Viet Nam Burden of Disease and Injury Study 2008
Transcription
Viet Nam Burden of Disease and Injury Study 2008
Viet Nam Burden of Disease and Injury Study 2008 MEDICAL PUBLISHING HOUSE HANOI - 2011 The VINE Project 2010-2011 AUTHORS Nguyen Thi Trang Nhung, Hanoi School of Public Health, Vietnam Tran Khanh Long, Hanoi School of Public Health Vietnam Bui Ngoc Linh, Hanoi School of Public Health, Vietnam Theo Vos, School of Population Health, the University of Queensland, Australia Ngo Duc Anh, School of Population Health, the University of Queensland, Australia Nguyen Thanh Huong, Hanoi School of Public Health, Vietnam ACKNOWLEDGEMENT Our sincere thanks are extended to The Atlantic Philanthropies for funding The Evidence Base for Health Policy in Viet Nam Project (VINE Project). The Viet Nam Burden of Disease and Injury Study 2008 was carried out as part of the VINE Project. Hanoi School of Public Health Page ii The VINE Project 2010-2011 TABLE OF CONTENTS ABBREVIATIONS ........................................................................................................... viii EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ................................................................................................. viii 1. INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................ 1 2. OBJECTIVES ................................................................................................................. 4 2.1. GENERAL OBJECTIVE .........................................................................................................4 2.2. SPECIFIC OBJECTIVES.........................................................................................................4 3. METHOD ........................................................................................................................ 4 3.1. MORTALITY ESTIMATES....................................................................................................5 3.2. YEARS OF LIFE LOST (YLL)................................................................................................8 3.3. YEARS LIVED WITH DISABILITY (YLD)...........................................................................8 3.4. DISEASE CATEGORIES ........................................................................................................8 3.5. POPULATION.......................................................................................................................10 3.6. DISCOUNTING ....................................................................................................................10 3.7. DISABILITLY WEIGHTS ....................................................................................................11 3.8. AGE WEIGHTS ....................................................................................................................13 3.9. INCIDENCE AND DURATION............................................................................................13 4. OVERVIEW OF DISEASE AND INJURY MODELS..................................................... 15 4.1. TUBERCULOSIS ..................................................................................................................15 4.2. HIV/AIDS..............................................................................................................................16 4.3. DIARRHEA...........................................................................................................................17 4.4. RESPIRATORY INFECTIONS .............................................................................................17 4.5. CANCER ...............................................................................................................................17 4.6. DIABETES ............................................................................................................................18 4.7. MENTAL AND NEUROLOGICAL DISORDERS ................................................................19 Alcohol abuse........................................................................................................................19 Anxiety .................................................................................................................................19 Dementia...............................................................................................................................20 Depression ............................................................................................................................20 Drug dependence...................................................................................................................20 Epilepsy ................................................................................................................................20 Schizophrenia........................................................................................................................21 4.8. SENSE ORGAN DISORDERS ..............................................................................................21 Vision loss ............................................................................................................................21 Hearing loss ..........................................................................................................................22 4.9. ISCHEMIC HEART DISEASE..............................................................................................22 Hanoi School of Public Health Page iii The VINE Project 2010-2011 4.10. STROKE..............................................................................................................................23 4.11. CHRONIC OBSTRUCTIVE PULMONARY DISEASE (COPD) ........................................24 4.12. OSTEOARTHRITIS ............................................................................................................24 4.13. INJURY ...............................................................................................................................25 5. RESULTS ..................................................................................................................... 25 5.1. DEATHS AND LIFE EXPECTANCY...................................................................................25 5.2. MORTALITY BURDEN IN VIETNAM (YLL).....................................................................26 5.3. YEARS LOST DUE TO DISABILITY (YLD).......................................................................31 5.4. DISABILITY ADJUSTED LIFE YEARS (DALYS)..............................................................36 5.5. AGE AND SEX PATTERNS OF DISEASE BURDEN .........................................................43 5.6. SPECIFIC DISEASE AND INJURY CATEGORIES.............................................................49 Infectious and respiratory diseases.........................................................................................50 Cancer...................................................................................................................................52 Diabetes Mellitus ..................................................................................................................54 Neuropsychiatric disorders ....................................................................................................55 Sense organ diseases .............................................................................................................57 Cardiovascular disease ..........................................................................................................58 COPD ...................................................................................................................................60 Musculoskeletal disorders .....................................................................................................61 Injuries ..................................................................................................................................62 DISCUSSION ................................................................................................................... 67 REFERENCE.................................................................................................................... 71 APPENDIX ....................................................................................................................... 76 Hanoi School of Public Health Page iv The VINE Project 2010-2011 LIST OF TABLES Table 1. VA interview cluster and the corresponding medical university .........................................7 Table 2. Top ten causes of death by sex.........................................................................................26 Table 3. Top 10 causes of YLL by sex ..........................................................................................31 Table 4. Top 10 causes of YLD by sex ..........................................................................................36 Table 5. Top 10 causes of DALYs by sex......................................................................................43 Table 6. Top 10 causes of DALYs among children below 15 years of age in both sexes. ...............44 Table 7. Top 10 causes of DALYs by sex in the 15-44 age group..................................................46 Table 8. Top 10 causes of DALYs by sex in the 45-69 age group..................................................47 Table 9. Top 10 causes of DALYs by sex in the 70+ age group.....................................................49 Table 10. Data sources for prevalence and incidence and quality issues for the main diseases .......70 LIST OF FIGURES Figure 1. The Basic Disease Model Underlying DISMOD.............................................................14 Figure 2. General model for cancer YLD estimation......................................................................18 Figure 3. YLL by major disease groups, Viet Nam 2008 ...............................................................27 Figure 4. YLL by sex and major disease groups, Viet Nam 2008...................................................27 Figure 5. YLL by major disease categories in men, Viet Nam 2008...............................................28 Figure 6. YLL by major disease categories in women, Viet Nam 2008 ..........................................28 Figure 7. YLL by age and major disease groups in men, Viet Nam 2008.......................................29 Figure 8. YLL by age and major disease groups in women, Viet Nam 2008 ..................................29 Figure 9. YLL by age and disease categories in men, Viet Nam 2008............................................30 Figure 10. YLL by age and disease categories in women, Viet Nam 2008 .....................................30 Figure 11. YLD by major disease groups, Viet Nam 2008 .............................................................31 Figure 12. YLD by sex and major disease groups, Viet Nam 2008 ................................................32 Figure 13. YLD by major disease categories in men, Viet Nam 2008 ............................................33 Figure 14. YLD by major disease categories in women, Viet Nam 2008........................................33 Figure 15. YLD by age and major disease groups in men, Viet Nam 2008 ....................................34 Figure 16. YLD by age and major disease groups in women, Viet Nam 2008................................34 Figure 17. YLD by age and major disease categories in men, Viet Nam 2008 ...............................35 Figure 18. YLD by age and major disease categories in women, Viet Nam 2008...........................35 Figure 19. DALYs by major disease groups, Viet Nam 2008.........................................................37 Figure 20. YLL and YLD as proportion of total burden by sex, Viet Nam 2008 ............................37 Figure 21. DALYs by major disease categories, Viet Nam 2008 ...................................................38 Figure 22. DALYs by sex and major disease groups, Viet Nam 2008 ............................................38 Figure 23. DALYs by major disease categories in men, Viet Nam 2008 ........................................39 Figure 24. DALYs by major disease categories in women, Viet Nam 2008 ...................................39 Figure 25. DALYs by age and major disease groups in men, Viet Nam 2008 ................................40 Figure 26. DALYs by age and major disease groups in women, Viet Nam 2008............................41 Figure 27. DALYs by age and major disease categories in men, Viet Nam 2008 ...........................41 Figure 28. DALYs by age and major disease categories in women, Viet Nam 2008 ......................42 Figure 29. DALYs by major disease categories in the 0-14 age group, Viet Nam 2008..................43 Hanoi School of Public Health Page v The VINE Project 2010-2011 Figure 30. DALYs by major disease categories in the 15-44 age group in men,.............................45 Viet Nam 2008..............................................................................................................................45 Figure 31. DALYs by major disease categories in the 15-44 age group in women, Viet Nam 2008..............................................................................................................................45 Figure 32. DALYs by major disease categories in 45-69 age groups in men, .................................46 Viet Nam 2008..............................................................................................................................46 Figure 33. DALYS by major disease categories in the 45-69 age group in women, Viet Nam 2008..............................................................................................................................47 Figure 34. DALYs by major disease categories at ages 70+ in men, ..............................................48 Viet Nam 2008..............................................................................................................................48 Figure 35. DALYs by disease categories at ages 70+ in women, Vietnam 2008............................48 Figure 36. YLL and YLD by major disease categories, Viet Nam 2008.........................................49 Figure 37. The burden of specific infectious diseases by sex, Viet Nam 2008................................50 Figure 38. DALY rates (per 100,000 populations) for infectious diseases......................................51 by age in men, Viet Nam 2008 ......................................................................................................51 Figure 39. DALY rates (per 100,000 populations) for infectious diseases in women, Viet Nam 2008..............................................................................................................................51 Figure 40. DALYs by sex of specific cancers, Viet Nam 2008 ......................................................52 Figure 41. DALY rates per 100,000 population for specific cancers in men,..................................53 Viet Nam 2008..............................................................................................................................53 Figure 42. DALY rates per 100,000 population for specific cancers in women, .............................53 Viet Nam 2008..............................................................................................................................53 Figure 43. DALYs for diabetes by sex, Viet Nam 2008 .................................................................54 Figure 44. DALY rates per 100,000 population for diabetes by age in men, ..................................54 Viet Nam 2008..............................................................................................................................54 Figure 45. DALY rates per 100,000 population for diabetes by age in women, Viet Nam 2008 .....55 Figure 46. DALYs by sex of specific neuropsychiatric disorders, Viet Nam 2008 .........................55 Figure 47. DALY rates per 100,000 populations of mental disorders in men, Viet Nam 2008........56 Figure 48. DALY rates per 100,000 population for mental disorders in women,............................56 Viet Nam 2008..............................................................................................................................56 Figure 49. DALYs by sex of sense organ diseases, Viet Nam 2008. ..............................................57 Figure 50. DALY rates per 100,000 populations for sense organ diseases by age in men, Viet Nam 2008..............................................................................................................................57 Figure 51. DALY rates per 100,000 population for sense organ diseases by age in women, Viet Nam 2008..............................................................................................................................58 Figure 52. DALYs by sex of cardiovascular diseases, Vietnam 2008.............................................58 Figure 53. DALY rates per 100,000 population for cardiovascular diseases in men by age, Viet Nam 2008..............................................................................................................................59 Figure 54. DALY rates per 100,000 population for cardiovascular diseases by age in women, Viet Nam 2008..............................................................................................................................59 Figure 55. The burden of disease of respiratory diseases by sex, Viet Nam 2008 ...........................60 Figure 56. DALY rates per 100,000 population for respiratory diseases by age in men, Viet Nam 2008..............................................................................................................................60 Figure 57. DALY rates per 100,000 population for specific respiratory diseases by age in women, Viet Nam 2008..............................................................................................................................61 Hanoi School of Public Health Page vi The VINE Project 2010-2011 Figure 58. The burden of musculoskeletal disorders by sex, Viet Nam 2008..................................61 Figure 59. DALY rates per 100,000 population by age for musculoskeletal diseases in men, Viet Nam 2008..............................................................................................................................62 Figure 60. DALY rates per 100,000 population by age for musculoskeletal diseases in women, Viet Nam 2008..............................................................................................................................62 Figure 61. DALYs by sex of specific unintentional injuries, Viet Nam 2008. ................................63 Figure 62. The fatal and non-fatal burden of disease of unintentional injuries, Viet Nam 2008. .....63 Figure 63. DALY rates per 100,000 populations by age for unintentional injuries .........................64 in men, Viet Nam 2008. ................................................................................................................64 Figure 64. DALY rates per 100,000 populations by age for unintentional injuries .........................64 in women, Viet Nam 2008 ............................................................................................................64 Figure 65. DALYs by sex of intentional injuries, Viet Nam 2008..................................................65 Figure 66. DALY rates per 100,000 population by age for intentional injuries...............................65 in men, Viet Nam 2008 .................................................................................................................65 Figure 67. DALY rates per 100,000 population by age for intentional injuries in women, Viet Nam 2008..............................................................................................................................66 LIST OF APPENDIX Appendix 1. Diseases and injury categories and ICD-10................................................................76 Appendix 2. Disability Weights by disease and sequelae...............................................................79 Appendix 3. Deaths by sex, ages and causes in Vietnam 2008.......................................................88 Appendix 4. YLL by sex, ages and causes in Vietnam 2008..........................................................90 Appendix 5. YLD by sex, ages and causes in Vietnam 2008..........................................................92 Appendix 6. DALYs by sex, ages and causes in Vietnam 2008 .....................................................94 Appendix 7. YLD prevalence by sex, ages and causes in Vietnam 2008 ........................................96 Hanoi School of Public Health Page vii The VINE Project 2010-2011 ABBREVIATIONS AMI Acute myocardial infection AP Angina pectoris BoD Burden of disease CHS Commune Health Station COPCORD Community-Oriented Program for the Control of Rheumatic Disease COPD Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease DALY Disability adjusted life year DW Disability weight GBD study Global Burden of Disease Study HF Heart failure HIV/AIDS Human immunodeficiency virus/ Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome HLSS Household Living Standard Survey ICD International Classification of Disease IHD Ischemic heart disease MoH Ministry of Health NBD study National Burden of Disease study PCS Population Change Survey PTO method Person Trade-Off method TB Tuberculosis VA Verbal autopsy VINE Project The Evidence Base for Health Policy in Viet Nam Project VMIS Viet Nam Multi-center Injury Survey VNHS Viet Nam National Health Survey WHO World Health Organization YLD Years lived with disability YLL Years of life lost Hanoi School of Public Health Page viii The VINE Project 2010-2011 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY FATAL BURDEN IN 2008 Fatal diseases and injuries accounted for 4.1 million years of life lost (YLL) in men and 2.7 million YLL in women. The main cause groups of YLL in 2008 were cardiovascular diseases (24%), cancer (21%) and unintentional injuries (17%). Stroke (14%), road traffic accidents (9%) and liver cancer (7%) were the main fatal conditions, and leading causes of premature death in men. Stroke (17%), road traffic accidents (4%) and pneumonia (4%) were the three main causes for YLL in women. The top ten causes of YLL contributed 58% to the total non-fatal burden in men and 51% in women. NON-FATAL BURDEN IN 2008 Non-fatal diseases and injuries were responsible for 2.7 million years lost due to disability (YLD) in men and 2.7 million YLD in women. Neuropsychiatric conditions (33%), unintentional injuries (20%) and sense organ diseases (8%) were the three main leading cause of the disability burden in men. Neuropsychiatric conditions (41%), sense organ diseases (11%) and musculoskeletal diseases (10%) were the three main leading cause of the disability burden in women Alcohol use disorders (14%), depression (11%) and road traffic accident (8%) were the three main leading cause for disability burden in men while three leading causes in women were depression (29%), vision loss (10%), osteoarthrtis (9%). The top ten causes of YLD contributed 71% to the total non-fatal burden in men and 81% in women. Hanoi School of Public Health Page 1 The VINE Project 2010-2011 TOTAL DISEASE BURDEN IN 2008 In 2008 the total burden of disease (BoD) and injury in Viet Nam was 12.3 million disability-adjusted life years (DALYs). Men experienced 56% of the total burden. Fifty-six per cent of the total BoD was due to premature death, with 60% in men and 50% in women. Non-communicable diseases were responsible for 66% of the total burden in men and 77% in women. Unintentional injuries (18%), cardiovascular disease (17%) and neuropsychiatric disorders (14%) were the main cause groups in men while neuropsychiatric disorders (22%), cardiovascular disease (18%) and cancer (12%) were the main cause groups contributing to the BoD in women. In men, stroke was the leading cause of the burden (10%) followed by road traffic accidents (8%) and alcohol use disorders (5%). In women, depression was a leading cause of the burden (12%), followed by stroke (10%) and vision loss (4%). Lower respiratory infection (pneumonia) was the main cause of the BoD in childhood, making up 11% of the total burden. Road traffic accidents and HIV/AIDS were responsible for a quarter of the total burden in 15 - 44 year-old men. Depression and road traffic accidents accounted for 32% in women in this age group. Stroke was the main cause of burden contributing 14% in men and 9% in women aged 45 – 69 years; over age 70, stroke caused 22% of DALYs in men and 24% in women. QUALITY OF DATA Presently in Viet Nam, there is limited high quality epidemiology data available for calculating BoD. There is concern around the consistency between and among surveys for each disease. Hanoi School of Public Health Page 2 The VINE Project 2010-2011 All survey unit record data files should be submitted to a national health survey data warehouse and be made available to bona fide researchers to allow further analysis and scrutiny of data quality. More investment is needed to improve vital registration and routine data from hospitals. 