Mapping the morbidity and mortality of Chagas disease in an endemic area in Brazil.
Carolina de Araújo MedeirosMaria Beatriz de Araújo SilvaAndré Luiz Sá de OliveiraSílvia Marinho Martins AlvesMaria das Neves Dantas da Silveira BarrosMaria da Glória Aureliano de Melo CavalcantiGênova Maria de Azevedo OliveiraCristina de Fátima Velloso CarrazzoneWilson Alves de Oliveira JuniorZulma Maria De MedeirosPublished in: Revista do Instituto de Medicina Tropical de Sao Paulo (2022)
Chagas disease is among the 21 neglected diseases according to the World Health Organization. This study aimed to investigate the morbidity and mortality distribution of Chagas disease for identifying areas with greater prevalences and deaths of the disease in Northeast Brazil. A population-based ecological study was performed from 2016 to 2018 using data on acute Chagas disease patients from the Disease Notification Information System, chronic cases from the Chagas Disease and the referral Heart Failure Outpatient Clinic in Pernambuco, and Chagas disease-related mortality from the Mortality Information System. The unit of analysis were Pernambuco State mesoregions. The indicators were spatialized into thematic maps on the occurrence and mortality of the disease per 100,000 inhabitants. No cases of acute disease were reported in the period analyzed. Data on 801 chronic Chagas disease patients were analyzed. The population showed an average age of 62 years, with female predominance. The most prevalent comorbidity was systemic arterial hypertension and cardiologic involvement without ventricular dysfunction. The average chronic disease occurrence rate was 3.2/ 100,000 people/ year. As for deaths in the mortality system; in total, 350 deaths were recorded, showing male predominance, age ≥ 60 years, and chronic disease with cardiac involvement as the main mortality cause. The annual average mortality proportion was 1.6/100,000 people. The chronic case distribution showed spatial heterogeneity, with the highest rates of chronic disease and deaths observed in two mesoregions, with the main cause of death being heart-related. This highlights the need for more specialized services in areas with higher burden of the disease to avoid delay in the patients' care.
Keyphrases
- heart failure
- end stage renal disease
- cardiovascular events
- healthcare
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- risk factors
- prognostic factors
- palliative care
- high resolution
- cardiovascular disease
- machine learning
- electronic health record
- atrial fibrillation
- type diabetes
- intensive care unit
- health information
- arterial hypertension
- hepatitis b virus
- patient reported
- health insurance