level evidence of health outcomes such as health inequity, comorbidities and multimorbidities (sub-project # 1). Preliminary results on data quality and health outcomes by SES will be presented. This was followed by completion of securing approval to ensure data security compliance for data linkages of CDRs with the Provincial Renal Agency’s Registry called “PROMIS” (sub-project # 2), Cardiac Services BC’s Registry called “HEARTis” ((sub-project # 3), and BC Cancer Agency’s Registry and BC Generations Project data (sub-project # 4), for implementation to answer agency specific research questions. Conclusion/Implications This data linkage project to consolidate information from chronic disease and socio-economic databases for providing answers to various analytic questions posed will improve decision support and enhanced population health surveillance. The lessons learned from this multi-agency collaboration and their implications for other jurisdictions will be addressed

    Cohort profile: the British Columbia COVID-19 Cohort (BCC19C)—a dynamic, linked population-based cohort

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    PurposeThe British Columbia COVID-19 Cohort (BCC19C) was developed from an innovative, dynamic surveillance platform and is accessed/analyzed through a cloud-based environment. The platform integrates recently developed provincial COVID-19 datasets (refreshed daily) with existing administrative holdings and provincial registries (refreshed weekly/monthly). The platform/cohort were established to inform the COVID-19 response in near “real-time” and to answer more in-depth epidemiologic questions.ParticipantsThe surveillance platform facilitates the creation of large, up-to-date analytic cohorts of people accessing COVID-19 related services and their linked medical histories. The program of work focused on creating/analyzing these cohorts is referred to as the BCC19C. The administrative/registry datasets integrated within the platform are not specific to COVID-19 and allow for selection of “control” individuals who have not accessed COVID-19 services.Findings to dateThe platform has vastly broadened the range of COVID-19 analyses possible, and outputs from BCC19C analyses have been used to create dashboards, support routine reporting and contribute to the peer-reviewed literature. Published manuscripts (total of 15 as of July, 2023) have appeared in high-profile publications, generated significant media attention and informed policy and programming. In this paper, we conducted an analysis to identify sociodemographic and health characteristics associated with receiving SARS-CoV-2 laboratory testing, testing positive, and being fully vaccinated. Other published analyses have compared the relative clinical severity of different variants of concern; quantified the high “real-world” effectiveness of vaccines in addition to the higher risk of myocarditis among younger males following a 2nd dose of an mRNA vaccine; developed and validated an algorithm for identifying long-COVID patients in administrative data; identified a higher rate of diabetes and healthcare utilization among people with long-COVID; and measured the impact of the pandemic on mental health, among other analyses.Future plansWhile the global COVID-19 health emergency has ended, our program of work remains robust. We plan to integrate additional datasets into the surveillance platform to further improve and expand covariate measurement and scope of analyses. Our analyses continue to focus on retrospective studies of various aspects of the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as prospective assessment of post-acute COVID-19 conditions and other impacts of the pandemic

    Pharmaceutical opioid monitoring and surveillance in British Columbia : current state and future directions

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    Health Care and Epidemiology, Department ofMedicine, Faculty ofPopulation and Public Health (SPPH), School ofUnreviewedFacultyResearcherPostdoctora

    Assessing the external validity of model-based estimates of the incidence of heart attack in England: a modelling study

