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Journal Article

Citation

Hogg RS, Heath KV, Strathdee SA, Montaner JSG, O'shaughnessy MV, Schlechter MT. AIDS 1996; 10(8): 889-894.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1996, Lippincott Williams and Wilkins)

DOI

10.1097/00002030-199607000-00012

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess the impact of HIV infection and AIDS on mortality patterns in Canada with specific reference to gender and regional differentials and to other leading causes of death.

DESIGN: Descriptive, population-based study. Setting: Canada. Patients: All persons for whom HIV/AIDS [ninth revision of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-9) 042-044] was recorded as the underlying cause of death as reported to Statistics Canada between 1987 and 1992. For comparative purposes data was obtained on five other leading underlying causes of death including coronary heart disease (ICD-9 410-414), motor vehicle accidents (ICD-9 E810-E819), and suicides (ICD-9 E950-E959) in men and women, lung cancer (ICD-9 162) in men and breast cancer (ICD-9 174) in women. Population figures were obtained from Statistics Canada estimates. Main outcome measures: Age and cause-specific mortality rates, standardized mortality ratios (SMR), potential years of life lost (PYLL) before age 65 years, and life expectancy lost due to a select underlying cause of death.

RESULTS: Over the period 1 January 1987 to 31 December 1992, 5546 deaths attributed to HIV/AIDS (5229 in men and 317 in women) were recorded in Canada. SMR for men were significantly higher than the national average in the cities of Vancouver, Toronto and Montreal, whereas those for women were significantly greater only in Montreal. Deaths from HIV/AIDS accounted for 3.6% of PYLL in men and 0.4% of PYLL in women. In 1992, HIV/AIDS was the third leading cause of male PYLL surpassing lung cancer. In the cities of Montreal, Toronto, and Vancouver HIV/AIDS was the leading cause of PYLL and was responsible for significant decrease in life expectancy at birth in men over the study period.

CONCLUSIONS: HIV/AIDS has had considerable impact on mortality within Canada, principally among men and particularly in the cities of Toronto, Vancouver and Montreal.


Language: en

Keywords

adult; Canada; human; Men; Women; gender; suicide; Mortality; female; male; epidemiology; ischemic heart disease; sex difference; cause of death; mortality; traffic accident; life expectancy; article; major clinical study; Human immunodeficiency virus infection; priority journal; geographic distribution; breast cancer; acquired immune deficiency syndrome; lung cancer; city; AIDS; HIV infection

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