Document details

Geografias da Diabetes Mellitus em Portugal: Como as Condições do Contexto Influenciam o Risco de Morrer

Author(s): Santana, Paula ; Costa, Cláudia ; Loureiro, Adriana ; Raposo, João ; Boavida, José Manuel

Date: 2014

Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.26/9880

Origin: Direção-Geral da Saúde

Project/scholarship: info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/FCT/5876-PPCDTI/122566/PT ; info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/FCT/COMPETE/122566/PT;

Subject(s): Diabetes Mellitus; Portugal; Geografia da Saúde; Mortalidade


Description

Introduction: Diabetes Mellitus is a public health problem that is on the increase throughout the world, including in Portugal. This paper aims to identify the changing geographic pattern of this cause of death in Portugal and its association with sociomaterial deprivation. Material and Methods: This is a transversal ecological study of the deaths by Diabetes Mellitus in Portuguese municipalities in three periods (1989-1993, 1999-2003 and 2006-2010). It uses a Bayesian hierarchical model in order to obtain a smooth standardized mortality ratio and the relative risk of death by Diabetes Mellitus associated to sociomaterial deprivation. Results: In 1989-1993, the highest smooth standardized mortality ratio values were found in coastal urban municipalities (80% of municipalities with smooth standardized mortality ratio ≥ 161, of which 60% are urban); in 2006-2010, the opposite was found, with the highest smooth standardized mortality ratio values occurring in rural areas in southern inland regions (76.9% of municipalities with smooth standardized mortality ratio ≥ 161, of which 69.2% are rural), particularly the Alentejo. The relative risk of death by Diabetes Mellitus increases with vulnerability associated to social and economic conditions in the area of residence, and is significant in the last two periods (relative risk: 1.00; IC95%: 0.98-1.02). Discussion: Diabetes Mellitus presents a geographic pattern marked by coastal-inland and urban-rural asymmetry. However, this has been altering over the last twenty years. 48% of the population reside in municipalities where the smooth standardized mortality ratio has increased in the last twenty years, particularly in the rural areas of inland Portugal. Conclusion: The highest smooth standardized mortality ratio are currently found in rural municipalities with the highest index of sociomaterial deprivation.

Document Type Journal article
Language Portuguese
Contributor(s) Repositório Comum
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