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    Background: The DisMod II model is designed to estimate epidemiological parameters on diseases where measured data are incomplete and has been used to provide estimates of disease incidence for the Global Burden of Disease study. We assessed the external validity of the DisMod II model by comparing modelled estimates of the incidence of first acute myocardial infarction (AMI) in England in 2010 with estimates derived from a linked dataset of hospital records and death certificates. Methods: Inputs for DisMod II were prevalence rates of ever having had an AMI taken from a population health survey, total mortality rates and AMI mortality rates taken from death certificates. By definition, remission rates were zero. We estimated first AMI incidence in an external dataset from England in 2010 using a linked dataset including all hospital admissions and death certificates since 1998. 95 % confidence intervals were derived around estimates from the external dataset and DisMod II estimates based on sampling variance and reported uncertainty in prevalence estimates respectively. Results: Estimates of the incidence rate for the whole population were higher in the DisMod II results than the external dataset (+54 % for men and +26 % for women). Age-specific results showed that the DisMod II results over-estimated incidence for all but the oldest age groups. Confidence intervals for the DisMod II and external dataset estimates did not overlap for most age groups. Conclusion: By comparison with AMI incidence rates in England, DisMod II did not achieve external validity for age-specific incidence rates, but did provide global estimates of incidence that are of similar magnitude to measured estimates. The model should be used with caution when estimating age-specific incidence rates.Other UBCNon UBCReviewedFacult

    Incidence and 30-day case fatality for acute myocardial infarction in England in 2010: national-linked database study

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    Background: There are limited national population-based epidemiological data on acute myocardial infarction (AMI) in England, making the current burden of disease, and clinical prognosis, difficult to quantify. The aim of this study was to provide national estimates of incidence and 30-day fatality rate (CFR) for first and recurrent AMI in England.Methods: Population-based study using person-linked routine hospital and mortality data on 79 896 individuals of any age, who were admitted to hospital for AMI or who died suddenly from AMI in 2010.Results: Of 82 252 AMI events in 2010, 83% were first. Age-standardized incidence of first AMI per 100 000 population was 130 (95% CI 129-131) in men and 55.9 (95% CI 55.3-56.6) in women. Age-standardized 30-day overall CFRs including sudden AMI deaths for men and women, respectively, were 32.4% (95% CI 32.0-32.9) and 30.3% (95% CI 29.8-30.9) for first AMI and 29.7% (95% CI 28.7-30.7) and 26.7 (95% CI 25.5-27.9) for recurrent AMI. Age-standardized hospitalized 30-day CFR was 12.0% (95% CI 11.6-12.3) for men and 12.3% (95% CI 11-9-12.7) for women.Conclusions: While the majority of AMIs are not fatal, of those that are, two-thirds occur and sudden AMI deaths. About one in six of all AMIs are recurrent events. These findings reinforce the importance of primary and secondary prevention in reducing AMI morbidity and mortality.</p

    Trends and Determinants of Prescription Drug Use during Pregnancy and Postpartum in British Columbia, 2002-2011: A Population-Based Cohort Study.

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    To describe trends, patterns, and determinants of prescription drug use during pregnancy and postpartum.This is a retrospective, population-based study of all women who gave birth between January 2002 and 31 December 2011 in British Columbia, Canada. Study population consisted of 225,973 women who had 322,219 pregnancies. We examined administrative datasets containing person-specific information on filled prescriptions, hospitalizations, and medical services. Main outcome measures were filled prescriptions during pregnancy and postpartum. We used logistic regressions to examine associations between prescription drug use and maternal characteristics.Approximately two thirds of women filled a prescription during pregnancy, increasing from 60% in 2002 to 66% in 2011. The proportion of pregnant women using medicines in all three trimesters of pregnancy increased from 20% in 2002 to 27% in 2011. Use of four or more different types of prescription drug during at least one trimester increased from 8.4% in 2002 to 11.7% in 2011. Higher BMI, smoking during pregnancy, age under 25, carrying multiples, and being diagnosed with a chronic condition all significantly increased the odds of prescription drug use during pregnancy.The observed increase in the number of prescriptions and number of different drugs being dispensed suggests a trend in prescribing practices with potentially important implications for mothers, their neonates, and caregivers. Monitoring of prescribing practices and further research into the safety of most commonly prescribed medications is crucial in better understanding risks and benefits to the fetus and the mother

    Disparités socioéconomiques et spatiales dans les décès attribuables au suicide chez les jeunes et aux blessures non intentionnelles en Colombie-Britannique (2009-2013)

