Technical Notes
Read Next in Summary Measures of Health 2015-2017:
References
Relative Standard Error (RSE): A tool for assessing reliability of a rate or estimate. Estimates with large RSEs are considered less reliable than estimates with small RSEs. While there is not absolute cutoff point, the guidelines used by National Center for Health Statistics recommends that estimates with RSEs above 30 percent should be considered unreliable and have been suppressed in this report.
Social determinants of health: Conditions in which people are born, grow, live, work, and age. These circumstances are shaped by the distribution of money, power, and resources at global, national and local levels and can influence health outcomes of individuals and populations.
Years of Potential Life Lost (YPLL): A count of the average years a person would have lived if he or she had not died prematurely—before some selected time period. For the purposes of this report a death before age 75 years was considered premature.
Methods
Average life expectancy was calculated using a revised method developed by Chiang.7 Premature death rates were calculated and age-adjusted to the 2000 US Standard Population using the direct method applying the same age groupings and proportions as those established by the National Center for Health Statistics for the Department of Health and Human Services. Death data where less than five cases occurred in a three-year period were suppressed and rates were not calculated. Rates with RSEs greater than 23% but less than 30% were noted with caution for interpretation. Rates with RSEs greater than or equal to 30% were suppressed. Rates were considered statistically different if their confidence intervals did not overlap. Confidence intervals and margins of error were 95% unless elsewhere specified.
Limitations
Mortality Codes
The mortality statistics presented in this report were compiled in accordance with World Health Organization regulations, which specify that member countries classify and code causes of death in accordance with the current revision of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD). Effective with deaths occurring in 1999, the United States began using the Tenth Revision of this classification (ICD-10). ICD not only details disease classifications but also provides definitions, tabulation lists, the format of the death certificate, and the rules for coding cause of death. Cause-of-death data presented in this publication were coded using procedures outlined in annual issues of the National Center for Health Statistics Instruction Manual. This manual includes rules for selecting underlying cause of death and regulations on the use of ICD.
The following table lists causes of death presented in this report and their corresponding ICD-10 code(s).
Cause of Death | IDC-10 |
---|---|
All Causes of Death | A00-Y89 |
All Cancers | C00-C97 |
Colorectal Cancer | C18-C21, C26.0 |
Pancreatic Cancer | C25.9 |
Lung Cancer | C34 |
Female Breast Cancer | C50 |
Prostate Cancer | C61 |
Diabetes | E10-E14 |
Heart Disease | I00-I09, I11, I13, I20-I51 |
Stroke | I60-I69 |
Chronic Lower Respiratory Disease | J40-J47 |
Chronic Liver Disease and Cirrhosis | K70, K73-K74 |
Unintentional Injuries | V01-X59, Y85-Y86 |
Unintentional Motor Vehicle Collisions | V02-V04(.1,.9), V09.2, V12-V14(.3-.9), V19(.4-.6), V20-V28(.3-.9), V29-V79(.4-.9), V80(.3-.5), V81.1, V82.1, V83-V86(.0-.3), V87(.0-.8), V89.2 |
Unintentional Falls | W00-W19 |
Unintentional Drug Poisonings | X40-X44 |
Suicide | U03, X60-X84, 87.0 |