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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (
heart disease
)
34,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
From 1951 to 1971 male doctors reduced their cigarette smoking more than did men in social classes I and II combined. In 1970-2, 665 male doctors died aged under 65. Had they shown the same improvements in cause-specific death rates over the 20 years as men in classes I and II, 699 deaths would have been expected. This "saving" of 34 deaths in the doctors comprised savings from coronary heart disease (83), stroke (16), and lung cancer (8) balanced by 60 "losses" from three stress-related causes--namely, accident, poisonings, etc (30);
suicide
(26); and cirrhosis of the liver (4)--plus 13 from other causes. As a relative reduction in mortality from
heart disease
in doctors (as compared with that in social classes I and II) also occurred during 1931-51--that is, before they began to give up smoking--some of the saving in heart-disease deaths in 1951-71 was probably not related to changes in smoking habits. The relative worsening in mortality from stress-related diseases may have been due partly to a possible adverse effect of giving up smoking if smoking had acted to reduce stress. From these findings, the benefits of giving up smoking may not be so great as has commonly been assumed.
...
PMID:Has the mortality of male doctors improved with the reductions in their cigarette smoking? 53 59
The general death rate rises during business booms and falls during depressions. The causes of death involved in this variation range from infectious diseases through accidents to
heart disease
, cancer, and cirrhosis of the liver, and include the great majority of all causes of death. Less than 2 percent of the death rate-that for
suicide
and homicide-varies directly with unemployment. In the older historical data, deterioration of housing and rise of alcohol consumption on the boom may account for part of this variation. In twentieth-century cycles, the role of social stress is probably predominant. Overwork and fragmentation of community through migration are two important sources of stress which rise with the boom, and they are demonstrably related to the causes of death which show this variation.
...
PMID:Prosperity as a cause of death. 83 36
In the contemporary United States, mortality is 60% higher for males than for females. Forty percent of the excess of male mortality is due to arteriosclerotic
heart disease
, which is more common among men in part because they smoke cigarettes more than women do, and apparently also because they more often develop the competitive, aggressive Coronary Prone Behavior Pattern. Men who do not develop this Behavior Pattern may have as low a risk of coronary heart disease as comparable women. Oophorectomy of young women may increase the risk of coronary heart disease, but administration of female hormones generally does not reduce risk. One third of the sex differential in mortality is due to men's higher rates of
suicide
, fatal motor vehicle and other accidents, cirrhosis of the liver, respiratory cancers and emphysema. Each of these causes of death is linked to behaviours which are encouraged or accepted more in males than in females: using guns, drinking alcohol, smoking, working at hazardous jobs, and seeming to be fearless. Thus, the behaviors expected of males in our society make a major contribution to their elevated mortality.
...
PMID:Why do women liver longer than men? 101 12
In the contemporary United States, males have 60 percent higher mortality than females. In Part I, published in the previous issue, we showed that 40 percent of this sex differential in mortality is due to a twofold elevation of arteriosclerotic
heart disease
among men. Major causes of higher rates of arteriosclerotic
heart disease
in men include greater cigarette smoking among men; probably a greater prevalence of the competitive, aggressive Coronary Prone Behavior Pattern among men; and possibly a protective role of female hormones. In addition, men have higher death rates for lung cancer and emphysema, primarily because more men smoke cigarettes. In Part II we analyze the other major causes of men's higher death rates: accidents,
suicide
, and cirrhosis of the liver. Each of these is related to behaviors which are encouraged or accepted more in men than in women in our society--for example, using guns, being adventurous and acting unafraid, working at hazardous jobs and drinking alcohol. We conclude with suggestions for reducing male mortality; for example, by changing the social conditions which foster in men the behaviors that elevate their mortality.
...
PMID:Why do women live longer than men? 101 15
In an attempt to commit
suicide
, a 32-year-old women swallowed a vast amount of psychiatric drugs, i.e. tranquilizers, amphetamines, hynotic and antidepressant agents. By intensive care, using high doses of catecholamines and appropriate antidota, satisfactory circulation and oxygenation could be maintained. 3 days after admission a peritonitis became apparent. A 50 cm long section of the distal ileum was found to be completely necrotic and had to be resected. However, circulation of the correspondent mesenterium was not disturbed at all. A drug-induced non-occlusive intestinal ischemia was postulated to be the pathophysiological mechanism of intestinal necrosis. Non-occlusive intestinal ischemia is rare; it has been reported in young adults intoxicated by cocaine or phenobarbital, in children with high overdosage of iron compounds, in elderly individuals suffering from low-output congestive
heart disease
and in patients treated with digitalis drugs, with or with or without overdosage.
...
PMID:[Necrosis of the terminal ileum after drug poisoning. Case report]. 142 34
Health-related questionnaires were administered to 742 high school seniors in small towns in rural West Virginia. Students tended to overestimate the immediate threat to their health from cancer,
heart disease
and AIDS. They recognized a threat from auto accidents to their life and health in the immediate future, but nevertheless indulged in high-risk drinking and driving behavior. A surprisingly high percentage were concerned about stress and depression (40 percent) and
suicide
(11 percent). One-third of students had either planned or attempted
suicide
, suggesting that appropriate health education for this age group should include more emphasis on psychosocial issues and stress management.
