Publication | Open Access
Impact of primary health care on mortality from heart and cerebrovascular diseases in Brazil: a nationwide analysis of longitudinal data
330
Citations
23
References
2014
Year
The study assessed how Brazil’s Family Health Program (FHP) affected mortality from heart and cerebrovascular diseases between 2000 and 2009. Using an ecological longitudinal design, the authors applied negative‑binomial panel regressions with fixed effects to municipal data, linking annual and cumulative FHP coverage levels (none, incipient, intermediate, consolidated) to age‑standardized mortality rates for ICD‑10 cerebrovascular, ischemic, and other heart diseases. Consolidated FHP coverage was associated with a 18–21 % reduction in cerebrovascular and heart disease mortality (RR 0.82 and 0.79, respectively), with stronger effects for sustained coverage, and also increased health‑education activities, visits, and consultations while lowering hospitalizations; no effect was seen on accident mortality.
To evaluate the impact of Brazil's recently implemented Family Health Program (FHP), the largest primary health care programme in the world, on heart and cerebrovascular disease mortality across Brazil from 2000 to 2009.Ecological longitudinal design, evaluating the impact of FHP using negative binomial regression models for panel data with fixed effects specifications.Nationwide analysis of data from Brazilian municipalities covering the period from 2000 to 2009.1622 Brazilian municipalities with vital statistics of adequate quality.The annual FHP coverage and the average FHP coverage in previous years were used as main independent variables and classified as none (0%), incipient (<30%), intermediate (30-69%), or consolidated (≥ 70%). Age standardised mortality rates from causes in the group of cerebrovascular (ICD-10 codes I60-69), ischaemic (ICD-10 I20-25), and other forms of heart diseases (ICD-10 I30-52), which were included in the national list of ambulatory care-sensitive conditions, were calculated for each municipality for each year. They accounted for 40% of all deaths from these groups during the study period.FHP coverage was negatively associated with mortality rates from cerebrovascular and heart diseases (ambulatory care-sensitive conditions) in both unadjusted and adjusted models for demographic, social, and economic confounders. The FHP had no effect on the mortality rate for accidents, used as a control. The rate ratio for the effect of consolidated annual FHP coverage on cerebrovascular disease mortality and on heart disease mortality was 0.82 (95% confidence interval 0.79 to 0.86) and 0.79 (0.75 to 0.80) respectively, reaching the value of 0.69 (0.66 to 0.73) and 0.64 (0.59 to 0.68) when the coverage was consolidated during all the previous eight years. Moreover, FHP coverage increased the number of health education activities, domiciliary visits, and medical consultations and reduced hospitalisation rates for cerebrovascular and heart disease. Several complementary analyses showed quantitatively similar results.Comprehensive and community based primary health care programmes, such as the FHP in Brazil, acting through cardiovascular disease prevention, care, and follow-up can contribute to decreased cardiovascular disease morbidity and mortality in a developing country such as Brazil.
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