1. INTRODUCTION The pressing demand for health services by growing populations pose a challenge for governments around the globe. Limited resources require governments to respond to the health needs of their citizens wisely. An inadequate evidence base to guide decisions on health policies and resource allocation is a major obstacle to better policy development. The formulation of sound decisions on resource allocation (based on health outcomes) relies on the availability of accurate and comparable information. Researchers at Harvard University and the World Health Organization (WHO) developed a comprehensive method of quantifying loss of health in populations for the World Bank’s 1993 World Development Report. Health loss was measured in disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) combining mortality and morbidity due to disease and injury in a single indicator. The DALY has an important advantage from a policy perspective: population health status is estimated in a summary health-outcome measure combining both mortality and morbidity. This greatly enhances comparisons of the size of different health problems and comparisons of the cost-effectiveness of interventions addressing a particular health problem or a wider range of diseases. The combined knowledge of the size of current and future health problems, and knowledge of the ability of health services to respond to these health challenges with cost-effective interventions, forms a powerful set of tools for informed decision making. The Viet Nam National Burden of Disease (NBD) Study assessed the burden attributable to diseases and injuries. The study applied the methods developed for the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) Study. This report provides the internally consistent epidemiological estimates for a broad range of diseases and injuries in Viet Nam in 2008. A further publication will follow on the BoD attributable to selected risk factors. Hanoi School of Public Health Page 3 The VINE Project 2010-2011 The Viet Nam NBD Study is part of The Evidence Base for Health Policy Project (VINE Project), a collaboration between the Ministry of Health (Viet Nam), the Hanoi Medical School, the Hanoi School of Public Health and The University of Queensland, Australia. Researchers from the Hanoi School of Public Health and The University of Queensland were responsible for the NBD Study drawing upon information on causes of death gathered in a companion verbal autopsy (VA) study. Results of these two studies are used in cost-effectiveness analyses carried out as a third component of the VINE Project. 2. OBJECTIVES 2.1. GENERAL OBJECTIVE The Viet Nam NBD Study aims to provide a comprehensive assessment of premature mortality and morbidity (non-fatal health outcomes) attributable to disease and injury in 2008. 2.2. SPECIFIC OBJECTIVES To estimate cause-specific mortality by age and sex. To provide internally consistent estimates of incidence, prevalence, case-fatality and duration by age and sex for different causes of disease and injury. To calculate the burden of premature mortality and morbidity (non-fatal health outcome) in terms of DALYs. 3. METHOD The Viet Nam NBD Study is largely based on the methods developed for the GBD Study. The GBD Study began in the early 1990s with the objective to quantify the BoD and injury of human populations and define the world’s main health challenges (1). The method allows the quantification of all states of ill health into a universal indicator, the DALY. DALYs for a disease or health condition are calculated as the sum of the years of life lost due to premature mortality (YLL) in the population and the equivalent ‘healthy’ years lost due to disability (YLD) for incident cases of the health condition: Hanoi School of Public Health Page 4 The VINE Project 2010-2011 DALY = YLL + YLD The GBD DALYs are discounted at 3% and age weighted whereas DALYs in our Viet Nam BoD Study are discounted but not age weighted. Age weighting was intended to capture a greater social responsibility in young and mid-adult life for the very young and old in society, but has been controversial (2). The Viet Nam NBD Study used a combination of GBD disability weight (DW) and those developed by Dutch researchers (3) with the latter providing greater detail by severity level. 3.1. MORTALITY ESTIMATES Total and cause-specific mortality data were based on a nationally representative cause of death survey using VA (verbal autopsy) methods implemented in 192 communes in 16 provinces, representing five socio-economic regions in Vietnam: Thai Nguyen, Hoa Binh, Son La, Hanoi, Quang Ninh, Hai Duong, Thanh Hoa, Binh Dinh, Dac Lak, Khanh Hoa, Thua Thien Hue, Binh Duong, Lam Dong, Ho Chi Minh city, Can Tho, Kien Giang. The sample was drawn using a multi-stage stratified cluster sampling technique with provinces as primary sampling units and households as listing units. The sample consisted of 668,142 households with an estimated 2,616,056 persons; representing approximately 3% of the Vietnamese population. Recording of Deaths The list of deaths to have occurred between 1 January 2008 and 31 December 2008 was compiled from three existing sources at the commune level: commune health station (CHS) record, Commune People’s Committee’s report, and population collaborators’ report. For each death, demographic information of the deceased (age, sex, date of death) and household address was extracted into a separate file to help locate the household for subsequent VA interviews to ascertain the cause of death. Cause of death ascertainment The second phase of the mortality data collection constituted a VA interview with the principal caretaker of the deceased. In Viet Nam, VA was first applied to estimate maternal Hanoi School of Public Health Page 5 The VINE Project 2010-2011 and infant mortality (4) and then cause-specific mortality in the adult population in Fila Bavi, a demographic surveillance site about one hour outside of Hanoi (5, 6). For national application of VA, the WHO standard VA questionnaire (7) was adapted to the Vietnamese context, based on experience with VA in Fila Bavi. The questionnaire consisted of two modules: one for deaths in neonates and children below 12 years; and the other for adolescents and adults. The questionnaire captured information on (i) family background and demographic characteristics; (ii) signs and symptoms using a check list; (iii) open-ended questions to elicit information on the terminal illness leading to death; and (iv) information on contacts with health services during illness preceding death. The English version of the questionnaire was translated into Vietnamese, back-translated and pilot-tested before being used in this study. In each selected commune, two data collectors were recruited including one CHS staff member (nurse or midwife) and one population collaborator. Data collectors underwent three-day intensive training on VA interviewing skills. The training emphasized desensitizing techniques and communication skills to motivate the principal care taker of the deceased to participate in the interview and give appropriate answers. Furthermore, training covered the specific content of the questionnaire, the underlying intent of each question, and specific instructions for coding responses. The training methods included lecture presentation, group discussions, role-play, and hands-on practice. The potential bias arising from prior medical knowledge of the data collectors was also addressed, with suitable instructions to ask and record each question as per the protocol. VA data collection was administered through five medical universities, including Thai Nguyen and Hanoi in the North, Hue in the Centre, and Ho Chi Minh and Can Tho in the South. For logistical convenience, 16 provinces were divided into five clusters (Table 1), corresponding with the location of each medical university. Each participating medical university was responsible for conducting VA data collection, reviewing the VA questionnaire to determine the causes of death, and coding the causes of death identified in the respective cluster. VA interviews were completed in six months from May to October 2009. Hanoi School of Public Health Page 6 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Table 1. VA interview cluster and the corresponding medical university No. Medical University Province 1 Ha Noi Hanoi, Quang Ninh, Hai Duong, Thanh Hoa 2 Thai Nguyen Thai Nguyen, Hoa Binh, Son La 3 Hue Thua Thien Hue, Binh Dinh, Khanh Hoa 4 HCM HCM, Lam Dong, Binh Duong 5 Can Tho Can Tho, An Giang A total of 9293 completed questionnaires were reviewed by a team of experienced medical doctors at each medical university, who then assigned the causes of death with reference to the standard death certification form (7).Underlying causes of death were selected and coded using International Classification of Diseases Version 10 (ICD-10) by medical doctors trained in ICD coding and who had a good command of English (i.e. they were able to use the English version of the ICD-10 coding manual). Statistical analysis There are indirect methods like the Preston-Coale method (8) that assess the incompleteness of death registrations. When we used this method on deaths reported in the 2006 Population Change Survey by the General Statistics Office, it indicated an implausibly low level of completeness (54% for female deaths and 69% for male deaths). Instead, we were provided with estimates of childhood mortality and the probability of dying between ages 15 and 59 from the new Global Burden of Disease study (GBD study)(9, 10). The estimates for Viet Nam in 2008 are based on regression methods on available mortality data from all over the world since 1950. We believe this is currently the best available estimate for Viet Nam. We use a GBD software program called ModMatch to extend the childhood and adult mortality estimates into a full life table. The distribution by cause in each age and sex category from the VA study was then imposed on the life table’s all-cause mortality estimates for the whole country. Hanoi School of Public Health Page 7 The VINE Project 2010-2011 3.2. YEARS OF LIFE LOST (YLL) YLL are the mortality component of DALYs and are estimated against an ‘ideal’ standard life expectancy at each age. YLL for deaths in each age and sex category are estimated from the mean age at death in that age interval and the standard life expectancy figures at the exact ages defining the age interval. The basic formula for calculating YLL is: YLL = N * L Where N is the age and sex-specific number of deaths and L is the age and sex-specific standard life expectancy. With discounting at a rate of 3%, the formula becomes: YLL = N * (1-e-0.03L) /0.03 3.3. YEARS LIVED WITH DISABILITY (YLD) The loss of health due to non-fatal conditions requires estimation of the incidence of the health condition (disease or injury) in the year of interest. For each new case, the number of years of healthy life lost is obtained by multiplying the average duration of the condition (to remission or death) by a severity weight that measures the loss of healthy life using an average health state weight. The basic formula for calculating YLD is: YLD = I * DW * L Where I is the number of incident cases in the reference period, DW is the disability weight and L is the average duration of disability (measured in years). With discounting at the rate of 3%, the formula becomes: YLD = I * DW * L*(1-e-0.03L) / 0.03 3.4. DISEASE CATEGORIES One of the objectives of the GBD study was to develop a methodology for determining internally consistent estimates of disease burden avoiding overestimation of the contribution of a specific disease or injury through double counting. The approach adopted was to define mutually exclusive categories for more than 100 conditions and 400 disabling consequences (sequelae) using the ICD-10 coding. For the Viet Nam study, Hanoi School of Public Health Page 8 The VINE Project 2010-2011 diseases were classified into a comprehensive list of three major disease groups, 22 categories of disease and injuries and specific conditions following the structure of the GBD list of conditions (Appendix 1). The methods described in this report show how we calculated YLD for 42 diseases and injuries and their disabling sequelae for which we have developed explicit estimates. These conditions were chosen as they were expected to make significant contributions to the total morbidity burden based on their ranking in the 1999 Thai BoD Study (11) and availability of data. This list is not exhaustive and the remaining non-fatal conditions had to be extrapolated. In contrast, the analyses of the mortality burden are complete to the extent that it is possible within the limitation of the death data collected. To complete the total burden picture, we make the following assumptions regarding the residual morbidity not captured by the explicit estimates for the 41 selected disease and injury categories: For high mortality conditions, we assume morbidity in the residual category is proportional to its mortality using the average YLD to YLL ratio of related categories for which we developed explicit Vietnamese estimates; YLD for some conditions in Viet Nam were estimated by applying the ratio of YLD to YLL of the 1999 Thailand BoD study to YLL in Viet Nam. We used this extrapolation method for nutritional deficiencies, endocrine disorder, rheumatic heart disease, hypertensive heart disease, inflammatory heart disease, genitourinary diseases, and congenital anomalies. For all digestive diseases, YLD in Viet Nam were calculated by the ratio YLD to YLL for cirrhosis in Thailand. YLD for rest categories in each disease group such as “other cardiovascular disease”, “other cancers”, “other perinatal conditions”, “other maternal conditions” and “other infectious disease” were extrapolated by the YLD/YLL ratio of the diseases that were explicitly estimated within those disease groups. YLD for the neurological rest category were estimated from the YLD/YLL ratio of epilepsy and dementia combined; and Hanoi School of Public Health Page 9 The VINE Project 2010-2011 For low mortality conditions, for which we did not make any explicit estimates for Viet Nam, we made an assumption that YLD rates by age and sex from the 1999 Thai BoD study applied. This method was used for skin diseases, gout, oral conditions and asthma. 3.5. POPULATION Population estimates were based on the 1999 and the 2009 National Census projections. The two censuses provided information on the number of persons and households together with a range of their demographic characteristics. 3.6. DISCOUNTING The DALY measures the future stream of healthy years of life lost due to each death or incident case of disease or injury. It is thus an incidence-based measure rather than a prevalence-based measure. The GBD study applied a 3% time discount rate to years of life lost in the future to estimate the net present value of years of life lost. With this discount rate, a year of healthy life gained in 10 year’s time is worth 24% less than one gained now. Discounting future benefits is standard practice in economic analysis and there are some specific arguments for applying discounting to the DALY in measuring population health (12). Arguments include: To be consistent with measurement of health outcomes in cost-effectiveness analyses; To prevent giving excessive weight to deaths at younger ages (without age weighting and discounting, a male death at age zero results in 44% more YLL than a death at age 25 and 97% more than a death at age 40; with discounting at 3% an infant death results in only 12% and 29% more YLL than a death at age 25 and age 40, respectively); and The disease eradication/research paradox: assuming that investment in research or disease eradication has a non-zero chance of succeeding, then without discounting, Hanoi School of Public Health Page 10 The VINE Project 2010-2011 all current expenditure should be shifted to such investment because the future stream of benefits is infinite. Discounting has a profound effect on the estimated size of health outcomes. Discounting alters the value attached to death at different ages. Thus the choice of a discount rate for health outcomes, even if technically desirable, may result in morally unacceptable allocations between generations. Because the discount rate issue is not easily resolved, the GBD study published discounted and undiscounted estimates of the global burden. A discount rate of 5% per annum has been standard in much health economic and other social policy analyses for many years. Environmentalists and renewable energy analysts have argued in recent decades for lower discount rates for social decisions. The World Bank Disease Control Priorities Study and the Global Burden of Disease project (13, 14) both used a 3% discount rate. The United States Panel on Cost-Effectiveness in Health and Medicine recently recommended that a 3% real discount rate be used in health economic analyses to adjust both costs and health outcomes (15) but that the sensitivity of the results to the discount rate should be examined. In this study, a 3% discount rate was applied to calculate the DALY. 3.7. DISABILITLY WEIGHTS The DALY uses explicit preference values for different health states known as ‘disability weights’ (DW). The DW quantifies societal preferences for different health states. These weights do not represent the lived experience of any disability or health state, or imply any societal value of the person in a disability or health state. Rather they quantify societal preferences for health states in relation to the ‘ideal’ of optimal health. The weights for DALY calculation are expressed on a scale from zero to one, with zero representing a state of optimal health (no loss) and one representing a state equivalent to death. Thus a weight for paraplegia of 0.57 does not mean that a person in this health state is ‘half dead’ or that society values them as a person less than anyone else. It means that, on average, society judges a year with blindness (DW 0.43) to be preferable to a year with paraplegia (DW 0.57), and a year with paraplegia to be preferable to a year with Hanoi School of Public Health Page 11 The VINE Project 2010-2011 unremitting major depression (DW 0.76). It also means that, on average, society would prefer a person to have a year in good health followed by death than a year with paraplegia followed by death. Further, society would prefer a person to live three years with paraplegia followed by death than live one year of good health followed by death (3x (1-0.57) = 1.3 ‘healthy’ years is greater than 1 year of good heath). The BoD DW are based on the Person Trade-Off (PTO) method, as this more directly attempts to measure social preferences for health states than other methods. Using this method, the DW were derived from panels of health experts from around the world for 22 indicator conditions, followed by a deliberative process allowing members of the panel to alter their initial valuations after hearing arguments from other panel members (16). It has been argued that health state preferences would vary markedly between populations that have different cultural beliefs, conceptualizations of health, and expectations for health and well being. However, there is little evidence that this is the case (17). The GBD Study carried out health state preference studies in over ten countries and found surprisingly high levels of consistency between weights for the 22 indicator conditions spanning a wide range of severity (16). We used actual or derived weights from two sources: the GBD and the Dutch weights applied in the Australian study (18, 19). The Dutch weights cover only a restricted range of conditions, but they differentiate between different condition stages and severities. Therefore they can be applied more directly to detailed disease models in estimating the YLD. The Dutch weights also have the great advantage that they define each disease stage or sequelae in terms of a standardized health state description using a variant of the EuroQol classification, with six domains and three levels of severity for each domain. The six domains are mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain, affect and cognition. Each domain can be scored as having “no problems”, “some problems” or “severe problems”. The GBD weights cover a wider range of conditions, but generally for less specific disease and sequelae categories. The exception is injury, where the GBD has a much more comprehensive set of weights for the short-term and long-term sequelae of 39 types of injuries. The two sets of DW cannot be directly compared for most conditions because the Hanoi School of Public Health Page 12 The VINE Project 2010-2011 disease categories in the Dutch study are more specific. Based on the correlation coefficient (0.91) for these two sets of DW, and the line of best fit (a slope of 0.998 and an intercept of 0.009) it is reasonably valid to use the GBD and Dutch weights in the same study. A list of all Dutch weights used in this study and their sources is presented in Appendix 2. 