TY - JOUR PY - 2022// TI - Are we undercounting the true burden of mortality related to suicide, alcohol-related, or drug use? An analysis using veteran Colorado death certificate data JO - American journal of epidemiology A1 - Spark, Talia L. A1 - Adams, Rachel Sayko A1 - Hoffmire, Claire A. A1 - Forster, Jeri E. A1 - Brenner, Lisa A. SP - ePub EP - ePub VL - ePub IS - ePub N2 - Knowledge regarding deaths due to suicide, alcohol-related, or drug-related causes may be limited by inconsistent and/or restrictive case definitions, resulting in concerns regarding validity of findings and underestimates of burden. In this proof-of-concept study, we assessed varying case definitions (suicide, alcohol-related, drug-related mortality using underlying cause of death [UCOD] versus multiple cause of death [MCOD]) based on counts and rates among Colorado Veterans who died (2009-2020). Suicide, alcohol-related, or drug-related ICD-10 codes were identified, and two case definitions were compared: UCOD; qualifying ICD-10 code listed as the UCOD; and MCOD; qualifying ICD-10 code in any cause of death field. Of 109,314 decedents, the number and age-adjusted mortality rate (per 100,000 persons) significantly increased when including MCOD: UCOD, n=4,930 (110.3/100,000) versus MCOD, n= 6,954 (138.4/100,000). While rates of suicide mortality did not change, alcohol-related mortality doubled with the more inclusive case-definition: UCOD 1,752 (27.3/100,000) versus MCOD 3,847 (59.8/100,000). Alcohol use disorder codes accounted for 71% of additional alcohol-related deaths captured with the MCOD definition. Studies that rely on UCOD codes may be underestimating the burden of deaths, especially alcohol-related deaths. Increased effort is required to reevaluate current classifications of deaths associated with suicide, alcohol-use, or drug-use.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 0002-9262 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/aje/kwac194 ID - ref1 ER -