...
PMID:Adolescent perceptions of teenage morbidity and mortality in a rural population. 187 78
This 5-year follow-up study includes all patients (n = 934; 50% females) treated for self-poisoning in Oslo during 1 year. Seventeen percent were considered suicide attempts upon admission, 25% among the nonabusers and 8% among the abusers. At follow-up, 122 patients were dead (61% males). The mortality rate was highest among the abusers. The mortality rate was similar (13%) among those who were considered to be suicidal on admittance and those who were not. The causes of death were
suicide
(28%), opiate abuse (16%),
heart disease
(14%), accidents or wounds (11%), alcoholism (9%) and others (22%). The standard mortality rate was highly increased in all groups (8 times on average), highest among the female opiate abusers, whose rate was 63 times higher than expected. The increased
suicide
rates (87 times for females, 27 times for males), however, may be a more relevant measure of mental morbidity than the standard mortality rate. Logistic regression analysis demonstrated that male sex, age above 50 years and the lowest social group were factors on admission associated with death in the follow-up period. Age above 50 years and suicidal attempt on admission were associated with subsequent
suicide
. The study strongly supports the idea of self-destructiveness and slow
suicide
in substance abuse.
...
PMID:Suicide and other causes of death in a five-year follow-up of patients treated for self-poisoning in Oslo. 188 94
From 1981 through 1990, 100,777 deaths among persons with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) were reported to CDC by local, state, and territorial health departments; almost one third (31,196) of these deaths were reported during 1990. During the 1980s, AIDS emerged as a leading cause of death among young adults in the United States. By 1988, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection/AIDS had become the third leading cause of death among men 25-44 years of age and, by 1989, was estimated to be second, surpassing
heart disease
, cancer,
suicide
, and homicide (Figure 1). In 1988, HIV infection/AIDS ranked eighth among causes of death among women 25-44 years of age (Figure 2); in 1991, based on current trends, HIV infection/AIDS is likely to rank among the five leading causes of death in this population (1).
...
PMID:Mortality attributable to HIV infection/AIDS--United States, 1981-1990. 189 57
As part of an ongoing epidemiologic study, the death rate and causes of death during 1975 through 1984 were determined in Pima Indians who resided in the Gila River Indian Community (GRIC) in 1965 and later. Death certificates were available for 677 of the 681 deaths. In 78% of the deaths, the underlying cause recorded on the death certificate agreed with the cause determined after review of all available relevant records. The age- and sex-adjusted average annual death rate for the GRIC population (1639/100,000) was 1.9 times (95% CI 1.7-2.0) the 1980 rate for the U.S. all races (878/100,000). In Pima males, whose death rate was substantially higher than that of Pima females, the age-adjusted death rate was 2.3 times that in U.S. males, all races. Moreover among males 25-34 years of age, the Pima death rate was 6.6 times that for the U.S. all races.
Diseases of the heart
and malignant neoplasms caused 59% of U.S. deaths in 1980, but only 19% of GRIC deaths. By contrast, the age- and sex-adjusted mortality rate in the GRIC Pima was 5.9 times the rate of the U.S. all races for accidents, 6.5 times for cirrhosis, 7.4 times for homicide, 4.3 times for
suicide
, and 11.9 times for diabetes. Tuberculosis and coccidioidomycosis were important causes of death in the Pima, for whom infectious diseases was the tenth leading cause of death. The findings indicate that programs to improve the adverse mortality experience of the GRIC population should emphasize factors related to fatal accidents, alcoholic cirrhosis, homicide,
suicide
, diabetes mellitus, and infectious diseases. Young Pimas, especially the males, should be the primary focus of such preventive efforts. These findings and recommendations probably apply to many Native American populations.
...
PMID:Adverse mortality experience of a southwestern American Indian community: overall death rates and underlying causes of death in Pima Indians. 224 58
We compared the jobs, estimates of exposures, and mortality experience of short-term (less than or equal to 1 year) and long-term (greater than 1 year) workers from nine plants producing formaldehyde or formaldehyde products. There were few jobs that were filled solely or primarily by newly hired workers. The estimated median level of formaldehyde exposure experienced by short-term workers on their first job was nearly identical to that for long-term workers, although short-term workers were more likely to be in jobs exposed to particulates than were long-term workers. As duration of employment increased, there was little change in the average estimated exposure level of formaldehyde, but the likelihood of being exposed to particulates decreased. Short-term workers had greater risks than long-term workers of dying from diseases of the circulatory system, arteriosclerotic
heart disease
, emphysema, diseases of the digestive system, cirrhosis of the liver, motor vehicle accidents,
suicide
and malignant neoplasms, particularly cancers of the stomach, colon, lung, prostate, and brain.
...
PMID:Comparison of jobs, exposures, and mortality risks for short-term and long-term workers. 240 25
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