In-Hospital Elderly Mortality in a Nigerian Tertiary Health Care Center

Introduction: The elderly represent a significant proportion of the populace and their mortality index is of public health significance. With dearth of vital registration, in-hospital based studies remains a desirable alternative. This study hopes to determine the epidemiologic pattern of elderly mo...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: obiora Jude uchendu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Shahid Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences 2020-06-01
Series:Elderly Health Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ehj.ssu.ac.ir/article-1-179-en.html
id doaj-f2fdc7e4326f4f77bed1835f304b065c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f2fdc7e4326f4f77bed1835f304b065c2020-11-25T03:52:12ZengShahid Sadoughi University of Medical SciencesElderly Health Journal2423-61792423-61792020-06-01613642In-Hospital Elderly Mortality in a Nigerian Tertiary Health Care Centerobiora Jude uchendu0 Department of Histopathology, Morbid Anatomy, Delta State University, Abraka, Delta State, Nigeria Introduction: The elderly represent a significant proportion of the populace and their mortality index is of public health significance. With dearth of vital registration, in-hospital based studies remains a desirable alternative. This study hopes to determine the epidemiologic pattern of elderly mortality with respect to sex, age, date and cause of death.  Methods: This is descriptive retrospective study of elderly deaths among hospitalized patients in a Nigerian Tertiary Care Center. The age, sex, date and causes of death were analyzed using SPSS 21 and results summarized in tables and figures. Results: Elderly death constitute 24.7% of all hospital deaths with a crude mortality of 25.3%. Males constitute majority of the cases and 81.6% of the deaths occur within the 7th and 8th decades. Non-communicable diseases, communicable diseases and injuries constitute 80%, 12.5% and 7.6% of the cases respectively. Major specific causes of death include cerebrovascular accident, chronic kidney disease, chronic liver disease, sepsis, diabetes mellitus, road traffic accident, prostate and colorectal cancers accounting for 28.8%, 8.7%, 5.7%, 5.3%, 4.9%, 3.8%, 3.4% and 3.0% of all cases respectively. Conclusion: Mortality rate among in-hospital elderly patients are relatively high. More male are affected than females with causes attributed, in descending order to non- communicable, communicable diseases and external injuries. Major specific causes of death include cerebrovascular accident, chronic liver disease, chronic kidney disease, diabetes mellitus, cancers, sepsis and road traffic injury. Understanding the disease pattern will go a long way guiding social policy and healthcare interventions on the elderly population.http://ehj.ssu.ac.ir/article-1-179-en.htmlmortalitynon-communicablecommunicableinjuryaging
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author obiora Jude uchendu
spellingShingle obiora Jude uchendu
In-Hospital Elderly Mortality in a Nigerian Tertiary Health Care Center
Elderly Health Journal
mortality
non-communicable
communicable
injury
aging
author_facet obiora Jude uchendu
author_sort obiora Jude uchendu
title In-Hospital Elderly Mortality in a Nigerian Tertiary Health Care Center
title_short In-Hospital Elderly Mortality in a Nigerian Tertiary Health Care Center
title_full In-Hospital Elderly Mortality in a Nigerian Tertiary Health Care Center
title_fullStr In-Hospital Elderly Mortality in a Nigerian Tertiary Health Care Center
title_full_unstemmed In-Hospital Elderly Mortality in a Nigerian Tertiary Health Care Center
title_sort in-hospital elderly mortality in a nigerian tertiary health care center
publisher Shahid Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences
series Elderly Health Journal
issn 2423-6179
2423-6179
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Introduction: The elderly represent a significant proportion of the populace and their mortality index is of public health significance. With dearth of vital registration, in-hospital based studies remains a desirable alternative. This study hopes to determine the epidemiologic pattern of elderly mortality with respect to sex, age, date and cause of death.  Methods: This is descriptive retrospective study of elderly deaths among hospitalized patients in a Nigerian Tertiary Care Center. The age, sex, date and causes of death were analyzed using SPSS 21 and results summarized in tables and figures. Results: Elderly death constitute 24.7% of all hospital deaths with a crude mortality of 25.3%. Males constitute majority of the cases and 81.6% of the deaths occur within the 7th and 8th decades. Non-communicable diseases, communicable diseases and injuries constitute 80%, 12.5% and 7.6% of the cases respectively. Major specific causes of death include cerebrovascular accident, chronic kidney disease, chronic liver disease, sepsis, diabetes mellitus, road traffic accident, prostate and colorectal cancers accounting for 28.8%, 8.7%, 5.7%, 5.3%, 4.9%, 3.8%, 3.4% and 3.0% of all cases respectively. Conclusion: Mortality rate among in-hospital elderly patients are relatively high. More male are affected than females with causes attributed, in descending order to non- communicable, communicable diseases and external injuries. Major specific causes of death include cerebrovascular accident, chronic liver disease, chronic kidney disease, diabetes mellitus, cancers, sepsis and road traffic injury. Understanding the disease pattern will go a long way guiding social policy and healthcare interventions on the elderly population.
topic mortality
non-communicable
communicable
injury
aging
url http://ehj.ssu.ac.ir/article-1-179-en.html
work_keys_str_mv AT obiorajudeuchendu inhospitalelderlymortalityinanigeriantertiaryhealthcarecenter
_version_ 1724483735878893568