Chronic disease mortality among Wisconsin Native American Indians, 1984-1993.
Premature chronic disease mortality continues to be a problem among American Indian populations. This article examines the burden of chronic disease and related mortality. To document the chronic disease burden in the Wisconsin American Indian population, age- and sex-specific incidence-density mortality rates for ten chronic diseases (ischemic heart disease, stroke, diabetes, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, cirrhosis, and cancer of the breast, cervix, lung, colorectum and prostate) were estimated for a 10-year period (1984-1993) and compared with the Wisconsin non-Hispanic white population. Compared with whites, American Indians had markedly higher mortality rates from diabetes and cirrhosis in all age- and sex-specific groups. Ischemic heart disease mortality was significantly greater in both American Indian men and women 45-64 years of age (Rate Ratio [RR] = 1.7 and 2.1, respectively) compared to whites of the same age, but was lower in American Indians 65 years of age or older (RR=0.9 for both sexes). Overall, these ten chronic diseases were responsible for a significant excess number of deaths in middle-aged American Indian men and women (i.e., 45-64 years of age), whereas the chronic disease mortality experience of older American Indian men and women (i.e., > or = 65 years of age) was similar to that of the older white population.
Wisconsin WI