2018
DOI: 10.22158/rhs.v3n3p65
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Data Talks: Obesity-Related Influences on US Mortality Rates

Abstract: Background: In the US, obesity is an epidemiologic challenge and the population fails to comprehend this complex public health issue. To evaluate underlying obesity-impact patterns on mortality rates, we data-mined the 1999–2016 Center for Disease Control WONDER database’s vital records. Methods: Adopting SAS programming, we scrutinized the mortality and population counts. Using ICD-10 diagnosis codes connected to overweight and obesity, we obtained the obesity-related crude and age-adjusted causes of death.… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(33 citation statements)
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References 39 publications
(100 reference statements)
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“…As a result, there are a variety of ICD-10 code reporting errors [13], [30]. However, the ICD-10 code data has been shown to have significant clinical value in physician-patient settings [31]- [33], and the public CDC WONDER database's ICD-10 information has generated valuable awareness on the negative impacts of the nation's waistline on human health [10], [12], [13], [20], [34]- [37].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a result, there are a variety of ICD-10 code reporting errors [13], [30]. However, the ICD-10 code data has been shown to have significant clinical value in physician-patient settings [31]- [33], and the public CDC WONDER database's ICD-10 information has generated valuable awareness on the negative impacts of the nation's waistline on human health [10], [12], [13], [20], [34]- [37].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Reflecting on the negative consequences of previously studied chronic condition-related mortality on African-American/Blacks (AA/B) in the U.S. and Delaware (D'Souza et al, 2018;D'Souza, Kashmar et al, 2015;D'Souza, Li, Gannon et al, 2019;D'Souza, Walls et al, 2015;D'Souza, Wentzien et al, 2017; death ratios were higher for both Whites and AA/B at 3,007/10,703,061 (0.00028) and 691/2,962,447 (0.00023), respectively.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For their research projects, students probe the databases' annual records for population, demographic, housing, social, and economic characteristics for all U.S. states, as well as for the State of Delaware (D'Souza et al, 2018;D'Souza, Kashmar et al, 2015;D'Souza, Wentzien, Bautista et al, 2017;D'Souza, Li, Gannon et al 2019;Neff & D'Souza, 2019). Furthermore, undergraduates completed epidemiologic methods in study design, data analysis, and statistical interpretations for the adverse human health effects observed from persistent health complications arising from obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, and cancer (D'Souza et al, 2018;D'Souza, Kashmar et al, 2015;D'Souza, Li, Gannon et al, 2019;D'Souza, Walls et al, 2015;D'Souza, Wentzien et al, 2017;. Results reveal that the listed chronic conditions do (indeed) impact all segments of the U.S. population and that the African American/Black (AA/B) population has been disproportionately affected.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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