3.8. AGE WEIGHTS The GBD study weighted a year of healthy life lived at young ages and older ages lower than for other ages. However, there is no consensus that young and older ages should be given less weight or, if one wishes to do so, on the relative magnitude of the differences. The age weights are the single most controversial value choice built in the DALY. Criticisms of the age weights have fallen into four categories (2, 20): Age-weighting is unacceptable on equity grounds (every year of life is of equal value a priori); The age weights are arbitrary and have not been validated for large populations; The age weights do not reflect social values; and They add an extra level of complexity to the BoD analysis which obscures the method and makes little overall difference to the rankings. Conversely, there are arguments that age weights are not in themselves inequitable, because everyone potentially lives through every age, and that they do reflect legitimate societal priorities (21). The Viet Nam BoD study uses uniform age weights so that a year of healthy life is valued equally at all ages. 3.9. INCIDENCE AND DURATION The starting point for YLD calculation is to determine the number of new cases of a particular condition in the year of interest and to estimate or model disease duration, and in Hanoi School of Public Health Page 13 The VINE Project 2010-2011 some cases, progression through disease stages or severity levels. While for some conditions it is possible to derive numbers of incident cases directly from disease registers, routine databases or epidemiological studies, for most only prevalence data are available. Additionally, it is often necessary to estimate average duration from knowledge of the rates of remission or death for a particular condition. For these conditions, we use a software program called DISMOD. The underlying model used by DISMOD is summarized below (Figure 1). Population m without disease Incidence rate i All other mortality rate Remission rate Deaths from other causes m Cause specific Cases of disease Case fatality rate f deaths Figure 1. The Basic Disease Model Underlying DISMOD The epidemiology of a disease is fully described by incidence, prevalence, remission, duration, and some measure of mortality (relative risk, case fatality rate or mortality rates). These variables differ in nature. For example, incidence and case fatality express transition from one state to another, while prevalence is a proportion. All of these variables can, in principle, be observed, but with a different degree of difficulty. Mortality, for example, can be relatively easily observed, but, depending on the disease, can be misclassified. Nevertheless, cause of death statistics usually constitute a more reliable disease data source. If three of the five disease parameters listed above are known, DISMOD can calculate the missing two. Most commonly, there is information on prevalence, mortality and some notion of remission. DISMOD estimates incidence and average duration by age and sex that are consistent with the known parameters. Hanoi School of Public Health Page 14 The VINE Project 2010-2011 While different assumptions regarding remission and case fatality affect the age distribution of incident cases and YLD estimates, total YLD are relatively insensitive to these assumptions if matched to a fixed prevalence distribution. This is because YLD estimates are proportional to incidence multiplied by duration, which approximately equals the prevalence of the condition. In other words, for most conditions, the combination of incidence, case fatality and remission rates (and thus derived durations) used in the YLD calculations makes relatively little difference to total YLD across age groups assuming the same prevalence figures are used as the basis. The effect of discounting complicates this, however, with low incidence and long duration conditions being more discounted than high incidence but short duration conditions. For sequelae of short duration (for example, the recovery time post surgery), we base our assumptions regarding duration on findings reported in the literature or on advice from experts rather than using DISMOD. 4. OVERVIEW OF DISEASE AND INJURY MODELS 4.1. TUBERCULOSIS To calculate the incidence of tuberculosis (TB), we relied on the annual data on TB from 2002 to 2008 provided by the National Hospital of Lung Diseases that was sent to WHO for contribution to the Global Tuberculosis Database. New AFB+ cases are the only ones for which an age and sex pattern is provided. We imposed that pattern onto the overall figures of new cases of pulmonary TB, which including AFB+ and AFB-, and extra-pulmonary TB. YLD of TB were calculated for six different categories: treated and cured TB, treated and relapsed TB, treated and not cured TB, untreated and fatal TB, untreated TB with spontaneous recovery, and untreated TB resulting in chronic illness. According to a population-based study from Viet Nam, 20% of TB cases were underreported(22). In the absence of Vietnamese data, we made the same assumptions as in the Thai BoD study that 70% of cases received treatment (11, 23). The duration of treated TB was assumed to Hanoi School of Public Health Page 15 The VINE Project 2010-2011 be 10 months including 4 months of symptoms prior to treatment and 6 months on treatment (24). Based on the data of the Viet Nam National Tuberculosis Prevention Program, the cure rate of treated cases is 89%. The 8.6% who relapse were given an average duration of 12 months (4 months delay to treatment and 8 months of treatment)(25). The remaining 2.4% not cured were assumed to be on treatment with an average duration of 18 months. For those receiving no treatment, we assumed 50% died, 18% become chronic TB sufferers and 32% recovered spontaneously (26). Dutch DWs were used (0.29 for pulmonary TB and 0.30 for extra-pulmonary TB). 4.2. HIV/AIDS We modeled HIV/AIDS in four stages: early asymptomatic HIV infection (Dutch DW 0.20), then to symptomatic HIV infection stage (DW 0.31), then to AIDS (DW 0.56), and finally the terminal stage of the illness (DW 0.95). In the projection report for HIV in Viet Nam, the incidence rate in Viet Nam is about 39 per million population (27). This report also provided the prevalence rate, sex ratio and number of HIV infection cases in 2008 in Viet Nam. We subsequently applied the age and sex pattern from the Vietnamese Ministry of Health’s (MoH) report on HIV patterns in 2008 (28). Anti-retroviral treatment increases survival; the average duration of HIV/AIDS with treatment was estimated to be 30 years in the Australian population (29). This is compared to a median incubation period from HIV infection until development of AIDS of approximately 10 years in untreated adults. Infectious disease experts estimate there are 59,000 people eligible for treatment; that capacity to treat is 29,000 but only 20,000 are actually treated (30). From the 2008 report by the Vietnamese MoH, the effective coverage of anti-retroviral treatment in Viet Nam is 45% (31). We therefore assumed that 27% of people have the longer durations estimated for those treated in the Australian study and the remainder the shorter duration as estimated in the era before treatment was available. The mean duration from AIDS to death was based on applying the same estimate of 23% effective treatment coverage with a duration of 5.5 years (18), assuming that the people Hanoi School of Public Health Page 16 The VINE Project 2010-2011 untreated have an average duration of 1.3 years (as per the Thai HIV/AIDS projection study (11)). 4.3. DIARRHEA The incidence and duration of diarrhea was taken from the 2006 Viet Nam Standard Household Survey. In this survey, household members reported on the duration and levels of diarrhea, either mild, moderate, or severe. DW used for calculating YLD of diarrhea is Dutch weight of 0.056 for uncomplicated episode (mild and moderate) and 0.402 for complicated episode (severe). 4.4. RESPIRATORY INFECTIONS We used self-reported data from the 2002 Viet Nam National Health Survey (VNHS, 2002) on cough in the last four weeks at 3 levels: mild, moderate, and severe. We assumed severe disease reflected lower respiratory diseases at GBD study DW of 0.28. Mild disease was assumed to be nasopharyngitis and moderate disease to be sinusitis or tonsillitis (with Australian BoD DW based on regression model of Dutch weights of 0.014 and 0.061, respectively) at DW 0.061. For employed adults, the average number of days off-work due per episode of respiratory tract infection was around 0.5. The GBD study assumed an average duration of 3.5 days. If we are using the self-report prevalence data, we probably include a considerable number of minor infections with minimal disability. Hence we use days off work plus additional half day on either side (1.5 days) as the average duration. 4.5. CANCER We used site-specific incidence from six cancer registries (three from the North, one from Centre, and two from the South of Viet Nam). The comparison between the cancer incidence from those registries and cause-specific mortality from the cause of death study using the VA method showed that mortality rates are higher than incidence rates for almost all cancers for all age groups in both males and females. Consultation with cancer experts from the Viet Nam National Cancer Hospital who are involved in collecting data Hanoi School of Public Health Page 17 The VINE Project 2010-2011 revealed that the data obtained from the cancer registries is not complete due to limited coverage of the register system and lack of human capacity to collect quality data. For the sake of preserving consistency between mortality and morbidity estimates, we decided to calculate site-specific incidence rates for cancers by multiplying mortality rates from the mortality study with site specific incidence-to-mortality rate ratios from a study on the regional estimates of cancer mortality and incidence by site (32). Those surviving cancer for at least five years were assumed to be cured and have disability for five years. For those who died, the survival time to death was assumed to follow a Weibull distribution. Thus, the average survival time was estimated by applying this distribution with relative five-year survival rates for developing countries obtained from a study on the worldwide mortality from 25 cancers (33). We estimated disability for cancers by adopting the models as per the Australian BoD study (18) and application of the Dutch DW for each stage. The general model for cancers is shown in Figure 2. Incidence Up to 5 years 12 months or less Diagnosis and primary therapy DW 0.19-0.69 State after intentionally curative primary therapy DW 0.18-0.38 In remission DW 0.18-0.47 Variable Disseminated DW 0.75-0.91 12 months or less Cure Terminal DW 0.19-0.93 Death 1 month Figure 2. General model for cancer YLD estimation 4.6. DIABETES YLD for diabetes were estimated for two categories: uncomplicated diabetes and complicated diabetes. The prevalence of diabetes was derived from the survey Hanoi School of Public Health Page 18 The VINE Project 2010-2011 “Epidemiology of diabetes in Vietnam, treatment methods and preventive measures” (34). To calculate incidence rates and duration of diabetes, DISMOD2 (35) was used with zero remission and relative risk of mortality in diabetics from the Asia-Pacific Cohort Studies Collaboration (36). The ratio of YLD of diabetes complications to prevalent cases of diabetes in the 1999 Thai study was used to estimate YLD for complications of diabetes of Viet Nam. Dutch DW of 0.07 was used for uncomplicated diabetes. 4.7. MENTAL AND NEUROLOGICAL DISORDERS We used the epidemiology clinical survey of ten common mental disorders by eight ecological regions of Viet Nam in 2008 – 2009. The survey included a sample of 82,908 individuals. Data was available by age and sex. Alcohol abuse The incidence of alcohol abuse was computed using DISMOD2 from the prevalence provided by the epidemiology survey and a remission of 0.24, based on an American follow-up study of at-risk drinkers (37) and an elevated mortality risk of 1.8 in males and 3.84 in females (38). In the absence of local data, experts consulted agreed to use these estimates. An average DW for alcohol abuse of 0.09 was adopted from the Australian BoD study (18). Anxiety The epidemiology clinical survey reported 2085 cases of diagnosed anxiety. The remission rate was assumed to be 4.3%, which is the combined estimate from four follow-up studies of people with anxiety disorders (39). The standardized mortality ratio reported in the meta-analysis of Harris and Barraclough ranged from no elevated risk for anxiety neurosis to a risk of two for panic disorder (38). We assumed a relative risk for anxiety, and DISMOD2 was used to ascertain incidence and duration. For DW we used assumptions from the Australian BoD study taking into account average severity and a proportion of time over the chronic course of anxiety disorders that is symptomatic. Hanoi School of Public Health Page 19 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Dementia We derived incidence and duration from DISMOD2 using prevalence, zero remission and a relative mortality risk from Aguero-Torres study (3.6 and 4.5 for male and female 77-84 year olds (40); and 1.7 and 2.4 for males and females over age 85. We further used the severity distribution from the Rotterdam study (minimal 13.8%, mild 41.3%, moderate 30.0% and severe dementia 15.0%) (35). This leads to an average DW of 0.52. Depression This epidemiology clinical survey reported 2653 cases of diagnosed depression. In the absence of information on other depression parameters in Viet Nam, we decided to use the GBD study 1990 estimates on duration for our current study. We assumed that the average duration is 0.5 years with a corresponding remission of two years. A relative risk of mortality of 1.36 was applied in DISMOD2. Drug dependence There were 369 cases of drug dependence in the mental health survey, males accounting for 91%. The drug dependence definition used in that study included cocaine, heroin, opium and cannabis. The survey found that heroine was the most used drug. The survey also reported a prevalence of 0.0078 for the 10-19 age group. We assumed drug dependence only occurs among 15 year or older age groups with the prevalence being two times higher than that among the 10 – 19 age range. Due to the absence of data on other drug dependence parameters in Viet Nam, we decided to use a remission rate of 5% and a case fatality rate from overdose of 1% per year as per Australian research (41). A DW of 0.27 was assumed similar to the Australian BoD study Epilepsy As the prevalence of epilepsy by age in adults was somewhat erratic due to small numbers, we modelled an adult prevalence combining data across adult age groups. We used a midpoint mortality relative risk of 1.55 in range from 1.3 to 1.8 standardized mortality ratios reported for epilepsy (42). At ten years after diagnosis, the probability of Hanoi School of Public Health Page 20 The VINE Project 2010-2011 having no seizure and no medication for at least five years was 51% for those diagnosed before 10 years of age, 40% for those diagnosed at ages 10 -19 years, 28% for those with diagnosis at ages 20 to 59 and only 6% for those with diagnosis at 60 years or later. In addition, the probability of relapse by 20 years after remission was 13% among those less than nine years of age at diagnosis, 22% among those aged 10 - 19 years at diagnosis, and 32% among those over age 20 years at diagnosis (43)). We subtract the relapse rate from the remission rate to yield a net remission rate as an input to DISMOD2. Schizophrenia The National Mental Health Survey reported 348 cases of schizophrenia. We used a median estimate of the standardized mortality ratio of 2.58 in people with schizophrenia and a remission estimate of 0.0137 based on two meta-analysis of ten studies of Saha in 2005 and 2007 (44). As in the Thai BoD study we assumed that 63% of time is spent at the GBD Study DW of 0.627 for untreated cases (that was the proportion of patients during two year follow-up in WHO’s ten country study (45) who had remitted) and remainder of the time at 0.351 (GBD study weight for treated cases) to give a composite weight of 0.453. 4.8. SENSE ORGAN DISORDERS Vision loss Vision loss includes all self-reported cases from the Household Living Standard Survey (HLSS) 2006. Vision loss is divided into three categories: mild, moderate, and severe. In the VNHS investigators asked whether survey participants experienced any visual difficulty, including whether they wore glasses. The survey allowed for four potential responses: no difficulty, a little difficult, very difficult, and completely blind. We categorized the level of severity into none, mild, moderate, and severe corresponding to each of these four items. We used Dutch DW of 0.02 for mild, 0.17 for moderate and 0.43 for severe vision loss. The DISMOD2 model was used to model incidence and duration of vision loss for each level assuming no remission and no excess mortality. Hanoi School of Public Health Page 21 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Hearing loss Prevalence of hearing loss was also derived from the HLSS 2006. In this survey, people reported either one of three levels of hearing loss: a little difficult, very difficult and completely deaf. We then mapped into these responses mild, moderate and severe hearing loss categories for which there were Dutch DW (0.02, 0.12 and 0.37, respectively). Due to small survey numbers, the average DW for all prevalent cases of hearing loss varied markedly with age but showed a bimodal pattern with higher values below age 45 (average 0.083) than for older ages (average 0.051). DISMOD2 was used to model incident cases and duration of hearing loss, assuming no remission and a relative risk or mortality equal to one. 4.9. ISCHEMIC HEART DISEASE We made estimates for three disabling outcomes of ischemic heart disease (IHD): angina pectoris (AP), acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and heart failure (HF). The incidence of AP and AMI is based on hospital admission data from 200 health centers, provincial hospitals, and national hospitals from throughout Viet Nam. We used incidence of IHD from hospital admission data captured by the Administration of Medical Service of the MoH As there are only two age groups in the hospital data (<14 and 15+) we imposed the age pattern based on more detailed hospital admission data from Thailand.. Then, pursuant to expert advice, we assumed that 70% of admissions over 60 years of age were first ever admission cases for both AP and AMI and that 40% of AMI patients die outside of hospital and thus would not be captured by hospital data. Based on discussion with experts from the Viet Nam National Heart Hospital, we assumed that case fatality rate in IHD in Viet Nam is 50% higher than in Australia. DISMOD2 was used to derive average duration for all IHD incident events (combining AP and AMI) assuming zero remission. The DISMOD2 incidence output was then apportioned to AP and AMI based on ratio of AP to AMI admissions. We assumed that 15% of AMI leads to HF and again we assumed the case fatality rate of HF in Viet Nam is 50% higher than Australia. Hanoi School of Public Health Page 22 The VINE Project 2010-2011 We assumed AP is associated with mild to moderate disability (DW 0.08) until the last 6 months at severe DW (0.57); and three months DW for AMI (GBD study DW 0.491 untreated and 0.395 treated) with estimation that it is about 50% treated so combined weight is 0.443. For HF, we assumed 60% mild, 30% moderate and 10% severe disability (DW 0.06, 0.35 and 0.65, respectively). 4.10. STROKE YLD of stroke is estimated separately; those who die in 28 days and survivors after 28 days. Those who die in the first 28 days are assumed to have one week of disability at the level of severe stroke (0.92 DW). We imposed the age and sex pattern from Thai admission data on our overall admission estimates of people discharged after a stroke with adjustment to reflect the partial coverage of hospitals in the admission database as described in section above on IHD. In Perth Australia, 22% of non fatal strokes were managed outside the hospital system (46). We assumed a 50% higher proportion of cases do not present to hospitals in Viet Nam and that this proportion is much higher in the 75+ age group (44%) than at younger ages (17%). Bonita (46) also noted that 69% of recorded strokes in Perth are first ever strokes. We applied this proportion to incidence over age 60. In the Perth study about 22% of strokes in males and 26% of strokes in females resulted in death within 28 days. Higher case fatality rates were reported in cases of people older than 75 years (29%) compared to cases less than 75 years (18%) (46). On the advice of experts from the Heart Hospital we increased the case fatality rate by 50%. According to linked data from Western Australia (47) on pre- and post-stroke levels of disability amongst stroke survivors, mean DW amongst stroke survivors at four and twelve months were estimated. These DW were calculated from absolute changes in levels of disability after stroke in each individual and applied to all stroke survivors, not just those with disability. We used the four month survivor DW in the first year and the twelve-month disability after the first year. Hanoi School of Public Health Page 23 The VINE Project 2010-2011 4.11. CHRONIC OBSTRUCTIVE PULMONARY DISEASE (COPD) Our study utilised an epidemiological cross-sectional (national) study on COPD prevalence that was carried out in Viet Nam between September 2006 and June 2007 (48). COPD in this study is defined by the WHO GOLD definition in anyone who on spirometry testing has a proportion of forced vital capacity exhaled in the first second less than 70% (FEV1/FVC < 0.7). We assumed a progression from asymptomatic to mild-moderate and eventually severe. We have DW for severe (III-IV) of 0.53 and for mild-moderate of 0.17. Gold II is more inclusive (FEV1/FVC between 50 and 80%) than our definition of mild/moderate (50-70% FEV1/FVC) for which the DW of 0.17 was determined. DISMOD2 was used to derive average duration and incident for COPD assuming zero remission. 