International Comparisons in COPD Mortality

T J Thom T J Thom
1989 American Review of Respiratory Disease 102 citations

Abstract

In 31 developed countries, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and allied conditions comprise a major cause of death, but they cause less than 10% of all deaths, even in older persons. COPD mortality is highest in the Eastern European countries and Ireland, Scotland, and England/Wales, and is lowest in southern Europe, Japan, and Israel. That these differences are large and real is a likelihood but not a certainty, due to problems in comparability of cause-of-death statistics. In the past, the trend in COPD mortality has been upwards. Over the short time period of 1980 to 1985, there have been substantial declines in death rates in most countries for the major causes of death, but not for COPD or lung cancer. It is not clear, however, whether COPD mortality is continuing to increase everywhere. In only nine countries is the trend upwards and only in women above age 55 and in men above age 75. In the other 22 countries, trends are not clearly upwards or downwards. Longer time trend statistics are needed to corroborate and explain these patterns and the apparent intercountry differences.

Keywords

COPDMedicineCause of deathMortality rateDemographyComparabilityPulmonary diseaseDeveloped countryHealth statisticsDiseaseEnvironmental healthPopulationSurgeryInternal medicine

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
1989
Type
article
Volume
140
Issue
3_pt_2
Pages
S27-S34
Citations
102
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

102
OpenAlex

Cite This

T J Thom (1989). International Comparisons in COPD Mortality. American Review of Respiratory Disease , 140 (3_pt_2) , S27-S34. https://doi.org/10.1164/ajrccm/140.3_pt_2.s27

Identifiers

DOI
10.1164/ajrccm/140.3_pt_2.s27