Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: http://www.repositorio.ufop.br/jspui/handle/123456789/16799
Título: Cardiovascular mortality during the COVID-19 pandemics in a large Brazilian city : a comprehensive analysis.
Autor(es): Brant, Luisa Campos Caldeira
Pinheiro, Pedro Cisalpino
Ribeiro, Antônio Luiz Pinho
Machado, Ísis Eloah
Correa, Paulo Roberto Lopes
Santos, Mayara Rocha dos
Souza, Maria de Fátima Marinho de
Malta, Deborah Carvalho
Passos, Valéria Maria de Azeredo
Palavras-chave: Cardiovascular diseases
Hospitalization
Social vulnerability
Data do documento: 2022
Referência: BRANT, L. C. C. et al. Cardiovascular mortality during the COVID-19 pandemics in a large brazilian city: a comprehensive analysis. Global Heart, v. 17, n. 1, artigo e11, 2022. Disponível em: <https://globalheartjournal.com/article/10.5334/gh.1101/>. Acesso em: 11 out. 2022.
Resumo: Introduction: The impact of COVID-19 pandemics on cardiovascular diseases (CVD) may be caused by health system reorganization and/or collapse, or from changes in the behaviour of individuals. In Brazil, municipalities were empowered to define regulatory measures, potentially resulting in diverse effects on CVD morbimortality. Objective: To analyse the impact of COVID-19 pandemics on CVD outcomes in Belo Horizonte (BH), the sixth greater capital city in Brazil, including: mortality, mortality at home, hospitalizations, intensive care unit utilization, and in-hospital mortality; and the differential effect according to sex, age range, social vulnerability, and pandemic’s phase. Methods: Ecological study analysing data from the Mortality and Hospital Information System of BH residents aged ≥30 years. CVD was defined as in Chapter IX from ICD- 10. Social vulnerability was classified by a composite socioeconomic index as high, medium and low. The observed age-standardized rates for epidemiological weeks 10–48, 2020, were compared to the expected rates (mean of 2015–2019). Risk ratios (RiR) were analysed and 95% confidence intervals were calculated for all estimates. Population projected to 2020 for BH and its census tracts were used to calculate rates. Results: We found no changes in CVD mortality rates (RiR 1.01, 95%CI 0.96–1.06). However, CVD deaths occurred more at homes (RiR 1.32, 95%CI 1.20–1.46) than in hospitals (RiR 0.89, 95%CI 0.79–0.99), as a result of a substantial decline in hospitalization rates, even though proportional in-hospital deaths increased. The rise in home deaths was greater in older adults and in had an increasing gradient in those more socially vulnerable (RiR 1.45); for high (RiR 1.45), medium (RiR 1.32) and low vulnerability (RiR 1.21). Conclusion: The greater occurrence of CVD deaths at home, in parallel with lower hospitalization rates, suggests that CVD care was disrupted during the COVID-19 pandemics, which more adversely affected older and more socially vulnerable individuals, exacerbating health inequities in BH.
URI: http://www.repositorio.ufop.br/jspui/handle/123456789/16799
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5334/gh.1101
ISSN: 2211-8179
Licença: This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC-BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. See http://creativecommons.org/ licenses/by/4.0/. Fonte: PDF do artigo.
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