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Intensive care medicine · Dec 2002
Effect of deprivation and gender on the incidence and management of acute brain disorders.
- M R Macleod and P J D Andrews.
- Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, EH2 4XU, UK. malcolm@apoptosis.freeserve.co.uk
- Intensive Care Med. 2002 Dec 1;28(12):1729-34.
ObjectiveTo determine the impact of deprivation and gender on the incidence and emergency management of acute brain disorders.DesignRetrospective database review of mortality, hospital discharge, and ICU discharge data.SettingLothian Health Board area, 1995-1999.Patients And ParticipantsAll persons over the age of 15 dying or being discharged from hospital with a primary diagnosis of stroke, epilepsy, subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH) or traumatic brain injury; patients registered in the Scottish Intensive Care Society Audit Database as having been discharged from the supraregional neurosciences intensive care unit with one of these as a primary diagnoses and a home postcode within the Lothian Health Board area.Measurements And ResultsStandardised ratios were calculated for hospital admission, mortality, and ICU admission by deprivation category and gender. Data were available for 29,205 hospital admissions, 5,227 deaths, and 360 ICU admissions. For all diagnoses, deprivation was associated with higher rates of hospital admission and death. Deprivation was associated with lower rates of ICU admission for traumatic brain injury and stroke. There was a U-shaped relationship between deprivation and ICU admission with epilepsy. There were no gender differences in rates of ICU admission. Males had higher rates of hospital admission for all conditions and of death from epilepsy and SAH, and lower rates of death from stroke.ConclusionsWe have demonstrated deprivation- and gender- differences in the incidence and emergency management of four acute brain disorders. The identification of the source(s) of these differences is an important subject for further research.
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