To understand more fully the nature of events leading to asthmatic death, we conducted a confidential enquiry prospectively throughout 1994-96 among the surviving relatives and respective general practitioners of subjects whose deaths could be attributed to asthma, whether wholly or partly. We also reviewed relevant hospital records and autopsy reports, and we submitted all the gathered information to an enquiry panel for evaluation. The subjects were identified from death certificates issued in five districts of the Northern Health Region of England (population 1 million) on which asthma was recorded as the primary cause of death.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAsthma mortality appeared to increase two-fold in the UK from the mid- 1970s to the early 1990s, but there is evidence of inaccuracy in asthma death certification and so a region-wide investigation was undertaken to assess whether this recorded statistical trend might have been partly or wholly artefactual. A total of 35 respiratory physicians, distributed in panels of three, systemically reviewed the hospital and general practice records of 210 subjects with physician-diagnosed asthma who died in 1991 and 1992. The death certificates indicated that asthma was considered to be the primary cause of death in 103 (group 1), a contributory cause in 70 (group 2) and not relevant in 37 (group 3).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough the death rate from asthma in England and Wales is reported to be about 2000 a year, clinical experience suggests that it is much rarer. Doctors in West Cumbria health district could recall only seven cases in 14 years. Examination of case notes of patients officially recorded as dying of asthma showed that many were aged over 60 and cigarette smokers.
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