Mortality due to External causes in the State of São Paulo in 2005

Authors

  • Vilma Pinheiro Gawryszewski Centro de Vigilância Epidemiológica
  • Mitsuyoshi Morita Residente de Medicina Preventiva e Social da Universidade Estadual de Campinas – Unicamp
  • Neuma T. Hidalgo Centro de Vigilância Epidemiológica
  • Dalva Maria de Oliveira Valencich Centro de Vigilância Epidemiológica
  • Rodolfo Brumini Centro de Vigilância Epidemiológica

Abstract

 Accidents and violence are included among the major mortality causes in most countries, and account for a  significant toll of population morbidity, economic deficiencies, loss of productive capacity and life quality. This  paper aims to describe mortality due to external causes among the population living in the State of São  Paulo, in the year of 2005. The material studied comprised the universe of deaths due to external causes in  the population living in the State of São Paulo. Data bank used was the System of Mortality Information  (SIM), available in the State Secretary of Health of São Paulo. In 2005, the coefficient of mortality due to  these causes was 69,9 per 100.000 inhabitants. Male sex presented a risk of death due to these causes 4.7  times higher than female sex. Age groups presenting higher risks were those between 20-29 years of age  (especially due to homicides and transport accidents) and over 60 years olds (transport accidents, as  pedestrians, and falls). Homicides accounted for 32.6% of deaths, followed by transport accidents (26.8% of   the total). The State of São Paulo is presenting, since 1999, a decreasing tendency in the mortality coefficient  due to external causes, registering 27.6%. This decrease is registered in virtually all Regional Health  Branches, especially due to the decrease in homicides. Male sex showed the highest decrease in these  rates. 

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

References

Krug EG, Sharma GK, Lozano R. The global burden of injuries. Am J Public Health 2000; 90:523–526.

Peden M, Scurfield R, Sleet D et al. (eds). Road Traffic Injury Prevention. Geneva, Switzerland 2004. World Health Organization (WHO).

Krug Eg et al. (eds). World report on violence and health. Geneva, Switzerland 2002. World Health Organization (WHO).

Minayo MCS. Violência: um problema de saúde pública. In: Impacto da violência na saúde dos brasileiros. Brasília 2005. Secretaria de Vigilância em Saúde. Ministério da Saúde (SVS/MS).

OMS. Organização Mundial da Saúde. Classificação Estatística Internacional de Doenças e Problemas Relacionados à Saúde – 10ª Revisão. Centro Colaborador da Organização Mundial da Saúde para a Classificação de Doenças em Português. São Paulo 1995.

Brasil. Ministério da Saúde. DATASUS. Disponível em www.datasus.gov.br. [Acesso em 2004 set 12].

Gawryszewski VP, Hidalgo NT, Valencich DMO. A queda nas taxas de homicídios no Estado de São Paulo e apresentação dos dados de mortalidade por causas externas em 2004. Bepa 2005. [Boletim online]. Disponível em: http://www.cve.saude.sp.gov.br/agencia/bepa21_externa.htm.

Gawryszewski VP, Hidalgo NT. Mortes por causas externas no Estado de São Paulo, ano 2002. Bepa 2004. [Boletim on-line]. Disponível em: http://www.cve.saude.sp.gov.br/agencia/bepa1_mcex.htm

Gawryszewski VP, Pellini ACG, Hidalgo NT, Valencich, Brumini R. O impacto dos acidentes e violências nos gastos da saúde. Bepa 2006. [Boletim on-line]. Disponível em http://www.cve.saude.sp.gov.br/agencia/ bepa27_violencia.htm

Mouton CP, Espino DV. Health screening in older women. Am Fam Physician 1999; 59(7):1835-42.

Binder S. Injuries among older adults: the challenge of optimizing safety and minimizing unintended consequences. Inj Prev 2002;8:IV2-4 (Suppl 4).

Published

2006-09-29

How to Cite

1.
Pinheiro Gawryszewski V, Morita M, T. Hidalgo N, de Oliveira Valencich DM, Brumini R. Mortality due to External causes in the State of São Paulo in 2005. Bepa [Internet]. 2006 Sep. 29 [cited 2024 May 19];3(33):2-7. Available from: https://periodicos.saude.sp.gov.br/BEPA182/article/view/38796

Issue

Section

Original Article

Most read articles by the same author(s)

<< < 1 2