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    Introduction. Sachant que l’association entre l'état de santé et le statut socioéconomique (SSE) est largement documentée et que les blessures non intentionnelles continuent de se classer parmi les principales causes de décès chez les Britanno-Colombiens, nous avons voulu quantifier les disparités liées au SSE dans les taux de mortalité associés à trois secteurs prioritaires pour la Colombie-Britannique en matière de prévention des blessures : le suicide chez les jeunes, les blessures liées aux chutes chez les aînés et les blessures liées au transport. Méthodologie. Nous avons jumelé les données liées aux décès (2009 à 2013) tirées des statistiques de l’état civil et des données socioéconomiques de CensusPlus de 2011 à l’échelle de l’aire de diffusion ou de la circonscription sanitaire afin d'étudier les taux de mortalité normalisés selon l’âge (TMNA) et les disparités des TMNA concernant les blessures non intentionnelles et leurs sous-types, notamment les blessures liées aux chutes chez les aînés (65 ans et plus) et les blessures liées au transport, ainsi que le suicide chez les jeunes (15 à 24 ans), ce dernier étant considéré comme une forme de blessure intentionnelle. Nous avons étudié les disparités spatiales et les disparités selon le sexe et nous avons mesuré les disparités relatives et absolues entre les zones moins favorisées et les zones plus favorisées en fonction des quintiles de revenu, de scolarité, d’emploi, de défavorisation matérielle et de défavorisation sociale. Résultats. Notre étude a mis en évidence d’importantes différences entre les sexes en matière de taux de mortalité attribuable au suicide chez les jeunes, à des blessures liées aux chutes chez les aînés et à des blessures liées au transport, les hommes affichant des taux de mortalité beaucoup plus élevés que les femmes. Nous avons également observé des variations spatiales notables dans les TMNA pour l’ensemble des blessures non intentionnelles à l’échelle de la province. En général, la population vivant dans des zones où les revenus étaient faibles et où la défavorisation matérielle était importante a affiché des taux de mortalité plus élevés que la population vivant dans des zones favorisées. Conclusion. Le repérage de différences importantes dans les taux de mortalité liée à des blessures intentionnelles et non intentionnelles entre les sexes et en fonction du SSE ouvre des possibilités quant à l’élaboration de stratégies de prévention ciblées pour réduire ces disparités

    Area-based socioeconomic disparities in mortality due to unintentional injury and youth suicide in British Columbia, 2009–2013

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    Introduction: The association between health outcomes and socioeconomic status (SES) has been widely documented, and mortality due to unintentional injuries continues to rank among the leading causes of death among British Columbians. This paper quantified the SES-related disparities in the mortality burden of three British Columbia’s provincial injury prevention priority areas: falls among seniors, transport injury, and youth suicide. Methods: Mortality data (2009 to 2013) from Vital Statistics and dissemination area or local health area level socioeconomic data from CensusPlus 2011 were linked to examine five-year age-standardized mortality rates (ASMRs) and disparities in ASMRs of unintentional injuries and subtypes including falls among seniors (aged 65+) and transport-related injuries as well as the intentional injury type of youth suicide (aged 15 to 24). Disparities by sex and geography were examined, and relative and absolute disparities were calculated between the least and most privileged areas based on income, education, employment, material deprivation, and social deprivation quintiles. Results: Our study highlighted significant sex differences in the mortality burden of falls among seniors, transport injury, and youth suicide with males experiencing significantly higher mortality rates. Notable geographic variations in overall unintentional injury ASMR were also observed across the province. In general, people living in areas with lower income and higher levels of material deprivation had increasingly higher mortality rates compared to their counterparts living in more privileged areas. Conclusion: The significant differences in unintentional and intentional injury-related mortality outcomes between the sexes and by SES present opportunities for targeted prevention strategies that address the disparities.Pediatrics, Department ofMedicine, Faculty ofReviewedFacultyPostdoctoralResearcherGraduat
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