4.12. OSTEOARTHRITIS We decided to use the estimated prevalence of osteoarthritis from the Viet Nam Community-Oriented Program for the Control of Rheumatic Disease (COPCORD) study, despite its small sample size (49). This was because it provided the prevalence of radiographic osteoarthritis instead of self-reported osteoarthritis. This study was applied to 2119 urban subjects aged 16 years and over, using WHO-ILAR COPCORD core questionnaires for reporting symptoms and radiographic and blood tests to classify rheumatic disease categories (49). As the prevalence of osteoarthritis by sex only was obtained from this study, the age distribution of patients who were diagnosed with osteoarthritis in the Thai COPCORD study was imposed (11). People with osteoarthritis have a higher risk of death than others, but it is thought that this is due to an increased likelihood of significant co-morbidities (not related to the osteoarthritis), and thus we assumed that case fatality in osteoarthritis is zero. We used DISMOD2 to derive incidence and average duration with remission as inputs. Similar to both the Australian (18) and Thai (11) BoD studies, we applied an average of Dutch weights, assuming a severity distribution based on Kellgren and Lawrence radiological grades 2 and 3-4 for osteoarthritis from the Framingham study (50, 51). Hanoi School of Public Health Page 24 The VINE Project 2010-2011 4.13. INJURY The incidence of injury was taken from the Viet Nam Multi-center Injury Survey (VMIS) (52) and the Survey of Children Injury in six provinces: Hai Phong, Hai Duong, Hue, Quang Tri, Can Tho, and Dong Thap (Children Survey) (53). Injury cases in the two surveys were classified into eight categories: burns, drowning, fall, homicide and violence, poisoning, suicide, traffic accident, and other intentional injury. Compared to the Children Survey, VMIS reported a higher incidence of all types of injury and also more representative because of a larger sample size. Both surveys gave adequate information on the type of injury (e.g. fall or road traffic accident). Unfortunately, neither of the two surveys provided complete data on the nature of the injury (e.g. fractured leg or head injury). Some information on the body part affected and additional information in the child survey on whether the injury concerned a fracture was available. To extrapolate from the limited survey information to estimate each of the 32 nature of injury categories we used patterns of occurrence of injury types from the Thai BoD study. For instance, of all victims of a road traffic accident in Thailand with an injury in the area of the face (the only information provided in the Viet Nam adult survey), 67% had a fracture of face bones, 22% a fractured skull and 11% an injury to the eye. We then applied those proportions to the Viet Nam survey data for road traffic injuries where the face was the body part affected. For each body part we made similar rules and borrowed detailed information from the Thai BoD study. DW and duration for long term and short term injury were adapted from the GBD study. 5. RESULTS 5.1. DEATHS AND LIFE EXPECTANCY In Viet Nam in 2008, the number of deaths was estimated at 541,228; 54% in males and 46% in females. The leading cause of death in both sexes was stroke (Table 2). Liver cancer and road traffic accident were the second and third leading causes in men while COPD and pneumonia ranked second and third in women. Hanoi School of Public Health Page 25 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Table 2. Top ten causes of death by sex Male Female Rank Disease category Deaths % Disease category Deaths % 1 Stroke 53,217 18% Stroke 56,771 23% 2 Liver cancer 19,915 7% COPD 14,941 6% 3 Road traffic accidents 17,330 6% Pneumonia 11,175 4% 4 Lung cancer 15,720 5% Ischemic heart disease 11,015 4% 5 COPD 14,355 5% Diabetes 9,858 4% 6 Ischemic heart disease 13,504 5% Liver cancer 8,587 3% 7 Tuberculosis 11,450 4% Lung cancers 7,869 3% 8 Pneumonia 9,470 3% Tuberculosis 6,798 3% 9 HIV/AIDS 9,417 3% Road traffic accidents 5,750 2% 10 Stomach cancer 8,469 3% Stomach cancer 5,470 2% Total 290,624 Total 250,605 Life expectancy at birth in 2008 was 69.7 years in men and 77.7 years in women. The crude death rate was 6.4 per 1,000. The probability of dying before age 5 was 15 per 1,000 in males and 12 per 1,000 in females. The probability of dying between ages 15 and 59 was 0.03 in males and 0.07 in females. 5.2. MORTALITY BURDEN IN VIETNAM (YLL) The total YLL in the Viet Nam population in 2008 amounted to 6.8 million years. Almost two thirds of YLL were due to non-communicable diseases (group II). Proportions of mortality burden of communicable diseases, maternal and neonatal conditions (group I) and injuries (group III) were both 16% of the total (Figure 3). Hanoi School of Public Health Page 26 The VINE Project 2010-2011 16% 16% Group I Group II Group III 68% Figure 3. YLL by major disease groups, Viet Nam 2008 Premature mortality resulted in 4.1 million YLL in men and 2.7 million YLL in women. The percentage of YLL in men and women varied by major disease groups. Group I conditions and injuries (group III) contributed a greater burden to the total YLL in men than that in women (Figure 4). 80% 75% Proprotion of total YLL 70% 64% 60% 50% 40% Male 30% 20% 17% Female 19% 14% 11% 10% 0% Group I Group II Group III Figure 4. YLL by sex and major disease groups, Viet Nam 2008 YLL by sex Cardiovascular diseases, cancer and unintentional injuries were the leading cause of premature death in men in 2008 (Figure 5). Infectious diseases also contributed a significant proportion to total YLL. The four categories combined accounted for 74% of YLL in men. Hanoi School of Public Health Page 27 The VINE Project 2010-2011 7% 2% 2% 2% Cardiovas cular diseases 24% Cancer 4% Unintentional injuries 4% Infectious diseases Digestive dis eases 6% Res piratory diseases Res piratory infections Intentional injuries 11% 21% Congenital anomalies Neuropsychiatric conditions Other 17% Figure 5. YLL by major disease categories in men, Viet Nam 2008 The pattern was similar in women. The leading causes of YLL in women were also cardiovascular diseases, cancers, unintentional injuries and infectious diseases. The four disease groups combined accounted for 69% of YLL in women (Figure 6). 10% Cardiovas cular dis eas es 2% Cancer 3% 31% 3% Unintentional injuries Infectious dis eases 4% Respiratory dis eases 4% Respiratory infections Diabetes mellitus 5% Digestive dis eases Neurops ychiatric conditions 7% Perinatal conditions 9% 22% Other Figure 6. YLL by major disease categories in women, Viet Nam 2008 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 28 The VINE Project 2010-2011 YLL by age Total YLL in men increased steadily from the lowest value in 5 to 14 age group to a peak in 45 to 59 age group (Figure 7). The pattern in women is similar but at lower values than seen in men (Figure 8). Injuries and infectious diseases largely affected the young while non-communicable diseases are the dominant disease group among the elderly. Millions 1.4 Group I Group II Group III Years of Life Lost 1.2 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 0-4 5-14 15-29 3044 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Age groups Figure 7. YLL by age and major disease groups in men, Viet Nam 2008 Millions Group I 1.4 Group II Group III Years of Life Lost 1.2 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 0-4 5-14 15-29 3044 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Age groups Figure 8. YLL by age and major disease groups in women, Viet Nam 2008 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 29 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Infectious diseases and perinatal conditions were the prominent causes of the mortality burden in Vietnamese children. Before age 45, unintentional injuries and infectious diseases were the leading causes for YLL in both sexes in Viet Nam. After this age, cancer and cardiovascular diseases were the major causes of YLL (Figures 9 and 10). Millions others 1.2 Neuropsychiatric conditions Years of Life Lost 1.0 Congenital anomalies 0.8 Intentional injuries Respiratory infections 0.6 Respiratory diseases 0.4 Digestive diseases 0.2 Infectious diseases Unintentional injuries 0.0 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Cancer Cardiovascular diseases Age groups Figure 9. YLL by age and disease categories in men, Viet Nam 2008 Millions 1.2 Others Perinatal conditions Years of Life Lost 1.0 Neuropsychiatric conditions 0.8 Digestive dis eases 0.6 Diabetes mellitus Respiratory infections 0.4 Respiratory diseases 0.2 Infectious diseases Unintentional injuries 0.0 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 Age groups 60-69 70-79 80+ Cancer Cardiovascular diseases Figure 10. YLL by age and disease categories in women, Viet Nam 2008 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 30 The VINE Project 2010-2011 YLL by cause The main conditions causing YLL in both men and women were stroke and road traffic accidents. It is noted that liver cancer and lung cancer were important causes of the fatal burden in men and women. Table 3. Top 10 causes of YLL by sex Male Rank Disease category YLL Female % Disease category YLL % Stroke 453,357 17% 1 Stroke 579,115 14% 2 Road traffic accidents 381,728 9% Road traffic accidents 121,629 4% 3 Liver cancer 300,877 7% Pneumonia 118,805 4% 4 HIV/AIDS 238,430 6% Liver cancer 117,215 4% 5 Lung cancer 201,595 5% Ischaemic heart disease 110,197 4% 6 Pneumonia 157,546 4% Diabetes mellitus 104,814 4% 7 Ischaemic heart disease 150,223 4% Lung cancer 97,558 4% 8 Tuberculosis 140,286 3% COPD 96,738 4% 9 COPD 118,716 3% Tuberculosis 83,496 3% 10 Drowning 118,503 3% Stomach cancer 71,878 3% 5.3. YEARS LOST DUE TO DISABILITY (YLD) Total of YLD in Viet Nam in 2008 amounted to 5.4 million years. Non-communicable diseases contributed almost three quarters of the disability burden. Group I conditions and injuries contributed to 10% and 15% of total YLD, respectively (Figure 11). 10% 15% Group I Group II Group III 75% Figure 11. YLD by major disease groups, Viet Nam 2008 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 31 The VINE Project 2010-2011 YLD by sex Non-communicable disease accounted for 69% of the total YLD in men and 80% of the total in women. Injuries contributed much more YLD in men than in women, 21% vs.10% of total YLD (Figure 12). 90% 80% 80% Proportion of the YLD 69% 70% 60% 50% Female 40% Male 30% 20% 21% 11% 10% 10% 10% 0% Group I Group II Group III Figure 12. YLD by sex and major disease groups, Viet Nam 2008 The leading causes of YLD were similar in men and women. Neuropsychiatric conditions were the leading causes of the illness burden (Figures 13 and 14). In men, unintentional injuries were the second main cause, followed by sense organ disorders (vision and hearing loss). In women, sense organ disorders were the second leading cause followed by musculoskeletal conditions. Hanoi School of Public Health Page 32 The VINE Project 2010-2011 9% 2% Neuropsychiatric conditions 3% Unintentional injuries 4% 33% Sense organ diseases Cardiovascular diseases 4% Respiratory diseases 5% Musculoskeletal diseases Nutritional deficiencies Infectious diseases 6% Diabetes mellitus Cancer 6% other 8% 20% Figure 13. YLD by major disease categories in men, Viet Nam 2008 2% 3% 5% Neuropsychiatric conditions 4% Sense organ diseases 4% Musculoskeletal diseases 5% 41% Unintentional injuries Nutritional deficiencies 6% Cardiovascular diseas es Diabetes mellitus Respiratory diseases 9% Infectious dis eas es Oral conditions 10% 11% other Figure 14. YLD by major disease categories in women, Viet Nam 2008 YLD by age The pattern of YLD of men and women by age in Viet Nam in 2008 was similar. Non communicable diseases dominated the majority of the disability burden in all age groups and YLD increased gradually with age until reaching a peak in the 30-44 age group (Figures 15 and 16). Hanoi School of Public Health Page 33 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Millions Years Live with Disabidity 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 Group III 0.4 Group II 0.3 Group I 0.2 0.1 0.0 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Age groups Figure 15. YLD by age and major disease groups in men, Viet Nam 2008 Millions Years Live with Disabidity 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 Group III 0.4 Group II 0.3 Group I 0.2 0.1 0.0 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Age groups Figure 16. YLD by age and major disease groups in women, Viet Nam 2008 Most YLD in both sexes were due to non-communicable diseases in almost all age groups. For males less than 5 years of age, YLD were mainly due to respiratory diseases and unintentional injuries. Over a third of the total burden in age group from 14 onwards was attributable to neuropsychiatric conditions and injuries. After age 60, YLD were mainly due Hanoi School of Public Health Page 34 The VINE Project 2010-2011 to neuropsychiatric conditions and respiratory diseases. Moreover, from age 30 to age 60, sense organ diseases also contributed significantly to the YLD in men (Figure 17). Millions Years Live with Disability 1.2 others Cancer 1.0 Diabetes mellitus 0.8 Infectious diseases Nutritional deficiencies 0.6 Musculoskeletal diseases 0.4 Respiratory diseases Cardiovascular diseases 0.2 Sense organ diseases 0.0 Unintentional injuries 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Neuropsychiatric conditions Age groups Figure 17. YLD by age and major disease categories in men, Viet Nam 2008 Similar to men, YLD in women were mainly due to neuropsychiatric conditions. Besides that sense organ diseases and musculoskeletal diseases were also the leading causes of YLD in women. In girls, neuropsychiatric conditions, unintentional injuries, nutritional disorders (largely anemia) and respiratory diseases (largely asthma) were the main causes of YLD. From age 15, neuropsychiatric conditions, sense organ disorders and musculoskeletal disease constituted the leading causes of the YLD among women (Figure 18). Millions Years Lived with Disability 1.2 Others 1.0 Oral conditions Infectious diseases 0.8 Respiratory diseases 0.6 Diabetes mellitus Cardiovascular diseases 0.4 Nutritional deficiencies Unintentional injuries 0.2 Musculoskeletal diseases Sense organ diseases 0.0 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Neuropsychiatric conditions Age groups Figure 18. YLD by age and major disease categories in women, Viet Nam 2008 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 35 The VINE Project 2010-2011 YLD by cause The leading specific cause of YLD in men was alcohol use disorders, followed by depression, road traffic accidents and vision loss. In women, depression was the leading cause of the YLD, followed by vision loss, osteoarthritis and anxiety disorders. COPD, falls, and drug use disorders appeared among the top ten causes of YLD in men but not in women while dementia, hearing loss and schizophrenia were top ten causes of YLD in women but not in men. Table 4. Top 10 causes of YLD by sex Male Rank Disease category YLD Female % Disease category YLD % 1 Alcohol use disorders 303,138 14% Depression 638,658 29% 2 Depression 237,014 11% Vision loss 223,711 10% 3 Road traffic accidents 177,909 8% Osteoarthritis 202,544 9% 4 Vision loss 164,032 8% Anxiety disorders 146,254 7% 5 Stroke 135,817 6% Dementia 129,578 6% 6 Osteoarthritis 120,839 6% Diabetes 114,855 5% 7 COPD 114,966 5% Stroke 109,144 5% 8 Falls 114,960 5% Road traffic accidents 91,075 4% 9 Drug use disorders 104,769 5% Schizophrenia 74,926 3% 10 Diabetes 77,749 4% Hearing loss 65,381 3% 5.4. DISABILITY ADJUSTED LIFE YEARS (DALYS) In 2008 the total BoD in Viet Nam amounted to 12.3 million DALYs. Non-communicable diseases were responsible for more than three-quarters of total disease burden. Injuries contributed to 16% of the total burden (Figure 19). Hanoi School of Public Health Page 36 The VINE Project 2010-2011 13% 16% Group I Group II Group III 71% Figure 19. DALYs by major disease groups, Viet Nam 2008 The burden due to premature death (YLL) in Vietnam 2008 is larger than the burden due to illness (YLD) (Figure 20). Millions Total 56% Female 50% 44% 50% YLL YLD Male 60% 0 2 40% 4 6 8 10 12 14 Proportion of the total DALYs Figure 20. YLL and YLD as proportion of total burden by sex, Viet Nam 2008 Neuropsychiatric conditions and cardiovascular disease were the leading cause groups for disease burden in Viet Nam in 2008, each responsible for 18% of total DALYs. Unintentional injuries and cancers ranked third and fourth, accounting for 14% and 13% of total DALYs, respectively (Figure 21). Hanoi School of Public Health Page 37 The VINE Project 2010-2011 11% Neuropsychiatric conditions 18% 3% Cardiovas cular diseas es 3% Unintentional injuries 4% Cancer Infectious diseases 4% Respiratory diseases 18% 5% Sense organ diseas es Musculos keletal dis eases 7% Respiratory infections Diabetes mellitus 13% Other 14% Figure 21. DALYs by major disease categories, Viet Nam 2008 DALYs by sex The total number of DALYs in men was 6.8 million and 4.5 million in women. Noncommunicable diseases were the main cause for the total BoD in both men (77%) and women (66%). The proportion of communicable diseases contributing to total DALYs in men and women was almost similar. The contribution of injuries to total DALYs in men was two times higher than that in women (Figure 22). Proportion of the total DALYs 90% 77% 80% 66% 70% 60% 50% 40% Female 30% 20% 20% 12% 14% Male 10% 10% 0% Group I Group II Group III Disease groups Figure 22. DALYs by sex and major disease groups, Viet Nam 2008 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 38 The VINE Project 2010-2011 In men, unintentional injuries were the leading cause of BoD contributing 18% of total DALYs. Cardiovascular disease was responsible for 17% of the total, followed by neuropsychiatric conditions and cancers both contributing 14% to the total. Together, these four disease groups contributed approximately two thirds of the total BoD (Figure 23). The leading cause of BoD in women was neuropsychiatric conditions (22%), followed by cardiovascular diseases (18%), and then cancer and unintentional injuries (both 12%). Together, the top four disease categories were responsible for two thirds of all DALYs in women (Figure 24). 12% Unintentional injuries 18% 2% Cardiovascular diseases 3% Neuropsychiatric conditions 3% Cancer 4% Infectious diseases 5% 17% Respiratory diseases Digestive diseases Sense organ diseases 8% Respiratory infections Musculoskeletal diseases 14% 14% other Figure 23. DALYs by major disease categories in men, Viet Nam 2008 13% Neuropsychiatric conditions 22% Cardiovascular diseases 3% Cancer 4% Unintentional injuries Musculoskeletal diseases 4% Sense organ diseases 5% Infectious diseases Respiratory diseases 18% 5% Diabetes m ellitus Nutritional deficiencies 5% other 9% 12% Figure 24. DALYs by major disease categories in women, Viet Nam 2008 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 39 The VINE Project 2010-2011 DALY by age The lowest burden was experienced in the age group 5 to 14. After that the BoD in men increased gradually with age, peaking in the 45 to 59 age group. The total BoD in early childhood was predominantly due to communicable diseases. After age 15, noncommunicable diseases were leading causes though injuries also contributed significantly to the BoD at ages 15 to 59 (Figure 25). Millions Disability Adjusted Life Years 1.8 1.6 1.4 1.2 Group III 1.0 Group II 0.8 Group I 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Age groups Figure 25. DALYs by age and major disease groups in men, Viet Nam 2008 Before age of 14, the burden rose gradually with age groups in women. After that, the BoD in women peaked again at age 79 due to non-communicable diseases (Figure 26). Hanoi School of Public Health Page 40 The VINE Project 2010-2011 1.2 Millions Disability Adjusted Life Years Group III 1.0 Group II Group I 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 Age groups 60-69 70-79 80+ Figure 26. DALYs by age and major disease groups in women, Viet Nam 2008 Infectious and parasitic diseases were the main causes of the burden in males under 15 of age. Between ages 15 and 44 unintentional injuries and neuropsychiatric conditions dominated the BoD in men. Cardiovascular disease and cancer were the main causes of burden in older men (Figure 27). Disability Adjusted Life Years 1.8 Millions others 1.6 Musculoskeletal diseases 1.4 Respiratory infections 1.2 Sense organ diseases 1.0 Digestive diseases 0.8 Respiratory diseases 0.6 0.4 Infectious diseases 0.2 Cancer 0.0 Neuropsychiatric conditions 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 Age groups 60-69 70-79 80+ Cardiovascular diseases Unintentional injuries Figure 27. DALYs by age and major disease categories in men, Viet Nam 2008 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 41 The VINE Project 2010-2011 The pattern of the burden in women under 45 years of age was different to men. Unintentional injuries were the main cause in young girls. Neuropsychiatric conditions and injuries were the most important causes of burden in young adult women. Similar to older men, cardiovascular Disability Adjusted Life Years disease and cancer contributed most to the burden in older women (Figure 28). 