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© 1992 Oxford University Press

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Time Trends in Survival from Myocardial Infarction in Stockholm County 1976–1984

NIKLAS HAMMAR*, FLEMMING F LARSEN**, EVA SANDBERG{dagger}, LARS ALFREDSSON*,{ddagger} and TöRES THEORELL§

*Department of Epidemiology, Institute of Environmental Medicine, Karolinska lnstitutet Box 60208 S- 10401 Stockholm, Sweden
**Department of Thoracic Medicine, Karolinska Hospital Stockholm, Sweden
{dagger}Department of Epidemiology Stockholm County Council
{ddagger}Department of Occupational Health, Karolinska Hospital Stockholm, Sweden
§National Institute for Psychosocial Factors and Health

In Stockholm county, a rapid decline in mortality from acute myocardial infarction (AMI) was observed among middle- aged men in the early 1980s. In the present study survival among AMI patients from 1976 to 1984 was investigated in order to explore whether improvements in survival may have contributed to this decline. AMI patients aged 30–74 years (n = 16 108) were identified through a hospital discharge register. Ddeaths within one year of hospital admission were ascertained by means of linkage to the national cause of death register. Survival 1 year after hospital admission in creased in both genders during the period 1981–1984, but among women there was no uniform trend over the whole study period. The estimated age-adjusted relative risk of death within one year after hospital admission for patients with a first infarction admitted to hospital in 1983–1984 as compared to in 1981–1982 was 0.88 for men and 0.79 for women. The causes of the observed increase in survival could not be determined from this study, but changes in medical in tervention as well as diagnostic improvements may have been important. Improved survival may have contributed to about 30% of the decline in mortality from AMI among middle-aged men in Stockholm county during the early 1980s.

Revised 1 June 1992


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