American journal of epidemiology
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Comparative Study
Medical examiner data in injury surveillance: a comparison with death certificates.
Increasingly, researchers use medical examiner reports to study the epidemiology of fatal injuries, often assuming that reports of all fatal injuries are included in medical examiner databases. This study evaluated that assumption by comparing the medical examiner database with the death certificates of persons who died of fatal injuries in Iowa during 1990-1991. The authors also examined the association between demographic variables and the presence of a medical examiner report. ⋯ Among the elderly, fatalities from unintentional falls and, to a lesser extent, transportation fatalities were less likely to be investigated by a medical examiner, but intentional fatalities were more likely to be. Although medical examiner reports may contain detailed information, they underreport the actual number of injury deaths. This underreporting is of special concern for injury research, since certain demographic groups were found to be underrepresented in medical examiner reports.
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Beta-galactosidase (lactase) allows the digestion of lactose as its component sugars, galactose and glucose. Considerable variation exists worldwide in the prevalence of adults who lose the ability to digest lactose after infancy (hypolactasia) as well as in the amount of milk products they consume. ⋯ The authors found significant correlations among these variables such that fertility at older ages is lower and the decline in fertility with aging is steeper in populations with high per capita consumption of milk and greater ability to digest its lactose component. These demographic data add to existing evidence that dietary galactose may deleteriously affect ovarian function.
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Few injuries result in more profound and long-term disability than traumatic spinal cord injury. This study describes the demographic and epidemiologic characteristics of traumatic spinal cord injury among Oklahoma residents reported to the statewide, population-based surveillance system in 1988-1990; initial acute hospital and rehabilitation charges for 1989 are also included. There was a reported incidence rate of 40 per million population. ⋯ Despite its low incidence, hospitalization and rehabilitation charges for spinal cord injury in 1989 caused an economic burden of an estimated $8.4 million. While the charges presented were only a small portion of the total costs of spinal cord injury, they further substantiate the need for prevention efforts targeting these debilitating, often permanent injuries. These efforts should target young males and blacks, and should focus on preventing injuries associated with motor vehicle crashes, violence, and alcohol/drug use.
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The excess incidence of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus noted among African Americans in the past two decades may be attributable to variations in the distribution of specific risk factors, or the impact of these risk factors may differ by ethnicity or sex. Over the 16 years (1971-1987) of the First National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES I) Epidemiologic Follow-up Study, 880 incident cases of diabetes mellitus developed among 11,097 white and black participants who were between the ages of 25 and 70 years at baseline. There were substantial differences among the four race/sex groups with respect to age at baseline, as well as marked differences in the distribution of several major risk factors for diabetes, including obesity, subscapular and triceps skinfold thickness, blood pressure, income, activity, and educational level. ⋯ Baseline age, race, body mass index, and ratio of subscapular skinfold to triceps skinfold were significantly related to incident diabetes, both overall and in separate models for men and women; in the entire cohort and in women alone, blood pressure, activity level, and education also contributed to risk. Other interactions were tested but were not found to be important. Despite sampling difficulties and inconsistencies in the data, the NHANES I Epidemiologic Follow-up Study provides evidence that the associations of anthropometric and sociodemographic variables with diabetes may vary among subgroups which have different mean levels and distributions of these risk factors.