1.2 Millions Others Nutritional deficiencies 1.0 Diabetes mellitus 0.8 Respiratory diseases Infectious diseases 0.6 Sense organ diseases 0.4 Musculoskeletal diseases 0.2 Unintentional injuries Cancer 0.0 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 Age groups 60-69 70-79 80+ Cardiovascular diseases Neuropsychiatric conditions Figure 28. DALYs by age and major disease categories in women, Viet Nam 2008 DALYs by cause Stroke was the leading cause of DALYs in men, contributing 10% of total burden. For women, depression was the leading cause of the burden, accounting for 12% of total burden. Road traffic accidents, alcohol use disorders, liver cancer and HIV/AIDS were the next main causes in men. Stroke, vision loss, diabetes and road traffic accidents were the next causes in women (Table 5). The top ten causes in both men and women were responsible for just under half of the total BoD. Hanoi School of Public Health Page 42 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Table 5. Top 10 causes of DALYs by sex Male Rank Disease category 1 Female DALYs % Stroke 714,931 10% 2 Road traffic accidents 559,637 3 Alcohol use disorders 4 Disease category DALYs % Depression 638,658 12% 8% Stroke 562,501 10% 315,841 5% Vision loss 223,711 4% Liver cancer 312,804 5% Diabetes 219,669 4% 5 HIV/AIDS 285,748 4% Road traffic accidents 212,704 4% 6 Depression 237,014 3% Osteoarthritis 209,452 4% 7 COPD 227,957 3% Anxiety disorders 146,254 3% 8 Lung cancer 214,804 3% Pneumonia 146,202 3% 9 Falls 185.372 3% COPD 143,410 3% 10 Pneumonia 183,475 3% Dementia 143,258 3% 5.5. AGE AND SEX PATTERNS OF DISEASE BURDEN Children aged 0-14 years In 2008 the total BoD in children 0-14 years in Viet Nam was 1.3 million DALYs, accounting for 11% of the total BoD. Unintentional injuries, congenital anomalies and respiratory disease combined were responsible for half of the total of the burden in this age group (Figure 29). 2% 6% 5% Unintentional injuries 22% Congenital anomalies 8% Respiratory infections Perinatal conditions Neuropsychiatric conditions 8% Respiratory diseases 16% Nutritional deficiencies Infectious dis eases 9% Sens e organ diseases 11% 13% Other Figure 29. DALYs by major disease categories in the 0-14 age group, Viet Nam 2008 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 43 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Congenital anomalies and perinatal conditions were the leading specific causes of BoD in children, followed by pneumonia and nutritional deficiencies. In addition, many types of injuries such as drowning, fall and road traffic accidents appeared as the main causes of BoD in children (Table 6). Table 6. Top 10 causes of DALYs among children below 15 years of age in both sexes Rank Disease category Both sexes DALYs % 1 Pneumonia 150,228 11% 2 Drownings 89,853 7% 3 Falls 51,953 4% 4 Road traffic accidents 37,009 3% 5 Epilepsy 23,073 2% 6 Hearing loss 19,718 1% 7 Diarrhea 16,639 1% 8 Depression 15,983 1% 9 Anxiety disorders 15,142 1% 10 Vision loss 8,450 1% Males and Females aged 15 to 44 years In men aged between 15 and 44 unintentional injuries were the leading BoD cause and neuropsychiatric conditions ranked second. These two disease groups contributed about half of the total BoD in this age range. Infectious diseases and cardiovascular diseases were responsible for one fifth of total BoD in males of this age group. In women of a similar age group, neuropsychiatric conditions, unintentional injuries, infectious diseases, and intentional injuries were the leading causes of the BoD (Figures 30 and 31). Hanoi School of Public Health Page 44 The VINE Project 2010-2011 3% 6% 3% 3% 28% Unintentional injuries Neuropsychiatric conditions 3% Infectious diseases 3% Cardiovascular diseases Cancer 7% Intentional injuries Respiratory diseases Musculoskeletal diseases 7% Digestive diseases Sense organ diseases Other 23% 14% Figure 30. DALYs by major disease categories in the 15-44 age group in men, Viet Nam 2008 8% 2% 3% Neuropsychiatric conditions 4% Unintentional injuries Infectious diseases 4% 40% Musculoskeletal diseases Cancer 4% Sense organ diseases Cardiovascular diseases 7% Nutritional deficiencies Diabetes m ellitus Intentional injuries 7% Other 8% 13% Figure 31. DALYs by major disease categories in the 15-44 age group in women, Viet Nam 2008 Road traffic accidents were the leading specific cause of BoD in men aged 15 to 44, contributing 15% of the total of the burden. The next leading causes, HIV and alcohol use disorders, combined, and accounted for 17% of the total of the burden. For women, depression was the leading specific cause in this age group, responsible for 24% of the total burden, followed by road traffic accidents (8%) and anxiety disorders (7%). HIV/AIDS ranks second in men, whilst it ranks seventh in women. Liver cancer, falls and drug use disorders were top-ten causes of BoD in men of this age group but not in women. Conversely, anxiety disorders, vision loss and diabetes were among top-ten BoD causes in women but not in men (Table 7). Hanoi School of Public Health Page 45 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Table 7. Top 10 causes of DALYs by sex in the 15-44 age group Male Rank Disease category Female DALYs % Disease category DALYs % 1 Road traffic accidents 384,885 15% Depression 383,971 24% 2 HIV/AIDS 269,592 10% Road traffic accidents 124,518 8% 3 Alcohol use disorders 191,147 7% Anxiety disorders 106,526 7% 4 Depression 149,309 6% Osteoarthritis 100,193 6% 5 Stroke 130,827 5% Schizophrenia 65,575 4% 6 Drug use disorders 106,600 4% Vision loss 60,503 4% 7 Falls 87,370 3% HIV/AIDS 52,278 3% 8 Liver cancer 68,872 3% Diabetes 42,633 3% 9 Schizophrenia 67,610 3% Stroke 37,838 2% 10 Osteoarthritis 65,382 2% Tuberculosis 34,502 2% Males and females aged 45 – 69 years Cancer contributed 23% of the total burden in men and 18% of the total burden in women aged 45 to 69 years. Cardiovascular diseases were the second leading cause in women and the third leading cause of the BoD in men. Neuropsychiatric disorders were the leading cause group in women in this age group, responsible for 19% of the total burden, but ranked third in men accounting for 11% of the total BoD (Figures 32 and 33). 8% 3% 23% 3% Cancer Cardiovascular diseases 4% Neuropsychiatric conditions 5% Unintentional injuries Digestive diseases Respiratory diseases 5% Sens e organ dis eases Infectious diseases 5% Congenital anom alies 22% Diabetes m ellitus other 11% 11% Figure 32. DALYs by major disease categories in 45-69 age groups in men, Viet Nam 2008 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 46 The VINE Project 2010-2011 8% 2% 3% 19% 3% Neuropsychiatric conditions Cancer 6% Cardiovascular diseases Sense organ diseases Unintentional injuries 8% Congenital anomalies 18% Diabetes m ellitus Respiratory diseases Infectious diseases 8% Digestive diseases Other 8% 17% Figure 33: DALYS by major disease categories in the 45-69 age group in women, Viet Nam 2008 Stroke was the leading specific cause of BoD in both men and women in this age bracket. The next three leading causes were liver cancer, road traffic accidents and lung cancer in men, and COPD, lung cancer, and ischemic heart disease in women (Table 8). Table 8. Top 10 causes of DALYs by sex in the 45-69 age group Rank Disease category Male DALYs % Disease category 14% Depression Female DALYs % 220,731 13% 1 Stroke 343,396 2 Liver cancer 191,497 8% Stroke 156,548 9% 3 Road traffic accidents 139,243 6% Vision loss 107,214 6% 4 Lung cancer 127,657 5% Diabetes 100,593 6% 5 Alcohol use disorders 122,931 5% Osteoarthritis 97,719 6% 6 COPD 86,819 4% Liver cancer 68,525 4% 7 Ischaemic heart disease 86,406 4% Road traffic injuries 63,393 4% 8 Vision loss 83,144 3% Ischaemic heart disease 59,551 3% 9 Depression 76,381 3% Dementia 52,119 3% 10 Diabetes 71,417 3% Lung cancer 49,956 3% Adults aged 70+ years Total burden at ages 70 and above was almost 2.5 million DALYs. Women accounted for 58% of the total of the DALYs in this age group. Cardiovascular diseases were the leading Hanoi School of Public Health Page 47 The VINE Project 2010-2011 cause group in both sexes, contributing 40% to total BoD at this age. Cancers were the next leading cause group, followed by neuropsychiatric disorders in women and respiratory disease in men (see Figures 34 and 35). 2% 2% 5% Cardiovascular diseases 3% Cancer 4% Respiratory diseases 4% 40% 5% Infectious and parasitic diseases Neuropsychiatric conditions Digestive diseases Unintentional injuries 5% Diabetes m ellitus Sense organ diseases 10% Respiratory infections other 20% Figure 34. DALYs by major disease categories at ages 70+ in men, Viet Nam 2008 7% Cardiovascular diseases 3% 3% Cancer 4% Neuropsychiatric conditions 4% 40% Respiratory diseases Diabetes mellitus 5% Sense organ diseases Infectious and parasitic diseases 5% Respiratory infections 7% Unintentional injuries Digestive diseases 9% 13% Other Figure 35. DALYs by disease categories at ages 70+ in women, Vietnam 2008 Stroke was the leading cause for both older men and women (Table 9), responsible for 22% of total BoD in men and 24% in women respectively. Other cardiovascular diseases also ranked second in both sexes. COPD, lung cancer, and IHD were the next three leading causes in older men while dementia, COPD and diabetes held that position in women. Hanoi School of Public Health Page 48 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Table 9. Top 10 causes of DALYs by sex in the 70+ age group Rank Male Disease category Disease category DALYs % Stroke Female DALYs % 367,039 24% 1 Stroke 234,042 22% 2 COPD 80,255 8% Dementia 91,139 6% 3 Lung cancer 60,332 6% COPD 82,857 5% 4 Ischaemic heart disease 57,927 5% Diabetes 76,443 5% 5 Liver cancer 51,568 5% Ischaemic heart disease 61,082 4% 6 Tuberculosis 41,848 4% Pneumonia 52,691 3% 7 Stomach cancer 34,920 3% Vision loss 52,359 3% 8 Diabetes 32,774 3% Lung cancer 39,027 3% 9 Dementia 28,758 3% Liver cancer 36,471 2% 10 Pneumonia 25,360 2% Tuberculosis 32,762 2% 5.6. SPECIFIC DISEASE AND INJURY CATEGORIES Most of the burden of cancer, cardiovascular disease, unintentional injuries, infectious and parasitic diseases was due to premature deaths. In contrast, the burden of sense organ disease, mental disorder and, musculoskeletal disease was mainly caused by disability (Figure 36). Other Diabetes mellitus Respiratory infections Musculoskeletal diseases Sense organ diseases Respiratory diseases YLL Infectious diseases YLD Cancer Unintentional injuries Cardiovascular diseases Neuropsychiatric conditions 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35% 40% 45% % of the total DALYs Figure 36. YLL and YLD by major disease categories, Viet Nam 2008 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 49 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Infectious and respiratory diseases Overall, the BoD caused by infectious diseases was higher in men than in women. DALYs caused by HIV/AIDS in men were four times higher than in women. The burden of pneumonia was similar in both sexes (Figure 37). Other respiratory infectious Upper respiratory infectious Pneumonia Other infectious disease Male Female Diarrhoea HIV/AIDS TB 0% 1% 2% 3% 4% 5% % of the total DALYs Figure 27. The burden of specific infectious diseases by sex, Viet Nam 2008 Figure 38 presents the rate of disease burden as DALYs per 100,000. Pneumonia was the main cause of the respiratory infection burden in young boys. In the next age range, HIV/AIDS was the leading cause. The majority of the burden rate caused by infectious diseases in men at age 60 years (and above) was due to TB. Pneumonia and upper respiratory infections were important burden causes from age 70 onward. Hanoi School of Public Health Page 50 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Thousands DALYs per 100000 population 12 Other respiratory infectious 10 Upper respiratory infectious 8 Pneumonia 6 Other infectious disease Diarrhoea 4 HIV/AIDS 2 TB 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Age groups Figure 38. DALY rates (per 100,000 populations) for infectious diseases by age in men, Viet Nam 2008 Similar to men, the rate of the burden of infectious disease in women was dominated by pneumonia in 0 to 4 and 70+ age groups (Figure 39). In early childhood, pneumonia made up the bulk of the rate of burden. In adulthood, besides pneumonia, TB was the main cause for a sharp rise in the rate of the burden. HIV/AIDS also contributed to the increase with age in the burden rate. Thousands DALYs per 100000 population 14 Other respiratory infectious 12 Upper respiratory infectious 10 Pneumonia 8 Other infectious disease 6 Diarrhoea 4 HIV/AIDS 2 TB 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Age groups Figure 39. DALY rates (per 100,000 populations) for infectious diseases in women, Viet Nam 2008 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 51 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Cancer The pattern of the burden of cancer differs between men and women. It was higher in men for most cancers. This is particularly the case for lung, liver and mouth cancer, which were almost twice as common in men. However, some cancers that exist common in women such as ovary, uterus and breast cancer, also show significant percentages (Figure 40). Other malignant neoplasms Leukaemia Lymphomas, multiple myeloma Bladder cancer Prostate cancer Ovary cancer Uterus cancer Breast cancer Male Melanoma and other skin cancers Female Lung cancer Pancreas cancer Liver cancer Bowel cancer Stomach cancer Oesophagus cancer Mouth and oropharynx cancers 0.0% 0.5% 1.0% 1.5% 2.0% 2.5% 3.0% 3.5% 4.0% 4.5% 5.0% % of the total DALYs Figure 40. DALYs by sex of specific cancers, Viet Nam 2008 The DALY rate for cancer increased steadily with age, up until 70 years, before declining. Stomach, liver, and lung were the most common cancer types in both men and women (Figure 41 and 42). Hanoi School of Public Health Page 52 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Other malignant neoplasms Thousands Leukaemia 16 Lymphomas, multiple myeloma 14 DALYs per 100000 population Bladder cancer 12 Prostate cancer 10 Breast cancer Melanoma and other skin cancers 8 Lung cancer 6 Pancreas cancer 4 Liver cancer Bowel cancer 2 Stomach cancer - Oesophagus cancer 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Mouth and oropharynx cancers Age groups Figure 41. DALY rates per 100,000 population for specific cancers in men, Viet Nam 2008 Thousands Other malignant neoplasms 10 Leukaemia DALYs per 100000 population 9 Lymphomas, multiple myeloma 8 Bladder cancer 7 Ovary cancer 6 Uterus cancer Breast cancer 5 Melanoma and other skin cancers 4 Lung cancer 3 Pancreas cancer 2 Liver cancer Bowel cancer 1 Stomach cancer 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 Age groups 60-69 70-79 80+ Oesophagus cancer Mouth and oropharynx cancers Figure 42. DALY rates per 100,000 population for specific cancers in women, Viet Nam 2008 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 53 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Diabetes Mellitus The burden of diabetes mellitus amounted to 358,000 DALYs with a greater burden in women than in men (Figures 43). Disability was the cause of 46% of DALYs from diabetes. Male Male Female Female 0% 1% 2% 3% 4% 5% % of the total DALYs Figure 43. DALYs for diabetes by sex, Viet Nam 2008 DALY rates rose gradually to a peak at about 3.8 per 100,000 population in the 60-69 age group in both sexes (Figures 44 and 45). Thousands DALYs per 100000 population 4.0 3.0 2.0 Diabetes 1.0 0.0 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Age groups Figure 44. DALY rates per 100,000 population for diabetes by age in men, Viet Nam 2008 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 54 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Thousands DALYs per 100000 population 9.0 8.0 7.0 6.0 5.0 Diabetes 4.0 3.0 2.0 1.0 0.0 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Age groups Figure 45. DALY rates per 100,000 population for diabetes by age in women, Viet Nam 2008 Neuropsychiatric disorders In 2008, neuropsychiatric disorders contributed more than 2.1 million DALYs to the BoD in Viet Nam. Overall, the burden of mental disorders in women was higher than in men due to a higher burden of depression, anxiety, dementia, and schizophrenia. Drug use disorder and alcohol use disorder caused a greater burden in men than in women (Figure 46). Other neuropsychiatric disorders Drug use disorders Dementia Alcohol use disorders Male Epilepsy Female Schizophrenia Anxiety disorders Depression 0% 2% 4% 6% 8% 10% 12% 14% % of the total DALYs Figure 46. DALYs by sex of specific neuropsychiatric disorders, Viet Nam 2008 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 55 The VINE Project 2010-2011 DALY rates for neuropsychiatric disorders in males rose sharply from age 5 to age 44. After that, there was a plateau in rates during ages 45 to 60 years. In young and middle aged adult men, alcohol abuse disorder dominated the BoD, followed by depression. Dementia made the largest contribution to the BoD in men over age 60 (Figure 47). Thousands 10 Other neuropsychiatric disorders DALYs per 100000 population 9 8 Drug use disorders 7 Dementia 6 Alcohol use disorders 5 4 Epilepsy 3 Schizophrenia 2 Anxiety disorders 1 Depression 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Age groups Figure 47. DALY rates per 100,000 populations of mental disorders in men, Viet Nam 2008 DALY rates in women were higher compared to those in men (2739 vs. 2349 per 100,000) despite having low rates of alcohol and drug use disorders. It increased steadily to a peak at the oldest age group. This increase in the elderly was mainly due to dementia. Depression was the greatest contributor to BoD at ages 15 and 60 years (Figure 48). Thousands 10 Other neuropsychiatric disorders DALYs per 100000 population 9 Drug use disorders 8 7 Dementia 6 Alcohol use disorders 5 Epilepsy 4 3 Schizophrenia 2 Anxiety disorders 1 Depression 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Age groups Figure 48. DALY rates per 100,000 population for mental disorders in women, Viet Nam 2008 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 56 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Sense organ diseases Overall, the burden of vision loss and hearing loss in women was higher than in men (Figure 49). Hearing loss Male Female Vision loss 0% 1% 2% 3% 4% 5% % of the total DALYs Figure 49. DALYs by sex of sense organ diseases, Viet Nam 2008 Overall, the pattern of DALY rates for hearing loss and vision loss were similar in men and women. During childhood, DALY rates reached a peak at ages 5 to 14 followed by a small dip in early adulthood in both sexes, and then a steep rise with age. The contribution to the burden of vision loss was much greater than that of hearing loss (Figures 50 and 51). DALYs per 100000 population 2,500 2,000 1,500 Hearing loss 1,000 Vision loss 500 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Age groups Figure 50. DALY rates per 100,000 populations for sense organ diseases by age in men, Viet Nam 2008 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 57 The VINE Project 2010-2011 DALYs per 100000 population 3,500 3,000 2,500 Other sense organ disorders 2,000 1,500 Hearing loss 1,000 Vision loss 500 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Age groups Figure 51. DALY rates per 100,000 population for sense organ diseases by age in women, Viet Nam 2008 Cardiovascular disease In Viet Nam in 2008, cardiovascular disease was one of the largest contributors to the total BoD. The contribution of stroke and IHD to the total cardiovascular disease burden was similar among men and women while other cardiovascular diseases among men made up a greater proportion (Figure 52). Other cardiovascular diseases Stroke Male Female Ischaemic heart disease 0% 2% 4% 6% 8% 10% 12% % of the total DALYs Figure 52. DALYs by sex of cardiovascular diseases, Vietnam 2008 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 58 The VINE Project 2010-2011 DALY rates for cardiovascular diseases increased with age in both sexes with stroke being the dominant cause of burden (Figures 53 and 54). Thousands DALYs per 100000 population 40 Other cardiovascular diseases 30 Stroke 20 Ischaemic heart disease 10 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 Age groups 80+ Figure 53. DALY rates per 100,000 population for cardiovascular diseases in men by age, Viet Nam 2008 Thousands DALYs per 100000 population 40 Other cardiovascular diseases 30 Stroke 20 Ischaemic heart disease 10 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 Age groups 60-69 70-79 80+ Figure 54. DALY rates per 100,000 population for cardiovascular diseases by age in women, Viet Nam 2008 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 59 The VINE Project 2010-2011 COPD Compared to women, men made a greater contribution to the total burden due to COPD (Figure 55). The number of DALYs, caused by COPD was also higher in men. Other respiratory diseases Male Female COPD 0% 1% 1% 2% 2% 3% 3% 4% % of the total DALYs Figure 55. The burden of disease of respiratory diseases by sex, Viet Nam 2008 DALY rates for COPD and other respiratory disease increased steadily with age in men and women (Figures 56 and 57). Thousands Other respiratory diseases DALYs per 100000 population 12 10 COPD 8 6 4 2 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Age groups Figure 56. DALY rates per 100,000 population for respiratory diseases by age in men, Viet Nam 2008 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 60 The VINE Project 2010-2011 DALYs per 100000 population Thousands 12 Other respiratory diseases 10 8 COPD 6 4 2 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Age groups Figure 57. DALY rates per 100,000 population for specific respiratory diseases by age in women, Viet Nam 2008 Musculoskeletal disorders The contribution of osteoarthritis to the total burden in women was about two times higher than in men (4% vs. 2%) (Figure 58). DALY rates per 100,000 population among women were also almost doubled that among men (Figure 59, 60). Other musculoskeletal disorders Male Female Osteoarthritis 0% 1% 2% 3% 4% 5% % of the total DALYs Figure 58. The burden of musculoskeletal disorders by sex, Viet Nam 2008 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 61 The VINE Project 2010-2011 DALYs per 100000 population 1,500 Other musculoskeletal disorders 1,200 900 Osteoarthritis 600 300 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Age group Figure 59. DALY rates per 100,000 population by age for musculoskeletal diseases in men, Viet Nam 2008 DALYs per 100000 population 3,000 2,500 2,000 Other musculoskeletal disorders 1,500 1,000 Osteoarthritis 500 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Age group Figure 60. DALY rates per 100,000 population by age for musculoskeletal diseases in women, Viet Nam 