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A statistical study shows the geographical inequalities of 16 causes of mortality in Spain

  • Scientific Culture and Innovation Unit
  • February 22nd, 2021
Miguel Ángel Martínez, professor at the Faculty of Mathematics of the University of Valencia.
Miguel Ángel Martínez, professor at the Faculty of Mathematics of the University of Valencia.

Miguel Ángel Martínez, professor at the Faculty of Mathematics of the University of Valencia (UV) is the coordinator of MEDEA3, a statistical study on the geographical distribution of mortality from 16 causes in 26 Spanish cities of 11 autonomous communities. The initiative, which has resulted in an interactive atlas of mortality and in which 13 research groups from 36 institutions participate, concludes that a single geographic pattern dominates the pattern of all diseases or causes of death.

The MEDEA3 project has been financed by the Carlos III Health Institute and has recently concluded its third edition. The 26 cities comprise 9 of the 10 main cities in Spain by population and among them are Alicante, Castellón de la Plana and València. The 16 causes of mortality included are the most important causes of death by absolute number and others of less absolute impact, but of important social interest such as AIDS, traffic accidents or suicides. The project also proposes the study of the association of the geographical distribution of the risk of each disease with socioeconomic and environmental factors.

In the case of València, to give an example of the data contained, the highest mortality from AIDS occurs in the eastern area, as well as the centre and its expansion in the case only of men. For women, regarding stomach cancer, the probability of dying from it is higher in the north of the city and also in the east, while in men it predominates with greater intensity in the east.

“Given the number of cities and causes of mortality considered, the amount of results generated by the project is enormous. As the main result of the project, it should be noted that, in general terms, it has been possible to find a unique geographical pattern for each city, with a very strong force compared to other factors, which is reproduced to a greater or lesser extent for almost all causes of mortality studied”, highlights Miguel A. Martínez, researcher at the Department of Statistics and Operations Research.

“This result contrasts with the initial objective of the project, and previous phases of it, such as the National Atlas of Mortality in Spain, in which it was proposed to find the geographical pattern of each disease. What has been found is that there seems to be a single geographic pattern that dominates, with more or less force, the geographic pattern of all diseases, which simply show small variations with respect to that pattern”, indicates Martínez, also responsible for the Bayensians research group of the FISABIO Foundation, with which the UV Vabar research group maintains a joint research unit for the development of statistical methods on the study of health data.

Among the conclusions, it has also been found that this pattern is strongly related to social factors and presents very different mortality values according to the social typology of each section. Thus, there is an evident excess of risk for a good part of the causes of mortality studied in the most socioeconomically depressed census sections of all the cities considered.

In addition, it has been possible to determine which causes would be the most representative of the excess mortality that these areas present, which in men respiratory diseases (lung cancer and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) and cirrhosis are the ones that show a greater excess of deaths in those areas. In the case of women, the diseases with the greatest presence in the areas that have shown a greater risk have been those of the circulatory system (ischemic disease and cerebrovascular accidents) as well as dementias.

 

Project

The study units used throughout the project have been the census sections of each of the cities considered. Each census section houses between one thousand and two thousand people, so its size is very small for statistical purposes. This problem has represented the main methodological challenge of the study from a mathematical point of view, since for the data analysis it has been necessary to use estimation models in small areas that consider not only the relationship / similarity between risks of nearby census section, but also the relationship that could exist between different causes of death.

In this way, despite the small size of the census sections, it is possible to emerge the geographic pattern of the risk of each of the diseases considered in the project. MEDEA3 has been a pioneer in the use of this type of methodology that integrates the simultaneous study of 16 causes of death in the same model.

On behalf of the University of Valencia, teachers from the Department of Preventive Medicine and Public Health, as well as from the Department of Nursery have participated in the project.