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Invited Commentary: Will Heart Attacks Be “Gone with the Century”?
Roger discusses the importance of the the study conducted by Rosamond et al on characterization of race- and sex-specific differences in the sensitivity of code 410 for diagnosing mycardial infarction. The findings underscore that relying on code 410 of the International Classification of Diseases,...
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Published in: | American journal of epidemiology 2004-12, Vol.160 (12), p.1147-1149 |
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container_title | American journal of epidemiology |
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creator | Roger, Véronique L |
description | Roger discusses the importance of the the study conducted by Rosamond et al on characterization of race- and sex-specific differences in the sensitivity of code 410 for diagnosing mycardial infarction. The findings underscore that relying on code 410 of the International Classification of Diseases, to characterize the burden of ischemic disease across communities and populations will probably become increasingly misleading. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1093/aje/kwh342 |
format | article |
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language | eng |
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source | Oxford Journals Online |
subjects | Black or African American Black People Classification Epidemiology Female Heart attacks Hospitalization Humans International Classification of Diseases - trends Male Myocardial Infarction - diagnosis Myocardial Infarction - epidemiology Patient Discharge - trends Predictive Value of Tests Reproducibility of Results Studies United States - epidemiology White People |
title | Invited Commentary: Will Heart Attacks Be “Gone with the Century”? |
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