2008 Injuries Unintentional injuries DALYs due to unintentional injuries were 2.5 times higher in men than in women (1.229 vs. 505). Road traffic accidents contributed most to the unintentional injury burden, with about 4% Hanoi School of Public Health Page 62 The VINE Project 2010-2011 in women and 8% in men. Falls and drowning were two other significant causes in both sexes (Figure 61). Unintentional injuries were among the leading causes of the BoD (14% of total burden) (Figure 62). The largest proportion of the burden for unintentional injuries was from premature death, particularly for road traffic accidents, drowning and poisoning. Other unintentional injuries Drownings Fires Falls Male Female Poisonings Road traffic accidents 0% 1% 2% 3% 4% 5% 6% 7% 8% 9% % of the total DALYs Figure 61. DALYs by sex of specific unintentional injuries, Viet Nam 2008 Other unintentional injuries Drownings Fires YLL Falls YLD Poisonings Road traffic accidents 000 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 Thousands Disability adjusted of Life Years Figure 62. The fatal and non-fatal burden of disease of unintentional injuries, Viet Nam 2008 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 63 The VINE Project 2010-2011 DALY rates in men for unintentional injuries showed a peak in young adults. In women the rates peaked in young adults and again in the elderly. Drowning was the most common cause of burden in young children of both sexes. Between ages 15 and 69 road traffic accidents dominated the DALY rates of both sexes. From age 70 years onwards falls are the largest cause of burden (Figures 63 and 64). Notably, from age 60, the rates of burden due to injuries in women increased steadily while the rates in men declined gradually. DALYs per 100000 population 4,500 Other unintentional injuries 4,000 3,500 Drownings 3,000 2,500 Fires 2,000 Falls 1,500 1,000 Poisonings 500 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Road traffic accidents Age groups Figure 63. DALY rates per 100,000 populations by age for unintentional injuries in men, Viet Nam 2008 DALYs per 100000 population 3,000 Other unintentional injuries 2,500 Drownings 2,000 Fires 1,500 1,000 Falls 500 Poisonings 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Road traffic accidents Age groups Figure 64. DALY rates per 100,000 populations by age for unintentional injuries in women, Viet Nam 2008 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 64 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Intentional injuries Intentional injuries contributed 1.5% to the total BoD in Viet Nam. Suicide was responsible for most of the burden caused by this category (Figure 65). Violence Male Female Suicide 0% 0% 0% 1% 1% 1% 1% % of the total DALYs Figure 65. DALYs by sex of intentional injuries, Viet Nam 2008 Similar to unintentional injuries, the burden in males was higher than that for females for both causes of intentional injuries (Figures 66 and 67). DALY rates for intentional injuries peaked in young adults and the elderly. DALYs per 100000 population 450 400 350 300 250 200 Violence 150 Suicide 100 50 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Age groups Figure 66. DALY rates per 100,000 population by age for intentional injuries in men, Viet Nam 2008 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 65 The VINE Project 2010-2011 DALYs per 100000 population 400 350 300 250 200 Violence 150 Suicide 100 50 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Age groups Figure 67. DALY rates per 100,000 population by age for intentional injuries in women, Viet Nam 2008 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 66 The VINE Project 2010-2011 DISCUSSION This study is significant: it is the first-ever attempt to provide a comprehensive estimate of the patterns of the BoD and injury in Viet Nam. The results are based on the pool of data on mortality, non-fatal health outcomes, and injury that was available for more than 50 disease and injury categories in a single measurement (DALYs) of the population’s health status. Study findings constitute a valuable source of information to aid decision making and priority setting in healthcare in the country. The mortality estimates were derived from national VA studies, which allowed for the first time an understanding of the full picture of causes of death. Attention given to accurate cause of death data hopefully will lead to improvements in the death-certification process. Ultimately, this should reduce the need for specific data collections in the future, such as through VA study. A large number of estimates describing the epidemiology of the main diseases in Viet Nam are now available, including incidence, prevalence, severity distribution and the risk of disabling sequelae. These estimates will be very useful for health planners and policy makers. For example, the prevalence figures in combination with health service usage figures can give an indication of the coverage of health services. In turn, this will highlight which health problems of Viet Nam may require more investment into health infrastructure and service provision (and types of service provision). The disease burden of Vietnam in 2008 was dominated by non-communicable diseases causing 70% of health loss. Injuries were responsible for 16% and the remainder was due to communicable diseases, maternal and neonatal conditions. Cardiovascular diseases, particularly stroke, and unintentional injuries, especially road traffic accidents, were major leading causes of burden among adult populations, whereas pneumonia was the leading cause among children. This pattern of disease burden implies that efforts need to be made to prevent emergent non-communicable diseases and injury while measures to control infectious diseases remain important. The use of DALYs as a summary measure of the population health allows meaningful comparisons of health loss caused by different diseases, taking into account fatal and non-fatal health outcomes. Thus, largely non-fatal health outcomes such as mental Hanoi School of Public Health Page 67 The VINE Project 2010-2011 disorders, musculoskeletal disorders and sense organ disorders become apparent as large health problems while with the traditional mortality-based measures they would have been ignored. This information is of further import given it re-focuses public health attention on the contribution chronic diseases have on the overall BoD in Viet Nam, with further implications for national health policy, planning and health promotion. Data quality Findings from this study should be interpreted in conjunction with its limitations. First, death reporting was found to be incomplete with substantial variations among different regions throughout the country, particularly concerning deaths among children under 5 years of age. We relied on a 2008 life table for Viet Nam generated for the Global Burden of Disease, update of which is currently being conducted by the University of Washington, Harvard University, The University of Queensland, the World Health Organization and Johns Hopkins University. The life table was created based on a statistical model of available mortality data by country and year. As there was little data from Viet Nam contributing to this statistical model, there is uncertainty about the validity of the estimates. Second, causes of death were based on the VA method. While this is deemed an acceptable alternative in the absence of a valid vital registration system as is the case in Viet Nam, its shortcomings in determining cause of death should be considered. VA studies ought not to be a long term strategy to collect information on causes of death that are vital to health planning. The ultimate goal has to be to improve the vital registration system. This will require collaboration between the ministries and local government who are currently involved in mortality data collection systems at the commune level. A single registration system would need to be created at local level that pools and corrects all information and provides an electronic record of each death with details on age, sex, cause, place and date of death, and area of residence. Third, data for non-fatal health outcomes were largely based on surveys of varying quality. For mental disorders and diabetes there were major inconsistencies or implausible consistency of age-specific estimates between successive surveys conducted in 2006 and 2008. Access to unit record data of surveys, apart from the national surveys conducted by Hanoi School of Public Health Page 68 The VINE Project 2010-2011 the General Statistics Office is restricted and makes it difficult to make a judgment on the quality of the data collected. As all of these surveys are funded by public or donor funds, it is advisable that Government regulates that all survey unit record data files are submitted to a national health survey data warehouse and be made available to bona fide researchers leaving a reasonable amount of time following data collection (e.g. two years) to allow the primary researchers time to publish data. Incomplete information on hospitalizations (limitations of a largely paper-based recording system of tabulations, e.g. lack of detail by age, sex and cause; as yet, incomplete coverage of electronic records) meant we had to rely on additional information from the more detailed hospital registration system in Thailand. Table 10 (located on the following page) indicates the major quality issues for the main diseases. For the calculation of the YLD from injuries we had limited data about the nature of injuries from the injury surveys, indicating the location of the injury but not the type. We recommend that in future injury survey greater detail on the nature of injuries is collected. Despite limitations, this study can be considered as ground work for future BoD and mortality investigations in Viet Nam. It also highlighted the weaknesses of available data collection systems as well as the needs for strengthening the existing health information system in the country. While there is considerable uncertainty around input data for the DALYs estimates, results are considered a reasonable overall picture of health problems for Viet Nam to aid health policy making. It certainly is a major improvement over having a collection of disparate health statistics of unknown validity and completeness. However, there is considerable scope to improve the accuracy of these estimates if routine data collection systems and surveys can be improved based on the recommendations in this report. Hanoi School of Public Health Page 69 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Table 10. Data sources for prevalence and incidence and quality issues for the main diseases Data source Diseases Issues Hospital data IHD, stroke • incomplete coverage • only two age groups: <5 and 5+ • Assumed full coverage of TB cases in contact with health services • Unknown undetected cases of TB • HIV/AIDS estimates from good quality modeling study • Good surveys but incomplete information on nature of injuries • Inconsistencies in child estimates between surveys • Incomplete coverage • Coverage varies between register sites • Inconsistency between incidence and mortality estimates • Representative, good quality self report data mental disorders • No unit record data available dementia • No information on severity epilepsy • Sudden large increase in prevalence of depression between mental health surveys of 2008 and 2006 • Implausible replication of age and sex patterns between successive surveys • Viet Nam part of survey • Good quality study • Good quality study Disease notifications TB HIV/AIDS Injury surveys Cancer register National Health Survey injuries cancers diarrhea respiratory infections hearing loss vision loss Mental Health Survey Multi country survey COPD survey Osteoarthritis COPD Hanoi School of Public Health Page 70 The VINE Project 2010-2011 REFERENCE 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 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Diseases and injury categories and ICD-10 Diseases and injuries ICD-10 Code I Communicable, maternal, perinatal and nutritional A00-B99, G00-G02, N70-N73, J00-J06, J10J18, J20-J22, H65-H66, O00-O99, P00-P99, E00-E02, E40-E46, E50, D50-D53, 55-D57, D80D89 A Infectious and parasitic diseases A00-B99, G00, N70-N73 1 Tuberculosis A15-A19, B90 2 HIV B20-B24 3 Diarrheal diseases A00-A04, A06-A09 B Respiratory infections J00-J06, J10-J18, J20-J22, H65-H66 1 Lower respiratory infections J10-J22 2 Upper respiratory infections J00-J06 3 Otitis media H65-H66 C Maternal conditions O00-O99 D Conditions arising during the perinatal period P00-P99 E Nutritional deficiencies E00-E02, E40-E46, E51-E64, D50-D53 II Non-communicable diseases C00-C97, D00-D48, D55-D80, E03-E07, E10E16, E20-E34, E65-E89, F00-F99, G03-G99, H00-H61, H68-H95, I00-I99, J30-J99, K00-K99, N00-N64, N75-N99, L00-L99, M00-M99, Q00Q99 A Malignant neoplasms C00-C97 1 Mouth and oropharynx cancers C00-C14 2 Oesophagus cancer C15 3 Stomach cancer C16 4 Colon and rectum cancers C18-C21 5 Liver cancer C22 6 Pancreas cancer C25 7 Trachea, bronchus and lung cancers C33-C34 8 Melanoma and other skin cancers C43-C44 9 Breast cancer C50 10 Cervix uteri cancer C53 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 76 The VINE Project 2010-2011 11 Corpus uteri cancer C54 12 Ovary cancer C56 13 Prostate cancer C61 14 Bladder cancer C67 15 Lymphomas and multiple myeloma C81-C87 16 Leukaemia C91-C95 B Benign neoplasms D00-D48 C Diabetes mellitus E10-E14 D Endocrine disorders D55-D80, E03-E07, E15-E16, E17-E34, E65-E89 E Neuropsychiatric conditions F00-F69, F70-F99, G03-G99 1 Depression F32-F33 2 Anxiety disorders F40-F42 3 Schizophrenia F20-F29 4 Epilepsy G40-G41 5 Alcohol use/dependence F10 6 Dementia F00-F03, G30-G31 7 Drug use/dependence F11-F16, F18-F19 F Sense organ diseases H00-H61, H68-H95 G Cardiovascular diseases I00-I99 1 Ischaemic heart disease I20-I25 2 Stroke I60-I69 H Respiratory diseases 1 Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease J30-J99 J40-J44 I Digestive diseases K20-K99 J Genito-urinary diseases N00-N64, N75-N99 K Skin diseases L00-L99 L Musculoskeletal diseases M00-M99 1 Osteoarthritis M15-M19 2 Other musculoskeletal M00-M04, M07-M14, M20-M99 M Congenital anomalies Q00-Q99 N Oral conditions K00-K14 III Injuries V01-Y98 A Unintentional injuries V01-X59, Y40-Y98 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 77 The VINE Project 2010-2011 1 Road traffic accidents V01-V89, Y85 2 Poisonings X40-X49, Y14, Y16, Y17, Y18, Y19 3 Falls W00-W19 4 Fires X00-X09 5 Drownings W65-W74 6 Other unintentional injuries V90-V99, W20-W64, W75-W84, W85-W99, X10X39, X50-X59, Y40-Y84, Y86, Y88-Y91 B Intentional injuries X60-Y09, Y35-Y36 1 Self-inflicted injuries (suicide) X60-X84, Y87 0, Y87 1 2 Violence/homicide X85-Y09 3 War Y35-Y36 Hanoi School of Public Health Page 78 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Appendix 2. Disability Weights by disease and sequelae Disease category and sequelae Disability Age/sex weight Comments A Infectious and parasitic disease 1 Tuberculosis Pulmonary tuberculosis 0.295 all Dutch weight Extra-pulmonary tuberculosis 0.300 all Dutch weight Early HIV 0.200 all Dutch weight Late HIV 0.310 all Dutch weight AIDS 0.560 all Dutch weight AIDS terminal phase 0.950 all Dutch weight Uncomplicated episode 0.056 all Dutch weight for uncomplicated episode Complicated episode 0.402 all Dutch weight for complicated episode(50%) plus uncomplicated episode(50%) Pneumonia episode 0.280 all GBD weoght Acute nasopharyngitis 0.014 all GBD weoght Acute sinusitis 0.061 all Australian study Pharyngitis/tonsillitis 0.061 all Australian study Low grade malignancy, dissemination stage I and II 0.190 all Dutch disability weights Low grade malignancy, dissemination stage III and IV 0.610 all Dutch disability weights Intermediate/high malignancy grade, dissemination stage I 0.550 all Dutch disability weights Intermediate/high malignancy grade, dissemination stage II,III & IV 0.750 all Dutch disability weights Temporary remission after treatment 0.190 all Dutch disability weights Complete remission 0.190 all Dutch disability weights Preterminal phase 0.750 all Dutch disability weights Terminal phase 0.930 all Dutch weight for end stage 2 HIV/AIDS 3 Diarrhoeal diseases 4 Respiratory infection B Malignant neoplasms Lymphomas, Multiple Myeloma Hanoi School of Public Health Page 79 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Disease category and sequelae Disability Age/sex weight Comments disease Bladder Diagnosis and primary therapy 0.270 all Provisional weight based on Dutch disability weights State after intentionally curative primary therapy 0.180 all Provisional weight based on Dutch disability weights Male survivors with impotence/incontinence 0.200 all WHO GBD 2000 study In remission 0.180 all Provisional weight based on Dutch disability weights Disseminated cancer 0.640 all Provisional weight based on Dutch disability weights Terminal stage 0.930 all Dutch weight for end stage disease Diagnosis and primary therapy, tumour <2 cm 0.260 all Dutch disability weight Diagnosis and primary therapy, tumour 2-5 cm 0.690 all Dutch disability weight Diagnosis and primary therapy, tumour 5+ cm 0.810 all Dutch disability weight State after intentionally curative primary therapy 0.260 all Dutch disability weight Survivors with mastectomy 0.090 all Weight taken from Global Burden 2000 study In remission 0.260 all Dutch disability weight Disseminated cancer 0.790 all Dutch disability weight Terminal stage 0.930 all Dutch weight for end stage Diagnosis and primary therapy 0.430 all Provisional weight based on Dutch disability weights State after intentionally curative primary therapy 0.200 all Provisional weight based on Dutch disability weights Survivors with hysterectomy 0.180 all weight for infertility ages under 40 In remission 0.200 all Provisional weight based on Dutch disability weights Disseminated cancer 0.750 all Provisional weight based on Dutch disability weights Breast Cervix uteri Hanoi School of Public Health Page 80 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Disease category and sequelae Terminal stage Disability Age/sex weight Comments 0.930 all Dutch weight for end stage Diagnosis and primary therapy 0.430 all Dutch weight State after intentionally curative primary therapy 0.200 all Dutch weight Survivors with stoma 0.210 all WHO GBD 2000 weight In remission 0.430 all Dutch weight Incompletely removed or disseminated carcinoma 0.830 all Dutch weight Terminal stage 0.930 all Dutch weight for end stage Diagnosis and primary therapy 0.430 all Provisional weight based on Dutch disability weights State after intentionally curative primary therapy 0.200 all Provisional weight based on Dutch disability weights Survivors with hysterectomy 0.180 all weight for infertility ages under 40 In remission 0.200 all Provisional weight based on Dutch disability weights Disseminated cancer 0.750 all Provisional weight based on Dutch disability weights Terminal stage 0.930 all Dutch weight for end stage Diagnosis and primary therapy 0.550 all Provisional weight based on Dutch disability weights State after intentionally curative primary therapy 0.190 all Provisional weight based on Dutch disability weights In remission 0.190 all Provisional weight based on Dutch disability weights Preterminal cancer 0.750 all Provisional weight based on Dutch disability weights Terminal stage 0.930 all Dutch weight for end stage all Provisional weight - Dutch weight for colorectal cancer Colon and Rectum cancer Corpus Uteri Leukemia Liver cancer Diagnosis and primary therapy Hanoi School of Public Health 0.430 Page 81 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Disease category and sequelae Disability Age/sex weight Comments a State after intentionally curative primary therapy 0.200 all Provisional weight - Dutch weight for colorectal cancer In remission 0.200 all Provisional weight - Dutch weight for colorectal cancer Disseminated cancer 0.830 all Provisional weight - Dutch weight for colorectal cancer Terminal stage 0.930 all Dutch weight for end stage Primary treatment, no evidence of dissemination 0.190 all Dutch disability weight No evidence of dissemination after initial treatment 0.190 all Dutch disability weight Primary treatment, lymph node but no distant dissemination 0.430 all Dutch disability weight In remission 0.190 all Dutch disability weight Disseminated melanoma 0.810 all Dutch disability weight Terminal stage 0.930 all Dutch weight for end stage Diagnosis and primary therapy 0.560 all Provisional weight - Dutch weight for oesophageal cancer State after intentionally curative primary therapy 0.370 all Provisional weight - Dutch weight for oesophageal cancer In remission 0.370 all Provisional weight - Dutch weight for oesophageal cancer Disseminated cancer 0.900 all Provisional weight - Dutch weight for oesophageal cancer Terminal stage 0.930 all Dutch weight for end stage Diagnosis and primary therapy 0.560 all Dutch weight State after intentionally curative primary therapy 0.370 all Dutch weight Incompletely removed or disseminated carcinoma 0.900 all Dutch weight Preterminal stage 0.930 all Dutch weight Terminal stage 0.930 all Dutch weight Melanoma Mouth cancer Oesophagus Ovary Hanoi School of Public Health Page 82 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Disease category and sequelae Disability Age/sex weight Comments Diagnosis and primary therapy 0.430 all Provisional weight based on Dutch disability weights State after intentionally curative primary therapy 0.200 all Provisional weight based on Dutch disability weights Survivors with hysterectomy 0.180 all weight for infertility ages under 40 In remission 0.200 all Provisional weight based on Dutch disability weights Disseminated cancer 0.750 all Provisional weight based on Dutch disability weights Terminal stage 0.930 all Dutch weight for end stage Diagnosis and primary therapy 0.430 all Provisional weight - Dutch weight for colorectal cancer State after intentionally curative primary therapy 0.200 all Provisional weight - Dutch weight for colorectal cancer Disseminated cancer 0.830 all Provisional weight - Dutch weight for colorectal cancer Terminal stage 0.930 all Dutch weight for end stage Diagnostic, primary therapy, localised cancer 0.270 all Dutch disability weight Clinically disease free after primary therapy 0.180 all Dutch disability weight Survivors with long term impotence/incontinence 0.200 all WHO GBD 2000 weight In remission/watchful waiting 0.270 all Dutch disability weight Hormone refractory