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About:
Excess of Cardiovascular Deaths During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Brazilian Capital Cities
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wasabi.inria.fr
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research paper
schema:ScholarlyArticle
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type
Academic Article
research paper
schema:ScholarlyArticle
isDefinedBy
Covid-on-the-Web dataset
title
Excess of Cardiovascular Deaths During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Brazilian Capital Cities
Creator
Antônio, Marcelo
Brant, Luisa
Gláucia, Maria
Lopes, C
Luiz, Antonio
Luiz, Antônio
Malta, Deborah
Nascimento, Bruno
Oliveira,
Ribeiro, P
Ribeiro, Pinho
Teixeira, Renato
source
MedRxiv
abstract
Introduction: During the COVID-19 pandemic, excess mortality has been reported, while hospitalizations for acute cardiovascular events reduced. Brazil is the second country with more deaths due to COVID-19. We aimed to evaluate excess cardiovascular mortality during COVID-19 pandemic in 6 Brazilian capital cities. Methods: Using the Civil Registry public database, we evaluated total and cardiovascular excess deaths, further stratified in ACS, stroke and unspecified cardiovascular deaths in the 6 Brazilian cities with greater number of COVID-19 deaths (Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Fortaleza, Recife, Belem, Manaus). We compared data from epidemiological weeks 12 to 22 of 2020, with the same period in 2019. We also compared the number of hospital and home deaths during the period. Results: There were 69,328 deaths and 17,877 COVID-19 deaths in the studied period and cities for 2020. Cardiovascular mortality increased in most cities, with greater magnitude in the Northern capitals. However, while there was a reduction in ACS and stroke in the most developed cities, the Northern capitals showed an increase of these events. For unspecified cardiovascular deaths, there was a marked increase in all cities, which strongly correlated to the rise in home deaths (r=0.86, p=0.01). Conclusion: The excess cardiovascular mortality was greater in the less developed cities, possibly associated with healthcare collapse. ACS and stroke deaths decreased in the most developed cities, in parallel with an increase in unspecified cardiovascular and home deaths, presumably as a result of misdiagnosis. Conversely, ACS and stroke deaths increased in cities with a healthcare collapse.
has issue date
2020-06-26
(
xsd:dateTime
)
bibo:doi
10.1101/2020.06.24.20139295
has license
medrxiv
sha1sum (hex)
479c35aaa89e244dac10c8dd7e4c5dcd797f4761
schema:url
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.06.24.20139295
resource representing a document's title
Excess of Cardiovascular Deaths During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Brazilian Capital Cities
resource representing a document's body
covid:479c35aaa89e244dac10c8dd7e4c5dcd797f4761#body_text
is
schema:about
of
named entity 'hospitalizations'
named entity 'COVID-19'
named entity 'COUNTRY'
named entity 'ACUTE'
named entity 'COVID-19 PANDEMIC'
named entity 'CITIES'
named entity 'EXCESS'
named entity 'SECOND'
named entity 'CARDIOVASCULAR EVENTS'
covid:arg/479c35aaa89e244dac10c8dd7e4c5dcd797f4761
named entity 'excess mortality'
named entity 'excess'
named entity 'cardiovascular mortality'
named entity 'COVID'
named entity 'COVID-19 Pandemic'
named entity 'Brazilian'
named entity 'CNPq'
named entity 'preprint'
named entity 'June 19'
named entity 'acute care'
named entity 'pulmonary embolism'
named entity 'health systems'
named entity 'STEMI'
named entity 'preprint'
named entity 'intensive care'
named entity 'peer review'
named entity 'Pneumonia'
named entity 'preprint'
named entity 'demographic'
named entity 'epidemiological'
named entity 'peer review'
named entity 'cardiovascular events'
named entity 'preprint'
named entity 'ACS'
named entity 'Civil Registry'
named entity 'bradyarrhythmia'
named entity 'SARS'
named entity 'Rio de Janeiro'
named entity 'February 26'
named entity 'coronavirus'
named entity 'March 11'
named entity 'Civil Registry'
named entity 'Italy'
named entity 'copyright holder'
named entity 'ACS'
named entity 'peer review'
named entity 'access to healthcare'
named entity 'COVID-19'
named entity 'acute coronary syndrome'
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named entity 'health promotion'
named entity 'Recife'
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named entity 'COVID-19'
named entity 'preprint'
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named entity 'Brazil'
named entity 'quaternary'
named entity 'cardiovascular events'
named entity 'Sepsis'
named entity 'statistically significant'
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named entity 'coronavirus'
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named entity 'Manaus'
named entity 'SARS'
named entity 'preprint'
named entity 'copyright holder'
named entity 'COVID-19'
named entity 'ACS'
named entity 'peer review'
named entity 'medRxiv'
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