dc.description.abstract | Objective - To estimate the number of productive years of life lost to premature death due to coronary heart disease in Brazil and to report their trends over a 20-year period. Methods - The Brazilian Ministry of Health raw database on death due to coronary heart disease from 1979-1998
was used. The productive years of life lost to premature death were estimated using 20 and 59 years of age as the cut points for the productive years, replacing the potential years of 1 and 70 of the original formula. A descriptive analysis was provided with adjustments, means, proportions, ratios,
percentages of increase or reduction, and mobile means. Results - A 35.8% increase in death for males and 51.3% for females was observed, +43.3% being the relative
difference for females. The annual means of the productive years of life prematurely lost were analyzed in 140,865 males and 58,559 females, with the differential ratio between the age groups ranging from 2.3 to 2.5. The annual means were less favorable for males. Within each group (intragroup), the ratios decreased with the increase in
age, and the age means at the time of death remained constant. The raw tendencies decreased in the 20- to 29-year age group and increased in the 40- to 59-year age group
for females and the 40- to 49-year age group for males. When adjusted, the raw tendencies decreased. Conclusion - The 43.3% increase in the number of female deaths as compared with that of males and the ascending
tendency in the productive years of life lost in the 40-to 59-year age group point to the influence of unfavorable changes in female lifestyles and suggest a deficiency in
programs for prevention and control of risk factors and in their treatment in both sexes. | |