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Autoimmune diseases: a leading cause of death among young and middle-aged women in the United States

238

Citations

7

References

2000

Year

TLDR

The study evaluated how autoimmune diseases affect mortality in women. The authors compared autoimmune disease death counts to the top ten leading causes of death for women in 1995. Autoimmune disease deaths outpaced the 10th leading cause in all women under 65 and the 8th in the 15–24, 25–44, and 45–64 age groups, establishing them as a leading cause of death among young and middle‑aged women—a fact obscured by current leading‑cause identification methods.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: This study assessed the effect of autoimmune diseases on mortality among women. METHODS: Counts of autoimmune disease deaths were compared with frequencies of the 10 "official" leading causes of death among women in the United States in 1995. RESULTS: Autoimmune disease deaths exceeded the frequency of the 10th leading cause in every age category of women younger than 65 years and exceeded that for the eighth leading cause in the 15 to 24, 25 to 44, and 45 to 64 years age groups. CONCLUSIONS: Autoimmune diseases constitute a leading cause of death among young and middle-aged women. This fact is obscured by current methods used to identify leading causes.

References

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