Schistosoma mansoni in Brazil in 2015: retrieval of deaths and characteristics of patients that evolved to death

Revista de Medicina da UFC

Endereço:
Gerência de Ensino e Pesquisa - Universidade Federal do Ceará/Rua Coronel Nunes de Melo, S/N - Bloco dos ambulatórios (ilhas) - Andar superior - Rodolfo Teófilo
Fortaleza / CE
60430-270
Site: http://periodicos.ufc.br/revistademedicinadaufc
Telefone: (85) 3366-8590
ISSN: 24476595
Editor Chefe: Renan Magalhães Montenegro Júnior
Início Publicação: 30/11/2014
Periodicidade: Trimestral
Área de Estudo: Medicina

Schistosoma mansoni in Brazil in 2015: retrieval of deaths and characteristics of patients that evolved to death

Ano: 2019 | Volume: 59 | Número: 4
Autores: Helio Milani Pegado, Gilmara Lima Nascimento, Maria Regina Fernandes de Oliveira
Autor Correspondente: Helio Milani Pegado | [email protected]

Palavras-chave: schistosomiasis, epidemiology, mortality registries, mortality, schistosoma mansoni

Resumos Cadastrados

Resumo Inglês:

Introduction: Schistosomiasis is a disease endemic in Brazil. We analyzed the death records from the Brazilian Mortality Information System with the aim of retrieving deaths due to schistosomiasis and describing the patients that evolved to death in Brazil in the year of 2015. Methods: We evaluated the death certificates for retrieving basic causes due to schistosomiasis, estimated the mortality rate and described the sociodemographic characteristics of patients. Result: To retrieve the basic cause, we analyzed 150 death certificates and we found 39 (26%). Of the 406 studied deaths, 111 (27.3%) occurred in people aged between 60 and 69 and 101 (24.9%) between 70 and 79. Regarding the educational level, 196 (62.4%) had not concluded the elementary school and 85 (27.1%) had never studied. As to race/skin color, 248 deaths (65.1%) occurred in black or pardo. Pernambuco registered more deaths, with 119 (29.3%). Alagoas was the state presenting the highest mortality rate, with 1.62/100,000 residents. As immediate causes of death, most of them, 118 (29.1%), occurred by hypovolemic shock. Conclusions: Deaths were more frequent in older ages, consistent with the disease chronic evolution, in people with lower educational level, and in subjects that reported themselves as black or pardo.