paso.pi
monthly deaths in El Paso by cause (ICD8,9,10) 1962-2002
paso.er
monthly deaths in El Paso by 12 age-groups 1962-2002
paso_pi1.bas to read,graph
P+I -deaths in April 1962-2002
5 6 8 9 4 7 11 3
9 2 8 2 5 10 7 6 8 4
1 2 2 2 7 2 3 6 10 1
8 8 6 7 8 8 14 8 4 9
6 8 8
by deaths certificates
total monthly deaths in El Paso in April 1962-2002:
156 134 135 124 156 151 148 172
174 159 158 225 192 173 157 177 211 194
175 194 166 196 185 210 206 230 224 205
251 276 243 304 257 282 288 286 285 286
308 305 326
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/lcod.htmNumber of deaths for leading causes of death
Heart disease: 616,067
Cancer: 562,875
Stroke (cerebrovascular diseases): 135,952
Chronic lower respiratory diseases: 127,924
Accidents (unintentional injuries): 123,706
Alzheimer's disease: 74,632
Diabetes: 71,382
Influenza and Pneumonia: 52,717
Nephritis, nephrotic syndrome, and nephrosis: 46,448
Septicemia: 34,828
Source: Deaths: Final Data for 2007, table B
53000 out of ~2.4M per year , that doesn't give the typical
weekly 6% from MMWR
so presumably MMWR includes some other conditions
in P+I, not P+I by international code of diseases
hmm, mentioned anywhere on the death-certificate ...
they have much space of 2ndary,tertiary... conditions
on the death certificates (usually blank), maybe El Paso changed their
habits to use these recently
For the 1999--00 season, a new case definition for P&I death was used in the 122 Cities Mortality Reporting System. Before this season, a P&I death was considered to be one in which pneumonia was identified as an underlying cause of death or influenza was listed anywhere on the death certificate. For the 1999--00 influenza season, this case definition was changed so that a P&I death was defined as one in which pneumonia or influenza was listed anywhere on the death certificate. The new case definition could potentially increase P&I mortality measurement levels in comparison with previous seasons. In addition, a limited number of cities use International Classification of Disease (ICD) (17) coding of the underlying cause of death to report P&I deaths to the 122 cities system. In 1999, some of these sites converted from ICD version 9 coding to ICD version 10 coding. ICD 10 coding changed the way that the underlying cause of death is defined and reduced the number of deaths attributed to P&I by approximately 60%. During the 1999--00 season, the effect of these two changes on the national estimate of the percentage of P&I deaths was unknown. The baseline and epidemic threshold values projected for the 1999--00 season used the previous P&I definitions. During summer 2000, an analysis of the P&I mortality data indicated that the combined changes had led to an approximate 0.8% upward shift in the 1999--00 mortality estimates that did not represent a true increase in mortality. To adjust for this upward shift in mortality estimates, the 122 cities P&I mortality baseline was retrospectively adjusted upward for the 1999--00 influenza season. For this report, the 1997--98 and 1998--99 season baseline and epidemic threshold values and proportion of P&I deaths were increased by 0.8 percentage points to allow for comparison with the 1999--00 season.