000 nab a22 7a 4500
999 _c16683
_d16683
003 PC16683
005 20211214123436.0
008 211207b xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _cH12O
041 _aeng
100 _9892
_aBenito León, Julián
_eNeurología
100 _9423
_aVillarejo Galende, Alberto
_eNeurología
100 _92071
_aRomero Muñoz, Juan Pablo
_eInstituto de Investigación i+12
100 _9582
_aBermejo Pareja, Félix
_eNeurología
245 0 0 _aUnder-reporting of Parkinson's disease on death certificates: a population-based study (NEDICES).
_h[artículo]
260 _bJournal of neurological sciences,
_c2014
300 _a347(1-2):188-92.
500 _aFormato Vancouver: Benito León J, Louis ED, Villarejo Galende A, Romero JP, Bermejo Pareja F. Under-reporting of Parkinson's disease on death certificates: a population-based study (NEDICES). J Neurol Sci. 2014 Dec 15;347(1-2):188-92.
501 _aPMID: 25292414
504 _aContiene 36 referencias
520 _aBackground: Parkinson's disease is frequently omitted as a cause of death from death certificates. A limitation of previous studies that attempted to assess the validity of death certificates is that population-dwelling cases, with milder, undiagnosed Parkinson's disease were likely excluded. As a result, those studies likely overestimated the validity of death certificates because they did not include these milder cases. We assessed the validity of death certificates in a prospective population-based study (NEDICES), which includes previously undiagnosed Parkinson's disease cases detected during the assessment. Methods: 3926 community-dwelling elderly subjects with and without Parkinson's disease were followed during a median of 12.6 years, after which the death certificates of those who died were examined. We calculated the proportion of cases of clinically diagnosed Parkinson's disease for whom a diagnosis of Parkinson's disease was certified as the basic cause of death on death certificates. Results: 1791 (45.6%) of the 3926 participants died over a median follow-up of 7.1 years, including 82 (73.9%) deaths among 111 participants with Parkinson's disease. Parkinson's disease was rarely certified as the basic cause of death (14.6%). Gender, disease stage and the period during which the study was conducted (i.e., 1994 to 2007) did not influence the likelihood that Parkinson's disease would be reported. Conclusions: Our findings reinforce the notion that the reporting of Parkinson's disease on death certificates remains poor. This suggests a lack of awareness of the importance of Parkinson's disease as a cause of death.
710 _9267
_aServicio de Neurología-Neurofisiología
710 _9625
_aInstituto de Investigación imas12
856 _uhttp://pc-h12o-es.m-hdoct.a17.csinet.es/pdf/pc/1/pc16683.pdf
_ySoliocitar documento
942 _2ddc
_cART
_n0