cancer 0.640 all Dutch disability weight Terminal stage 0.930 all Dutch weight for end stage Diagnosis and primary therapy 0.530 all Dutch disability weight State after intentionally curative primary therapy 0.380 all Dutch disability weight all NOT APPLICABLE all Dutch disability weight Pancreas Prostate Stomach Survivors with long term sequelae Incompletely removed or disseminated carcinoma Hanoi School of Public Health 0.730 Page 83 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Disease category and sequelae Terminal stage Disability Age/sex weight Comments 0.930 all Dutch weight for end stage Diagnosis and primary therapy 0.440 all Dutch disability weight Disease free after primary therapy 0.470 all Dutch disability weight Disseminated cancer 0.910 all Dutch disability weight Terminal stage 0.930 all Dutch weight for end stage 0.070 all GBD weight Alcohol abuse 0.090 all Australian study Anxiety 0.098 Male Australian study 0.093 Female Australian study Trachea, Bronchus and Lung cancer C Diabetes mellitus (IDDM and NIDDM) D Mental Health Dementia 0.520 Dutch weight Depression 0.410 Male Dutch weight 0.370 Female Dutch weight Drug dependence 0.270 Epilepsy 0.850 0-4 only GBD weight 0.129 5 + age GBD weight Schizophrenia Australian study 0.453 GBD weight E Permanent disability Mild hearing loss (25-34 dBHTL) 0.020 all One half of Dutch disability weight for mild hearing loss Mild hearing loss (35-44 dBHTL) 0.040 all Dutch weight Moderate hearing loss 0.120 all Dutch weight Severe hearing loss 0.370 all Dutch weight Severe hearing loss (congenital or early) 0.170 all Dutch weight Moderate vision loss 0.430 all Dutch weight Mild 0.080 all Dutch weight Severe 0.570 all Dutch weight F Ischemic Heart Disease Angina pectoris Hanoi School of Public Health Page 84 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Disease category and sequelae Disability Age/sex weight Comments Acute myocardial infarction Untreated 0.491 all GBD weight Treat 0.395 all GBD weight Mild 0.060 all Dutch weight Moderate 0.650 all Dutch weight Severe 0.350 all Dutch weight Heart failure G Stroke For first year survival Male 0.33 < 65 age 0.37 74 age 0.27 75 + age Western Australia follow up data Female 0.20 < 65 age 0.27 65 – 74 age 0.39 Western Australia follow up data 75 + age For subsequent years 0.59 Male 0.67 < 65 age 0.74 74 age Western Australia follow up data 75 + age 0.67 Female 0.59 < 65 age 0.73 65 – 74 age Western Australia follow up data 75 + age H COPD Mild to moderate COPD 0.17 all Dutch disability weight Severe COPD 0.53 all Dutch disability weight Grade 2 (radiological) hip or knee 0.01 all Dutch disability weight for mild ADL limitations in the elderly Grade 2 symptomatic 0.14 all Dutch disability weight for Grade 2 (radiological) Grade 3-4 asymptomatic 0.14 all Dutch disability weight for Grade 2 (radiological) I OSTEOARTHRITIS Hanoi School of Public Health Page 85 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Disease category and sequelae Grade 3-4 symptomatic Disability Age/sex weight Comments 0.42 all Dutch disability weight for Grade 3-4 (radiological) Skull-short term 0.431 all GBD weight Skull-long term 0.223 all GBD weight Vertebra column 0.266 all GBD weight Rib or sternum 0.199 all GBD weight Pelvis 0.247 all GBD weight Clavicle,scapula or humerus 0.153 all GBD weight Radius of ulna 0.180 all GBD weight Hand bone 0.100 all GBD weight Femur-short term 0.372 all GBD weight Femur-long term 0.272 all GBD weight Patella, tibia or fibula 0.271 all GBD weight Ankle 0.196 all GBD weight Foot bone 0.077 all GBD weight 0.725 all GBD weight Shoulder, elbow or hip 0.074 all GBD weight Other dislocation 0.074 all GBD weight 0.064 all GBD weight Short-term 0.359 all GBD weight Long-term 0.350 all GBD weight 6 Internal injuries 0.208 all GBD weight 7 Open wound 0.108 all GBD weight Short-term 0.108 all GBD weight Long-term 0.301 all GBD weight 0.165 all GBD weight J Unintentional injuries 1 Fracture 2 Injured spinal cord 3 Dislocation 4 Sprains 5 Intracranial injuries 8 Injury to eye 9 Amputation Thumb Hanoi School of Public Health Page 86 The VINE Project 2010-2011 Disease category and sequelae Disability Age/sex weight Comments Finger 0.102 all GBD weight Arm 0.257 all GBD weight Toe 0.102 all GBD weight Foot 0.300 all GBD weight Leg 0.300 all GBD weight 10 Crushing 0.218 all GBD weight Less than 20% short-term 0.158 all GBD weight Less than 20% long-term 0.001 all GBD weight 20% to 60% short-term 0.441 all GBD weight 20% to 60% long-term 0.255 all GBD weight Greater than 60% short term 0.441 all GBD weight Greater than 60% long term 0.255 all GBD weight Short-term 0.064 all GBD weight Long-term 0.064 all GBD weight 0.611 all GBD weight 11 Burns 12 Injured nerves 13 Poisoning Hanoi School of Public Health Page 87 Appendix 3. Deaths by sex, ages and causes in Vietnam 2008 Males Persons Males Females 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 Females 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ 250,605 290,624 250,605 11,242 2,278 19,801 30,603 53,406 41,560 65,460 66,274 7,933 1,453 5,841 10,771 23,981 24,160 56,229 120,237 64,234 37,096 27,138 5,754 362 5,266 7,749 3,646 2,492 4,598 7,229 4,282 248 1,415 1,991 1,247 1,596 4,381 11,979 38,664 25,318 13,346 726 286 4,953 7,157 3,150 1,352 3,056 4,638 405 170 1,253 1,721 907 1,324 2,576 4,989 18,248 11,450 6,798 - 38 560 1,384 1,844 1,136 2,727 3,760 - - 367 732 506 931 1,598 2,664 10,834 9,417 1,416 - 105 3,812 4,984 517 - - - - 31 625 760 - - - - 3,229 910 2,319 242 38 37 37 100 72 64 321 - 31 49 - - 69 436 1,734 6,353 3,541 2,812 484 105 544 753 689 143 266 557 405 108 211 229 402 324 542 590 20,717 9,541 11,175 2,791 76 313 591 497 1,141 1,542 2,591 1,675 54 94 115 340 271 1,637 6,990 20,645 9,470 11,175 2,791 76 313 591 497 1,069 1,542 2,591 1,675 54 94 115 340 271 1,637 6,990 72 72 - - - - - - 72 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 223 - 223 - - - - - - - - - - 68 155 - - - - 4,439 2,237 2,203 2,237 - - - - - - - 2,203 - - - - - - - 191 - 191 - - - - - - - - - 23 - - - - 168 - 422,589 216,313 206,277 3,935 573 3,996 14,812 42,233 35,685 58,103 56,976 2,600 479 1,949 6,694 19,782 20,802 49,774 104,196 107,118 63,741 43,377 70 115 1,467 5,879 18,119 13,435 15,473 9,184 183 186 772 3,529 9,256 6,989 11,573 10,889 5,458 3,426 2,032 - - 37 313 1,201 924 481 471 144 - - 50 55 617 407 759 2,290 1,677 613 - - - 91 878 214 403 92 - - - 50 - - 265 297 13,938 8,469 5,470 - - - 510 2,433 1,278 2,567 1,680 - - 68 470 990 957 1,835 1,148 7,463 3,607 3,856 - - 99 426 532 709 785 1,055 - - 47 137 887 611 785 1,389 28,503 19,915 8,587 - 29 372 2,431 7,000 3,903 4,136 2,045 - 46 83 527 2,105 1,660 2,486 1,681 1,818 960 858 - - - 189 157 142 319 153 - - - 115 223 202 229 89 23,589 15,720 7,869 - 29 269 774 3,468 4,274 4,959 1,947 - - 83 457 1,361 1,330 2,189 2,450 358 220 138 - - - - 57 70 - 92 - 46 - - - - - 92 2,968 103 2,865 - - - - 103 - - - - - - 506 1,060 467 534 297 4,148 - 4,148 - - - - - - - - - - 34 341 942 470 1,398 964 589 - 589 - - - - - - - - - - 34 113 247 133 61 - 861 861 - - - - - - 72 339 450 - - - - - - - - 1,100 823 277 - - - 52 103 214 198 256 - - - - 62 66 - 149 4,036 2,518 1,518 35 29 180 526 759 357 325 307 - 62 258 203 349 - 127 518 812 587 224 35 - 224 52 114 70 - 92 39 - 34 152 - - - - 9,190 4,856 4,334 - 29 286 517 1,313 1,207 961 542 - 31 130 409 976 476 1,256 1,056 5,080 3,436 1,643 172 57 149 322 651 781 914 390 - 23 - 52 124 133 436 876 15,347 5,489 9,858 - - 40 229 679 1,278 1,982 1,280 - - - 302 646 2,016 3,551 3,343 1,692 831 861 35 - 54 135 398 - 138 69 77 - 81 63 341 64 145 89 All Causes I. Communicable, mate rnal, pe rinatal and nutritional conditions A. Infectious diseases 1 2 HIV/AIDS 3 Diarrhoea 4 B. Other infectious diseases Respiratory infections 1 Pneumonia 2 Upper respiratory infections 3 Other respiratory infections C. Maternal conditions D. Perinatal conditions E. II. Tuberculosis Nutritional deficiencies Non-communicable diseases A. Malignant neoplasms 1 2 3 Mouth and oropharynx cancers Oesophagus cancer Stomach cancer 4 Bowel cancer 5 Liver cancer 6 Pancreas cancer 7 Lung cancer 8 Melanoma and other skin cancers Breast cancer 9 10 Uterus cancer 11 Ovary cancer 12 Prostate cancer 13 Bladder cancer 14 15 16 Lymphomas, multiple myeloma Leukaemia Other malignant neoplasms B. Other neoplasms C. Diabetes mellitus D. Endocrine disorders Males Persons E. 2 3 Alcohol use disorders Other neuropsychiatric disorders 70-79 80+ 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ 12,994 4,736 8,258 242 286 476 732 690 568 670 1,072 - 85 473 227 525 399 558 5,989 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 534 211 323 - - - 49 98 - 64 - - - - - 111 69 - 143 2,133 1,073 1,060 - 105 318 204 241 72 64 69 - 31 330 113 238 197 61 89 600 600 - - - 37 245 247 70 - - - - - - - - - - 3,480 600 2,880 - - - - - 72 138 390 - - - - - - 145 2,735 216 216 - 6,031 2,036 3,995 89 - - - - - - 81 135 - - - - - - - - - - - - 242 181 40 98 103 354 404 612 - 54 143 115 177 133 352 3,021 89 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 89 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 89 - 89 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 89 194,436 93,933 100,503 551 - 705 4,366 13,996 14,570 28,893 30,852 - 31 164 1,674 6,652 7,920 25,706 58,356 24,519 13,504 11,015 - - 77 758 2,224 2,541 4,174 3,730 - - - 176 1,674 1,146 2,794 5,225 109,988 53,217 56,771 - - 517 2,578 9,051 8,810 16,231 16,030 - - 130 657 2,914 3,978 15,517 33,576 59,930 27,212 32,718 551 - 111 1,029 2,722 3,219 8,489 11,092 - 31 34 842 2,064 2,795 7,396 19,555 39,022 19,554 19,468 207 29 260 225 1,744 2,633 5,949 8,506 222 - - 177 634 1,362 3,432 13,641 29,296 14,355 14,941 172 - 74 139 795 1,851 4,626 6,698 - - - - 341 883 2,454 11,263 9,726 5,199 4,527 35 29 186 86 949 782 1,323 1,808 222 - - 177 293 479 978 2,378 24,023 15,069 8,953 140 29 317 2,481 5,056 1,780 2,328 2,938 260 54 115 126 615 936 2,002 4,845 8,133 3,678 4,454 - 29 267 234 453 426 1,074 1,196 - - 198 442 755 729 972 1,359 1,346 472 874 - - 54 41 54 72 - 251 - - 49 102 119 - 229 375 8,177 2,324 5,853 - - - 82 249 142 681 1,170 - 23 - - 62 255 1,169 4,344 1,896 554 1,342 - - - - 108 70 69 306 - - - - - - 252 1,090 6,281 1,770 4,511 - - - 82 141 72 612 864 - 23 - - 62 255 917 3,254 4,981 2,897 2,084 2,517 29 204 49 98 - - - 1,858 77 96 - 54 - - - 152 152 - - - - 37 46 - - 69 - - - - - - - - 54,405 37,215 17,190 1,554 1,343 10,539 8,042 7,526 3,383 2,759 2,068 1,051 725 2,477 2,086 2,952 1,762 2,074 4,062 47,339 32,682 14,657 1,554 1,316 9,137 6,595 6,765 2,970 2,335 2,010 1,051 725 1,846 1,587 2,506 1,306 1,783 3,852 23,081 17,330 5,750 34 306 6,104 3,761 4,278 1,390 908 549 - 112 1,324 1,289 1,670 523 556 277 1,624 1,296 327 - - 270 417 417 134 - 58 - - - 109 - 65 - 154 8,578 4,678 3,899 34 30 517 853 636 676 833 1,099 72 - 81 - 116 262 656 2,713 243 148 95 - - 75 - - 72 - - 36 - - - 59 - - - 6,488 4,561 1,927 1,259 817 1,084 571 510 140 123 58 322 531 228 141 168 131 195 210 7,326 4,669 2,658 227 164 1,087 993 924 558 470 246 622 82 213 48 493 326 376 498 7,066 4,532 2,533 - 27 1,402 1,447 761 413 425 58 - - 631 499 445 456 291 210 5,573 3,206 2,366 - - 711 1,161 629 346 302 58 - - 584 499 445 391 236 210 1,432 1,265 167 - 27 691 286 132 67 62 - - - 47 - - 65 55 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Vision loss Hearing loss Other sense organ disorders Cardiovascular diseases Ischaemic heart disease Stroke 3 Other cardiovascular diseases Respiratory diseases 1 2 COPD Other respiratory diseases Digestive diseases Genitourinary diseases Skin diseases Musculoskeletal diseases 1 2 III. 60-69 Drug use disorders 3 2 L. 45-59 Dementia 2 1 K. 30-44 Sense organ diseases 1 J. 15-29 Schizophrenia Epilepsy 8 I. 5-14 Anxiety disorders 5 7 H. Females 0-4 Depression 4 6 G. Females Neuropsychiatric conditions 1 F. Males Osteoarthritis Other musculoskeletal disorders M. Congenital anomalies N. Oral conditions Injurie s A. Unintentional injuries 1 2 3 Poisonings Falls 4 Fires 5 Drownings 6 B. Road traffic accidents Other unintentional injuries Intentional injuries 1 2 3 Suicide Violence Other intentional injuries Appendix 4. YLL by sex, ages and causes in Vietnam 2008 Males Females Persons Males Females 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ 6,845,317 4,130,875 2,714,442 340,278 66,724 541,224 732,222 1,017,229 562,724 572,373 298,101 241,855 42,995 162,370 265,383 484,421 364,266 567,299 585,853 1,069,891 689,975 379,916 174,278 10,677 141,604 189,483 70,273 33,173 40,171 30,317 130,620 7,348 38,972 49,400 25,683 24,279 44,223 59,392 649,558 463,762 185,795 21,970 8,424 133,108 174,928 60,806 18,153 26,949 19,424 12,325 5,067 34,502 42,526 18,562 20,307 25,843 26,663 223,782 140,286 83,496 - 1,126 15,127 33,661 35,017 15,481 23,969 15,904 - - 10,022 17,946 10,295 14,163 16,196 14,875 275,476 238,430 37,046 - 3,086 102,169 122,584 10,592 - - - - 929 17,204 18,913 - - - - 30,969 15,056 15,913 7,323 1,126 983 931 1,896 891 636 1,270 - 929 1,403 - - 974 4,417 8,190 119,330 69,990 49,340 14,647 3,086 14,830 17,752 13,301 1,781 2,343 2,250 12,325 3,210 5,873 5,667 8,268 5,170 5,230 3,598 277,242 158,436 118,805 84,532 2,253 8,496 14,554 9,467 15,020 13,222 10,893 51,071 1,605 2,619 2,834 7,121 3,972 16,856 32,729 276,351 157,546 118,805 84,532 2,253 8,496 14,554 9,467 14,129 13,222 10,893 51,071 1,605 2,619 2,834 7,121 3,972 16,856 32,729 891 891 - - - - - - 891 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 5,892 - 5,892 - - - - - - - - - - 1,851 4,041 - - - - 135,000 67,776 67,224 67,776 - - - - - - - 67,224 - - - - - - - 2,200 - 2,200 - - - - - - - - - 676 - - - - 1,523 - 4,674,678 2,644,211 2,030,467 119,100 16,755 109,844 349,615 800,050 482,490 507,829 258,530 79,239 14,191 54,217 164,027 398,129 312,872 502,037 505,756 1,475,925 887,518 588,406 2,110 3,332 40,262 138,992 342,070 181,717 136,653 42,382 5,576 5,491 21,413 86,739 186,369 106,111 119,969 56,739 74,915 50,327 24,588 - - 983 7,486 23,059 12,501 4,006 2,291 4,403 - - 1,246 1,128 9,003 4,494 4,313 30,088 25,243 4,846 - - - 2,166 16,382 2,826 3,549 320 - - - 1,246 - - 2,405 1,194 176,111 104,234 71,878 - - - 11,987 45,392 17,416 22,299 7,139 - - 1,851 11,693 20,160 14,108 17,936 6,130 91,524 44,697 46,827 - - 2,744 10,260 9,689 9,830 7,367 4,808 - - 1,309 3,243 17,922 9,235 7,765 7,351 418,092 300,877 117,215 - 833 10,087 57,304 133,545 53,601 36,020 9,487 - 1,352 2,328 12,658 41,688 25,328 25,639 8,221 26,058 12,953 13,105 - - - 4,346 2,799 1,935 3,182 690 - - - 2,834 4,435 2,998 2,234 605 299,153 201,595 97,558 - 833 7,259 18,054 65,078 56,670 44,392 9,309 - - 2,328 11,233 27,483 20,233 23,252 13,029 4,317 2,341 1,976 - - - - 977 1,045 - 320 - 1,352 - - - - - 624 50,636 1,946 48,690 - - - - 1,946 - - - - - - 12,343 21,662 7,519 5,971 1,194 55,779 - 55,779 - - - - - - - - - - 925 8,430 19,050 7,403 15,087 4,883 10,979 - 10,979 - - - - - - - - - - 925 2,733 4,587 2,023 711 - 6,188 6,188 - - - - - - 891 2,913 2,384 - - - - - - - - 11,650 8,816 2,835 - - - 1,173 1,946 2,826 1,819 1,052 - - - - 1,147 1,091 - 597 69,212 43,096 26,115 1,055 833 4,963 12,616 14,372 4,607 3,092 1,558 - 1,857 7,182 5,187 7,320 - 1,477 3,092 17,749 11,812 5,938 1,055 - 6,266 1,173 1,954 1,045 - 320 1,173 - 925 3,840 - - - - 133,474 73,395 60,079 - 833 7,961 12,426 24,932 16,526 8,013 2,704 - 929 3,638 10,052 19,786 7,170 12,998 5,507 67,644 52,140 15,504 5,214 1,666 4,192 7,883 12,290 10,720 8,505 1,671 - 676 - 1,347 2,294 2,023 4,417 4,746 165,822 61,008 104,814 - - 1,110 5,334 13,336 17,416 17,777 6,035 - - - 7,193 12,690 30,052 37,771 17,109 30,850 14,815 16,035 1,055 - 1,541 3,170 7,578 - 1,071 401 2,345 - 2,235 1,487 6,842 1,049 1,472 605 All Causes I. Communicable, maternal, perinatal and nutritional conditions A. Infectious diseases 1 2 HIV/AIDS 3 Diarrhoea 4 B. D. E. II. Other infectious diseases Respiratory infections 1 Pneumonia 2 Upper respiratory infections 3 C. Tuberculosis Other respiratory infections Maternal conditions Perinatal conditions Nutritional deficiencies Non-communicable diseases A. Malignant neoplasms 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Mouth and oropharynx cancers Oesophagus cancer Stomach cancer Bowel cancer Liver cancer Pancreas cancer Lung cancer Melanoma and other skin cancers Breast cancer 10 Uterus cancer 11 Ovary cancer 12 13 Prostate cancer Bladder cancer 14 Lymphomas, multiple myeloma 15 Leukaemia 16 Other malignant neoplasms B. Other neoplasms C. Diabetes mellitus D. Endocrine disorders Males Persons E. Males Females Females 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ 7,323 8,424 13,119 17,433 13,270 7,741 5,758 4,833 - 2,533 13,242 5,566 10,561 6,070 5,838 26,742 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Neuropsychiatric conditions 1 2 148,453 77,900 70,553 - - - Depression Anxiety disorders - 3 Schizophrenia 4 Epilepsy 5 Alcohol use disorders 6 7 - 7,550 3,645 3,905 - - - 1,119 1,889 - 636 - - - - - 2,357 974 - 574 45,641 23,557 22,084 - 3,086 8,807 4,958 4,779 891 636 401 - 929 9,220 2,733 4,815 3,072 711 605 12,703 12,703 - - - 983 5,946 4,730 1,045 - - - - - - - - - - 17,312 3,632 13,680 - - - - - 891 1,071 1,671 - - - - - - 1,472 12,208 5,389 5,389 - 59,857 28,973 30,884 Dementia Drug use disorders F. Other neuropsychiatric disorders Sense organ diseases - - 2,219 3,170 - - - - - - - - - - - - 7,323 5,339 1,110 2,239 1,872 4,915 3,414 2,762 - 1,605 4,022 2,834 3,390 2,023 3,655 13,355 8 1 Vision loss 2 Hearing loss - 605 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 605 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 605 - 605 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 605 1,829,829 992,251 837,579 16,695 - 19,268 103,026 263,531 197,352 251,400 140,978 - 929 4,563 40,916 133,993 118,332 255,442 283,404 260,420 150,223 110,197 - - 2,092 17,854 41,755 34,507 37,544 16,471 - - - 4,219 33,645 17,490 28,374 26,468 1,032,472 579,115 453,357 - - 14,228 60,680 169,955 119,671 140,796 73,784 - - 3,638 16,219 58,735 58,905 154,048 161,812 536,937 262,913 274,025 16,695 - 2,948 24,492 51,821 43,174 73,060 50,723 - 929 925 20,477 41,613 41,936 73,020 95,124 318,432 176,693 141,740 6,268 833 7,139 5,278 33,121 35,262 51,484 37,308 6,749 - - 4,320 12,474 19,786 34,069 64,341 215,455 118,716 96,738 5,214 - 1,965 3,227 15,149 24,695 39,666 28,801 - - - - 6,842 12,891 24,422 52,583 102,977 57,976 45,001 1,055 833 5,174 2,051 17,972 10,566 11,818 8,507 6,749 - - 4,320 5,632 6,895 9,647 11,757 312,696 226,501 86,195 4,219 833 8,546 58,075 97,827 23,651 20,454 12,896 7,922 1,605 3,160 2,973 12,930 14,089 19,396 24,120 102,377 42,863 59,514 - 833 7,393 5,409 8,505 5,805 9,172 5,745 - - 5,489 10,893 15,325 11,165 10,205 6,437 15,607 5,216 10,391 - - 1,541 988 927 891 - 869 - - 1,403 2,593 2,408 - 2,234 1,753 55,612 19,215 36,397 - - - 1,976 4,737 1,935 5,556 5,012 - 676 - - 1,147 4,195 11,222 19,157 3 G. Other sense organ disorders Cardiovascular diseases 605 1 Ischaemic heart disease 2 Stroke 3 H. Other cardiovascular diseases Respiratory diseases 1 2 COPD Other respiratory diseases I. Digestive diseases J. Genitourinary diseases K. L. Skin diseases Musculoskeletal diseases 1 Osteoarthritis III. M. Other musculoskeletal disorders Congenital anomalies N. Oral conditions 11,723 4,815 6,908 - - - - 1,855 1,045 535 1,381 - - - - - - 2,285 4,623 43,889 14,400 29,489 - - - 1,976 2,882 891 5,020 3,631 - 676 - - 1,147 4,195 8,936 14,534 148,525 85,789 62,736 76,215 833 5,733 1,119 1,889 - - - 56,647 2,281 2,712 - 1,096 - - - 2,301 2,301 - - - - 931 969 - - 401 - - - - - - - - 1,100,748 796,689 304,059 46,901 39,292 289,776 193,125 146,906 47,061 24,373 9,254 31,997 21,456 69,182 51,956 60,608 27,115 21,039 20,706 951,548 698,287 253,260 46,901 38,515 251,388 158,223 132,105 41,279 20,824 9,053 31,997 21,456 51,657 39,447 51,438 19,929 17,842 19,495 503,357 381,728 121,629 1,022 8,947 168,141 90,847 83,538 19,052 7,682 2,500 - 3,295 37,013 31,948 33,997 7,971 5,742 1,662 32,106 27,737 4,369 - - 7,326 9,993 8,226 1,991 - 201 - - - 2,685 - 1,067 - 617 100,659 70,412 30,248 1,022 876 14,148 19,961 11,915 9,858 7,631 5,001 2,172 - 2,235 - 2,358 3,845 6,365 13,274 2 Injuries A. Unintentional injuries 1 2 Poisonings 3 Falls 4 Fires 5 Drownings 6 B. Road traffic accidents 5,113 2,930 2,183 - - 2,030 - - 900 - - 1,086 - - - 1,097 - - - 162,539 118,503 44,035 37,986 23,928 29,918 13,470 10,152 1,896 953 201 9,773 15,712 6,444 3,570 3,423 1,993 1,910 1,211 147,773 96,977 50,797 6,871 4,764 29,825 23,952 18,275 7,583 4,558 1,150 18,966 2,449 5,966 1,243 10,563 5,053 3,826 2,731 149,200 98,402 50,799 - 778 38,388 34,902 14,801 5,782 3,549 201 - - 17,524 12,510 9,171 7,186 3,197 1,211 114,810 67,028 47,782 - - 19,441 27,988 12,015 4,787 2,596 201 - - 16,215 12,510 9,171 6,120 2,556 1,211 33,914 30,897 3,017 - 778 18,947 6,914 2,786 995 477 - - - 1,309 - - 1,067 640 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Other unintentional injuries Intentional injuries 1 2 3 Suicide Violence Other intentional injuries Appendix 5. YLD by sex, ages and causes in Vietnam 2008 All Causes I. Males Females 0-4 5-14 15-29 5,423,142 2,714,126 2,709,016 161,751 208,526 626,877 731,221 560,759 270,756 290,003 35,903 46,980 71,430 166,510 97,182 69,328 5,090 1,923 37,819 Females 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ 0-4 5-14 15-29 60-69 70-79 80+ 631,649 169,165 124,059 60,878 119,909 162,038 502,999 670,965 657,031 241,702 216,537 137,835 54,025 34,113 13,084 10,921 4,300 34,172 45,095 83,130 54,405 31,981 16,031 15,951 9,239 31,469 13,736 3,231 2,535 1,379 4,248 2,301 30,071 13,750 8,301 3,917 4,011 2,729 549 Communicable, maternal, perinatal and nutritional conditions A. B. II. Males 30-44 45-59 Persons Infectious diseases 1 Tuberculosis 38,219 25,683 12,536 - 28 4,603 9,423 7,484 2,170 1,448 527 27 199 3,236 3,298 2,784 1,300 1,142 2 HIV/AIDS 64,529 47,318 17,211 418 - 28,319 16,520 1,863 129 63 6 181 289 11,270 4,890 480 62 35 4 3 Diarrhoea 21,520 10,577 10,943 3,475 983 2,140 1,840 1,199 586 188 166 2,080 723 1,384 1,718 2,050 801 916 1,273 4 Other infectious diseases 42,242 13,605 28,637 1,198 912 2,758 3,685 3,190 346 837 680 1,959 1,090 14,180 3,845 2,987 1,754 1,919 902 86,308 45,301 41,007 6,528 13,425 9,779 7,205 5,315 1,494 1,242 314 3,639 7,476 9,114 7,951 6,621 2,249 2,161 1,796 Respiratory infections 1 Pneumonia 53,326 25,929 27,397 1,693 4,299 7,825 5,568 4,115 1,183 1,017 228 1,454 3,321 6,873 5,892 5,064 1,686 1,729 1,377 2 Upper respiratory infections 16,535 7,415 9,120 548 1,456 1,954 1,637 1,199 311 225 85 599 1,250 2,241 2,059 1,556 562 432 419 3 Other respiratory infections 16,447 11,957 4,489 4,287 7,670 - - - - - - 1,585 2,905 - - - - - - C. Maternal conditions 9,664 - 9,664 - - - - - - - - - - 4,659 5,005 - - - D. Perinatal conditions 15,580 6,200 9,380 6,200 - - - - - - - 9,380 - - - - - - - E. Nutritional deficiencies 282,697 122,072 160,625 18,084 31,632 23,831 15,351 15,062 8,359 7,144 2,608 16,906 35,318 39,287 27,698 17,059 9,866 9,778 4,714 Non-communicable diseases 4,046,588 1,885,970 2,160,618 97,246 86,098 358,672 530,428 504,190 148,307 106,254 54,774 71,359 82,635 356,296 552,882 568,024 214,176 188,759 126,486 A. 105,802 60,680 45,122 74 106 1,112 5,215 14,713 11,977 14,728 12,756 - 491 562 3,914 10,481 10,007 13,000 6,667 9,566 6,393 3,174 - - 55 572 2,241 1,781 949 794 - 324 - 128 132 361 2,035 193 2,540 2,172 368 - - - 114 1,117 288 547 106 - - - 68 - - - 300 - - 666 3,145 1,708 3,532 1,949 - - - 653 1,023 794 1,674 1,578 Malignant neoplasms 1 2 Mouth and oropharynx cancers Oesophagus cancer 3 Stomach cancer 16,723 11,000 5,722 - 4 Bowel cancer 12,193 7,069 5,124 - - 188 847 1,074 1,457 1,685 1,817 - - 83 - 1,417 1,373 1,301 950 5 Liver cancer 16,239 11,927 4,312 - 34 157 1,324 2,762 1,589 1,787 4,274 - 9 34 149 714 795 953 1,658 6 Pancreas cancer 1,387 788 599 1 1 4 148 122 119 293 100 - - 2 38 167 100 185 107 18,467 13,209 5,258 - 17 131 521 2,389 3,521 4,570 2,060 - - 41 230 1,151 1,090 2,026 720 692 580 113 - - - - 160 192 - 228 - - 113 - - - - - 7 8 Lung cancer Melanoma and other skin cancers 9 Breast cancer 10,295 - 10,295 - - - 1,241 3,582 3,121 2,045 306 10 Uterus cancer 6,097 - 6,097 - - - 461 1,386 1,389 2,119 742 11 Ovary cancer 955 - 955 - - - 138 103 496 219 - 12 Prostate cancer 713 713 - 13 Bladder cancer 2,090 1,830 260 - 14 Lymphomas, multiple myeloma 4,501 3,168 1,333 38 15 Leukaemia 936 659 277 35 16 Other malignant neoplasms 2,409 1,173 1,236 - - - - - 8 335 370 - - 116 220 485 456 552 - - - - - 260 - - 40 201 645 955 486 444 359 - 94 215 368 400 80 177 - - 249 63 129 78 - 105 - 44 - 233 - - - - - 13 127 199 398 264 128 43 - 19 75 207 407 148 267 113 B. Other neoplasms 1,034 767 266 6 4 25 66 174 234 230 29 - 4 - 32 51 44 80 54 C. Diabetes mellitus 192,604 77,749 114,855 - - 2,190 25,932 30,467 10,198 6,931 2,031 - - 2,369 33,072 39,391 18,461 15,659 5,904 D. Endocrine disorders 9,152 2,810 6,342 764 - 157 430 1,221 - 176 63 3,287 - 433 314 1,548 245 365 151 E. F. G. H. Males Females 0-4 5-14 15-29 2,012,259 906,247 1,106,013 25,083 20,725 297,775 275,639 Females 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ 0-4 5-14 15-29 60-69 70-79 80+ 201,972 47,690 27,652 9,711 19,882 32,335 306,290 315,355 239,676 83,542 62,945 45,988 1 Depression 875,673 237,014 638,658 - 4,707 58,383 90,925 62,099 14,282 5,323 1,295 - 11,276 150,834 233,137 176,198 44,532 17,764 4,916 2 Anxiety disorders 202,288 56,034 146,254 - 4,592 22,511 18,689 8,122 1,473 538 109 - 10,551 64,025 42,501 21,662 4,963 2,031 522 3 Schizophrenia 145,627 70,665 74,962 - - 39,062 27,429 4,174 - - - - 3,820 43,737 21,838 5,568 - - - 4 Epilepsy 25,178 12,199 12,979 3,809 6,451 1,462 343 100 19 11 6 3,769 5,030 3,092 746 308 24 7 2 5 Alcohol use disorders 333,482 303,138 30,345 - - 51,201 133,017 104,149 13,007 1,285 478 - - 9,330 12,813 7,520 452 142 87 6 Dementia 189,881 60,304 129,578 - - - - 17,769 16,518 18,791 7,226 - - - - 22,128 29,990 39,532 37,927 7 Drug use disorders 114,638 104,769 9,870 - 3,558 101,210 - - - - - - - 9,870 - - - - - 8 Other neuropsychiatric disorders 125,492 62,125 63,367 21,274 1,417 23,946 5,236 5,558 2,392 1,705 598 16,113 1,659 25,402 4,320 6,291 3,580 3,469 2,533 509,827 220,735 289,092 1,811 15,088 11,603 55,063 85,950 25,052 16,878 9,289 1,486 9,782 20,070 51,047 94,640 44,424 41,554 26,089 1 Sense organ diseases Vision loss 387,743 164,032 223,711 925 3,890 10,582 47,348 67,323 15,822 11,289 6,853 640 2,994 15,763 44,740 74,944 32,270 30,144 22,215 2 Hearing loss 122,084 56,703 65,381 886 11,198 1,021 7,715 18,627 9,230 5,589 2,436 846 6,787 4,307 6,307 19,696 12,154 11,410 3,874 3 Other sense organ disorders - - 2,906 5,374 21,134 42,783 51,088 19,148 21,609 12,057 221 918 4,984 17,437 32,552 19,566 37,015 30,100 49 176 1,316 4,861 7,624 2,520 2,501 1,412 8 31 316 2,581 5,790 2,626 3,454 2,786 5,198 19,635 36,282 39,858 13,913 13,467 5,995 213 862 4,614 13,369 24,399 14,509 29,490 21,689 318,893 176,100 142,793 1 Cardiovascular diseases Ischaemic heart disease 38,049 20,458 17,591 2 Stroke 244,961 135,817 109,144 1,468 3 Other cardiovascular diseases 35,883 19,826 16,057 1,389 - 183 1,640 3,607 2,715 5,641 4,650 - 25 54 1,487 2,364 2,431 4,071 5,624 268,229 171,164 97,065 9,772 39,166 17,862 41,895 36,711 12,734 8,468 4,556 7,266 35,061 7,675 16,998 17,558 4,939 4,152 3,416 2,505 Respiratory diseases 1 COPD 161,637 114,966 46,672 - 572 14,251 41,380 35,183 11,792 7,682 4,106 - 22 5,232 15,185 16,060 4,321 3,346 2 Other respiratory diseases 106,592 56,198 50,394 9,772 38,594 3,611 515 1,528 942 785 450 7,266 35,039 2,443 1,813 1,498 618 806 911 321 166 927 2,613 5,742 2,196 3,372 1,991 1,911 662 477 205 1,013 1,351 2,778 3,610 I. Digestive diseases 29,332 17,325 12,006 J. Genitourinary diseases 19,060 13,948 5,112 - 77 197 8,329 3,058 1,058 892 339 - - 581 1,245 1,292 767 799 428 K. Skin diseases 12,814 7,316 5,498 190 2,840 649 531 808 873 723 702 818 101 320 452 605 434 1,296 1,474 Musculoskeletal diseases 2,149 L. III. Neuropsychiatric conditions Males 30-44 45-59 Persons 402,500 143,526 258,974 232 350 982 68,184 55,682 13,344 3,823 930 720 950 8,355 106,677 107,862 24,692 7,569 1 Osteoarthritis 323,383 120,839 202,544 - - - 65,382 44,104 8,978 2,012 362 - - 1,123 99,070 83,157 14,562 3,852 781 2 Other musculoskeletal disorders 79,117 22,688 56,430 232 350 982 2,802 11,578 4,366 1,810 568 720 950 7,232 7,607 24,705 10,130 3,718 1,368 M. Congenital anomalies 74,296 46,534 27,762 45,925 99 250 52 208 - - - 27,252 151 205 - 153 - - - N. Oral conditions 90,785 41,067 49,718 10,163 2,103 3,809 3,695 16,398 3,805 774 321 8,516 2,180 3,975 6,134 21,202 5,706 1,547 457 815,795 557,400 258,396 28,602 75,447 196,774 146,767 93,347 7,774 6,883 1,804 14,378 34,307 63,574 63,679 57,026 11,495 11,828 2,110 783,247 531,505 251,742 28,602 73,518 185,440 141,044 87,191 7,088 6,818 1,804 14,378 33,815 61,098 60,821 56,309 11,384 11,828 2,110 2,177 11,930 76,919 48,978 35,149 1,504 982 270 2,851 6,786 24,012 31,545 17,984 3,440 4,310 146 55 46 61 63 86 55 66 87 19 16 21 21 28 19 22 29 Injuries A. B. Unintentional injuries 1 Road traffic accidents 268,984 177,909 91,075 2 Poisonings 695 519 176 3 Falls 177,057 114,960 62,098 11,174 22,647 29,573 23,688 20,814 2,418 3,592 1,055 5,957 8,105 11,994 6,521 17,879 4,364 5,516 1,761 4 Fires 10,604 7,886 2,718 1,530 1,479 2,455 1,460 773 115 63 11 870 482 587 395 201 96 48 39 5 Drownings 4,748 4,296 452 1,948 364 710 1,191 28 55 - - 84 58 168 - 130 12 - - 6 Other unintentional injuries 321,158 225,935 95,223 11,718 37,052 75,722 65,664 30,342 2,941 2,115 381 4,597 18,368 24,315 22,339 20,087 3,452 1,932 134 32,548 25,895 6,654 - 1,930 11,334 5,723 6,156 686 66 - - 492 2,476 2,858 717 111 - - 1 Intentional injuries Suicide 214 128 87 - 21 75 24 - 7 - - - - 12 20 54 - - - 2 Violence 32,334 25,767 6,567 - 1,908 11,259 5,699 6,156 679 66 - - 492 2,464 2,837 662 111 - - 3 Other intentional injuries - - - Appendix 6. DALYs by sex, ages and causes in Vietnam 2008 Males All Causes I. Males Females 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ 12,268,460 6,845,001 5,423,459 502,029 275,250 1,168,100 1,463,443 1,648,878 731,889 696,431 358,979 361,764 205,032 665,370 936,348 1,141,452 605,968 783,836 723,689 Communicable, maternal, perinatal and nutritional conditions A. 1,630,650 960,731 669,919 210,181 57,657 213,034 243,508 104,386 46,257 51,092 34,617 164,792 52,443 122,101 103,805 57,665 40,310 60,173 68,630 Infectious diseases 816,068 560,945 255,123 27,060 10,347 170,927 206,398 74,542 21,384 29,484 20,803 16,573 7,368 64,572 56,276 26,864 24,224 29,855 29,392 1 Tuberculosis 262,001 165,969 96,032 - 1,154 19,729 43,084 42,501 17,651 25,417 16,431 27 199 13,258 21,243 13,079 15,463 17,338 15,424 2 HIV/AIDS 340,005 285,748 54,257 418 3,086 130,488 139,104 12,455 129 63 6 181 1,218 28,475 23,803 480 62 35 4 3 Diarrhoea Other infectious diseases 52,490 25,633 26,856 10,798 2,110 3,123 2,772 3,095 1,477 824 1,436 2,080 1,651 2,787 1,718 2,050 1,775 5,333 9,463 161,572 83,595 77,977 15,845 3,998 17,587 21,438 16,491 2,128 3,180 2,930 14,284 4,300 20,052 9,512 11,255 6,924 7,149 4,501 Respiratory infections 363,550 203,738 159,812 91,060 15,677 18,275 21,759 14,782 16,513 14,464 11,206 54,709 9,081 11,732 10,784 13,742 6,221 19,017 34,525 1 329,677 183,475 146,202 86,225 6,552 16,321 20,122 13,582 15,312 14,239 11,121 52,525 4,926 9,491 8,726 12,185 5,658 18,585 34,106 17,426 8,306 9,120 548 1,456 1,954 1,637 1,199 1,201 225 85 599 1,250 2,241 2,059 1,556 562 432 419 16,447 11,957 4,489 4,287 7,670 - - - - - - 1,585 2,905 - - - - - - 4 B. 2 3 Pneumonia Upper respiratory infections Other respiratory infections C. Maternal conditions 15,556 - 15,556 - - - - - - - - - - 6,509 9,046 - - - D. Perinatal conditions 150,580 73,976 76,604 73,976 - - - - - - - 76,604 - - - - - - - 284,897 122,072 162,824 18,084 31,632 23,831 15,351 15,062 8,359 7,144 2,608 16,906 35,994 39,287 27,698 17,059 9,866 11,302 4,714 8,721,266 4,530,181 4,191,085 216,346 102,853 468,516 880,042 1,304,240 630,797 614,083 313,304 150,598 96,826 410,513 716,908 966,154 527,048 690,796 632,242 1,581,726 948,198 633,528 2,183 3,438 41,374 144,207 356,783 193,694 151,381 55,137 5,576 5,981 21,976 90,653 196,849 116,118 132,970 63,406 84,481 56,719 27,761 - - 1,038 8,058 25,300 14,283 4,955 3,085 4,403 324 - 1,375 1,260 9,364 6,529 4,506 32,628 27,415 5,214 - - - 2,281 17,499 3,114 4,096 425 - - - 1,314 - - 2,405 1,494 E. II. Females Persons Nutritional deficiencies Non-communicable diseases A. Malignant neoplasms Mouth and orophar1 ynx cancers 2 Oesophagus cancer 3 Stomach cancer 192,834 115,234 77,600 - - - 12,654 48,537 19,124 25,832 9,088 - - 1,851 12,346 21,183 14,902 19,610 7,708 4 Bowel cancer 103,717 51,766 51,950 - - 2,932 11,107 10,763 11,287 9,052 6,626 - - 1,392 3,243 19,339 10,609 9,066 8,301 5 Liver cancer 434,331 312,804 121,527 - 867 10,244 58,628 136,307 55,190 37,807 13,761 - 1,361 2,362 12,808 42,402 26,123 26,592 9,879 6 Pancreas cancer 27,445 13,741 13,704 1 1 4 4,494 2,922 2,054 3,475 790 - - 2 2,872 4,602 3,098 2,419 712 7 317,620 214,804 102,816 - 850 7,390 18,575 67,467 60,190 48,963 11,369 - - 2,369 11,464 28,633 21,323 25,277 13,749 8 Lung cancer Melanoma and other skin cancers 5,010 2,921 2,089 - - - - 1,137 1,237 - 547 - 1,352 113 - - - - 624 9 Breast cancer 60,931 1,946 58,985 - - - - 1,946 - - - - - - 13,584 25,244 10,641 8,016 1,500 10 Uterus cancer 61,875 - 61,875 - - - - - - - - - - 925 8,891 20,437 8,792 17,206 5,624 11 Ovary cancer 11,934 - 11,934 - - - - - - - - - - 925 2,871 4,690 2,519 929 - 12 Prostate cancer 6,900 6,900 - - - - - - 899 3,248 2,754 - - - - - - - - 13 13,740 10,646 3,095 - - - 1,289 2,166 3,311 2,276 1,604 - - - - 1,147 1,351 - 597 14 Bladder cancer Lymphomas, multiple myeloma 73,713 46,265 27,448 1,093 873 5,164 13,261 15,327 5,093 3,536 1,917 - 1,951 7,397 5,554 7,720 80 1,654 3,092 15 Leukaemia 18,686 12,471 6,215 1,090 - 6,515 1,235 2,083 1,123 - 424 1,173 44 925 4,073 - - - - 16 Other malignant neoplasms 135,883 74,568 61,315 - 846 8,088 12,625 25,331 16,790 8,141 2,747 - 948 3,713 10,259 20,193 7,318 13,265 5,620 B. Other neoplasms 68,678 52,908 15,770 5,220 1,671 4,216 7,949 12,465 10,954 8,735 1,699 - 680 - 1,379 2,345 2,068 4,497 4,801 C. Diabetes mellitus 358,427 138,758 219,669 - - 3,300 31,267 43,802 27,614 24,708 8,066 - - 2,369 40,265 52,081 48,512 53,430 23,013 D. Endocrine disorders 40,003 17,625 22,377 1,819 - 1,698 3,600 8,798 - 1,247 464 5,633 - 2,668 1,800 8,390 1,293 1,837 756 Males Males Females 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ 2,160,712 984,147 1,176,566 32,406 29,149 310,894 293,071 215,241 55,430 33,410 14,544 19,882 34,869 319,532 320,922 250,237 89,612 68,783 72,730 1 Depression 875,673 237,014 638,658 - 4,707 58,383 90,925 62,099 14,282 5,323 1,295 - 11,276 150,834 233,137 176,198 44,532 17,764 4,916 2 Anxiety disorders 202,288 56,034 146,254 - 4,592 22,511 18,689 8,122 1,473 538 109 - 10,551 64,025 42,501 21,662 4,963 2,031 522 3 Schizophrenia 153,177 74,310 78,867 - - 39,062 28,548 6,063 - 636 - - 3,820 43,737 21,838 7,924 974 - 574 4 Epilepsy 70,820 35,756 35,063 3,809 9,536 10,269 5,301 4,879 909 647 406 3,769 5,959 12,312 3,479 5,123 3,096 718 607 5 Alcohol use disorders 346,185 315,841 30,345 - - 52,184 138,963 108,879 14,051 1,285 478 - - 9,330 12,813 7,520 452 142 87 6 Dementia 207,193 63,936 143,258 - - - - 17,769 17,408 19,862 8,896 - - - - 22,128 29,990 41,004 50,135 7 Drug use disorders 120,028 110,158 9,870 - 3,558 103,430 3,170 - - - - - - 9,870 - - - - - 8 Other neuropsychiatric disorders 185,348 91,097 94,251 28,597 6,756 25,055 7,474 7,430 7,307 5,119 3,360 16,113 3,263 29,424 7,154 9,681 5,603 7,124 15,888 E. Neuropsychiatric conditions Sense organ diseases 510,432 220,735 289,697 1,811 15,088 11,603 55,063 85,950 25,052 16,878 9,289 1,486 9,782 20,070 51,047 94,640 44,424 41,554 26,694 1 Vision loss 387,743 164,032 223,711 925 3,890 10,582 47,348 67,323 15,822 11,289 6,853 640 2,994 15,763 44,740 74,944 32,270 30,144 22,215 2 Hearing loss 122,084 56,703 65,381 886 11,198 1,021 7,715 18,627 9,230 5,589 2,436 846 6,787 4,307 6,307 19,696 12,154 11,410 3,874 3 Other sense organ disorders 605 - 605 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 605 2,148,722 1,168,351 980,371 19,601 5,374 40,403 145,809 314,620 216,500 273,008 153,035 221 1,847 9,547 58,353 166,546 137,898 292,457 313,503 F. G. Cardiovascular diseases 1 Ischaemic heart disease 2 Stroke 3 Other cardiovascular diseases H. Respiratory diseases 298,469 170,681 127,788 49 176 3,408 22,714 49,379 37,027 40,045 17,883 8 31 316 6,800 39,435 20,116 31,828 29,254 1,277,432 714,931 562,501 1,468 5,198 33,864 96,963 209,812 133,584 154,263 79,779 213 862 8,251 29,588 83,134 73,414 183,537 183,502 572,820 282,739 290,082 18,085 - 3,131 26,132 55,428 45,889 78,701 55,373 - 954 980 21,965 43,977 44,367 77,092 100,748 586,662 347,857 238,805 16,041 39,999 25,001 47,173 69,832 47,995 59,952 41,864 14,015 35,061 7,675 21,318 30,032 24,726 38,221 67,756 1 COPD 377,092 233,682 143,410 5,214 572 16,216 44,607 50,331 36,487 47,349 32,906 - 22 5,232 15,185 22,902 17,212 27,768 55,088 2 Other respiratory diseases 209,569 114,174 95,395 10,827 39,427 8,785 2,566 19,500 11,508 12,603 8,958 14,015 35,039 2,443 6,133 7,130 7,513 10,453 12,668 I. Digestive diseases 342,027 243,826 98,201 4,540 999 9,473 60,687 103,568 25,846 23,826 14,887 9,833 2,266 3,638 3,178 13,944 15,440 22,174 27,729 J. Genitourinary diseases 121,437 56,811 64,626 - 910 7,590 13,739 11,563 6,863 10,063 6,084 - - 6,070 12,138 16,618 11,932 11,004 6,865 K. Skin diseases 28,421 12,532 15,889 190 2,840 2,190 1,519 1,735 1,764 723 1,571 818 101 1,723 3,045 3,012 434 3,530 3,227 458,113 162,742 295,371 232 350 982 70,160 60,419 15,279 9,378 5,941 720 1,626 8,355 106,677 109,009 28,887 18,791 21,306 335,106 125,654 209,452 - - - 65,382 45,959 10,023 2,548 1,742 - - 1,123 99,070 83,157 14,562 6,137 5,404 123,006 37,088 85,919 232 350 982 4,778 14,460 5,256 6,831 4,199 720 1,626 7,232 7,607 25,852 14,326 12,654 15,902 222,821 132,324 90,498 122,139 932 5,983 1,172 2,097 - - - 83,899 2,432 2,918 - 1,249 - - - 93,086 43,368 49,718 10,163 2,103 3,809 4,626 17,367 3,805 774 721 8,516 2,180 3,975 6,134 21,202 5,706 1,547 457 1,916,543 1,354,089 562,455 75,503 114,740 486,551 339,893 240,253 54,836 31,256 11,058 46,374 55,764 132,756 115,635 117,634 38,610 32,867 22,816 1,734,794 1,229,792 505,002 75,503 112,032 436,828 299,267 219,296 48,368 27,642 10,857 46,374 55,271 112,755 100,268 107,746 31,313 29,670 21,605 772,341 559,637 212,704 3,199 20,877 245,060 139,825 118,687 20,556 8,664 2,770 2,851 10,082 61,025 63,493 51,981 11,412 10,052 1,808 32,801 28,256 4,545 55 46 7,388 10,056 8,311 2,046 66 288 19 16 21 2,706 28 1,086 22 647 277,717 185,372 92,345 12,196 23,523 43,721 43,649 32,729 12,276 11,222 6,056 8,129 8,105 14,229 6,521 20,236 8,209 11,881 15,035 L. Musculoskeletal diseases 1 2 III. Females Pe rsons Osteoarthritis Other musculoskeletal disorders M. Congenital anomalies N. Oral conditions Injuries A. B. Unintentional injuries 1 Road traffic accidents 2 Poisonings 3 Falls 4 Fires 15,717 10,816 4,901 1,530 1,479 4,485 1,460 773 1,015 63 11 1,956 482 587 395 1,298 96 48 39 5 Drownings 167,287 122,800 44,487 39,934 24,292 30,628 14,661 10,180 1,951 953 201 9,857 15,770 6,612 3,570 3,553 2,005 1,910 1,211 6 Other unintentional injuries 468,932 322,912 146,020 18,590 41,816 105,547 89,616 48,617 10,524 6,673 1,531 23,563 20,817 30,281 23,583 30,650 8,505 5,757 2,865 Intentional injuries 181,749 124,296 57,452 - 2,707 49,723 40,625 20,957 6,468 3,615 201 - 492 20,001 15,367 9,887 7,297 3,197 1,211 1 Suicide 115,024 67,156 47,869 - 21 19,516 28,012 12,015 4,793 2,596 201 - - 16,227 12,530 9,225 6,120 2,556 1,211 2 Violence 66,248 56,664 9,584 - 2,686 30,206 12,613 8,942 1,675 542 - - 492 3,774 2,837 662 1,178 640 - 3 Other intentional injuries - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Appendix 7. YLD prevalence by sex, ages and causes in Vietnam 2008 Males Persons Males Females 0-4 5-14 Females 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ 560 All causes I. Communicable, maternal, perinatal and nutritional conditions A. B. Infectious diseases 1 Tuberculosis 56,361 40,116 16,245 - 358 8,497 14,885 10,806 2,931 1,930 709 51 345 4,962 4,442 3,296 1,405 1,183 2 HIV/AIDS 93,082 68,113 24,969 650 - 41,351 23,348 2,521 163 75 6 280 430 16,536 6,948 651 79 41 4 3 Diarrhoea 21,523 10,578 10,945 3,475 983 2,141 1,841 1,199 586 188 166 2,081 723 1,384 1,718 2,050 801 916 1,273 Respiratory infections 1 II. Upper respiratory infections C. D. 2 Pneumonia Maternal conditions Perinatal conditions E. Nutritional deficiencies 15,820 7,416 8,404 548 1,456 1,954 1,637 1,200 311 225 85 537 1,124 2,053 1,896 1,444 530 409 412 53,348 25,940 27,408 1,693 4,301 7,828 5,570 4,117 1,184 1,018 228 1,455 3,323 6,875 5,894 5,067 1,687 1,730 1,378 200 Noncommunicable diseases A. Malignant neoplasms 1 Mouth and oropharynx cancers 9,909 6,621 3,287 - - 57 592 2,322 1,845 983 823 - 336 - 133 137 374 2,107 2 Oesophagus cancer 2,595 2,219 376 - - - 117 1,141 294 559 108 - - - 69 - - - 307 3 Stomach cancer 17,059 11,222 5,837 - - - 680 3,208 1,742 3,603 1,989 - - - 666 1,044 810 1,708 1,610 4 Bowel cancer 12,489 7,240 5,249 - - 193 868 1,100 1,493 1,725 1,860 - - 85 - 1,452 1,407 1,332 973 5 Liver cancer 11,161 8,197 2,964 - 13 129 976 2,829 1,625 1,826 799 - - 37 80 586 843 915 503 6 Pancreas cancer 1,322 747 575 - - - 147 118 111 263 107 - - - 38 166 98 158 115 7 20,716 15,362 5,354 - 31 213 752 3,325 4,313 5,060 1,669 - - 42 235 1,172 1,110 2,063 734 8 Lung cancer Melanoma and other skin cancers 723 605 118 - - - - 167 201 - 237 - - 118 - - - - - 9 Breast cancer 10,646 - 10,646 - - - 1,283 3,703 3,227 2,115 317 10 Uterus cancer 6,321 - 6,321 - - - 478 1,439 1,441 2,196 768 11 Ovary cancer 987 - 987 - - - 142 106 513 226 - 12 Prostate cancer 2,139 2,139 - 13 Bladder cancer 2,158 1,889 269 - 14 Lymphomas, multiple myeloma 4,614 3,248 1,367 39 15 Leukaemia 951 670 281 36 248,707 70,837 177,871 B. Other neoplasms C. Diabetes mellitus D. Endocrine disorders E. Neuropsychiatric conditions - - - - - 201 913 1,025 - - 120 228 502 472 567 - - - - - 269 - - 41 206 661 980 498 455 368 - 97 221 377 410 82 181 - - 253 64 132 80 - 106 - 45 - 237 - - - - - - 440 13,033 28,607 14,808 11,549 2,400 - - 225 13,471 38,285 42,640 62,167 21,083 1 Depression 827,681 229,989 597,692 - 3,897 54,390 89,477 60,447 14,673 5,692 1,412 - 9,311 137,105 220,003 163,682 43,804 18,490 5,297 2 Anxiety disorders 189,912 53,522 136,391 - 763 12,178 19,239 14,055 3,891 2,498 896 1 1,437 29,805 47,566 34,761 10,982 8,057 3,783 3 Schizophrenia 154,164 78,182 75,981 - 892 20,212 32,357 18,893 3,868 1,619 342 - 516 13,498 27,439 23,505 6,340 3,645 1,038 4 Epilepsy 31,688 15,678 16,010 982 5,939 5,549 2,204 776 132 71 24 1,026 5,137 5,807 2,440 1,103 253 172 73 5 Alcohol use disorders 291,000 261,672 29,328 - 2,226 59,916 114,673 74,096 8,414 1,724 623 - 498 6,314 12,416 8,715 1,041 231 114 6 Dementia 180,028 58,405 121,622 - - - 127 7,141 14,745 23,140 13,252 - - - 10 7,505 21,669 44,400 48,038 7 Drug use disorders 115,826 105,098 10,727 - 605 61,089 36,662 6,044 474 173 52 - 35 6,001 3,703 819 113 42 14 Males F. G. H. Sense organ diseases Males Females Females 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ 0-4 5-14 15-29 30-44 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ 1 Vision loss 360,743 140,795 219,948 371 1,513 6,855 17,513 44,204 21,070 25,743 23,525 229 1,008 7,563 16,264 43,226 33,551 54,991 63,117 2 Hearing loss 119,624 56,546 63,078 50 2,551 7,809 7,982 9,277 9,610 11,671 7,597 56 1,599 5,516 6,863 9,770 9,877 15,444 13,953 Cardiovascular diseases 1 Ischaemic heart disease 2 Stroke 61,709 33,106 28,603 49 177 2,735 6,433 10,103 4,973 5,101 3,535 8 31 622 2,276 5,988 4,708 7,342 7,627 347,965 192,502 155,462 2,183 7,685 28,589 51,531 55,164 18,984 18,964 9,402 336 1,345 7,007 19,450 33,740 19,371 40,743 33,471 150,976 106,414 44,562 - 44 3,971 19,478 37,743 18,866 17,528 8,785 - 1 1,069 6,459 14,831 8,028 8,369 5,806 Respiratory diseases 1 III. Persons COPD I. Digestive diseases J. Genitourinary diseases K. Skin diseases L. Musculoskeletal diseases 292,467 114,874 177,593 - 66 986 14,358 42,370 27,654 20,247 9,193 - 89 1,499 9,566 71,763 37,719 35,660 21,297 292,467 114,874 177,593 - 66 986 14,358 42,370 27,654 20,247 9,193 - 89 1,499 9,566 71,763 37,719 35,660 21,297 M. 1 Osteoarthritis Congenital anomalies N. Oral conditions 431,697 280,915 150,782 4,642 23,184 132,838 72,146 44,999 1,765 1,062 280 6,713 14,600 45,453 50,149 24,858 4,123 4,729 156 695 519 176 55 46 61 63 86 55 66 87 19 16 21 21 28 19 22 29 289,777 187,837 101,941 24,124 44,852 50,162 34,437 26,592 2,793 3,797 1,080 13,938 17,571 22,781 10,335 24,275 5,110 6,088 1,844 25,067 14,989 10,078 - - 14,657 - - 332 - - 8,803 - - - 1,275 - - - 8,924 8,119 805 4,355 666 1,196 1,805 34 64 - - 191 113 311 - 177 14 - - 569,311 393,209 176,102 26,309 77,667 138,971 103,021 40,966 3,533 2,339 404 11,168 41,853 49,077 38,022 29,274 4,343 2,221 143 Injuries A. Unintentional injuries Road traffic accidents 1 Poisonings 2 Falls 3 Fires 4 Drownings 5 Other unintentional injuries 6 B. Intentional injuries 1 Suicide 2 Violence 335 209 126 - 42 125 36 - 7 - - - - 21 31 74 - - - 51,347 39,972 11,376 - 3,695 19,275 8,434 7,730 769 70 - - 1,049 4,717 4,514 958 138 - -