Author
Listed:
- Corsi, Daniel J
- S V Subramanian
- Chow, Clara K
- McKee, Martin
- Chifamba, Jephat
- Dagenais, Giles
- Diaz, Rafael
- Iqbal, Romaina
- Kelishadi, Roya
- Kruger, Annamarie
- Lanas, Fernando
- López-Jaramilo, Patricio
- Mony, Prem
- Mohan, V.
- Avezum, Alvaro
- Oguz, Aytekin
- Rahman, M.Omar
- Rosengren, Annika
- Szuba, Andrej
- Li, Wei
- Yusoff, Khalid
- Yusufali, Afzalhussein
- Rangarajan, Sumathy
- Teo, Koon
- Yusuf, Salim
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The PURE study was established to investigate associations between social, behavioural, genetic, and environmental factors and cardiovascular diseases in 17 countries. In this analysis we compare the age, sex, urban/rural, mortality, and educational profiles of the PURE participants to national statistics. METHODS: PURE employed a community-based sampling and recruitment strategy where urban and rural communities were selected within countries. Within communities, representative samples of adults aged 35 to 70 years and their household members (n = 424,921) were invited for participation. RESULTS: The PURE household population compared to national statistics had more women (sex ratio 95.1 men per 100 women vs 100.3) and was older (33.1 years vs 27.3), although age had a positive linear relationship between the two data sources (Pearson's r = 0.92). PURE was 59.3% urban compared to an average of 63.1% in participating countries. The distribution of education was less than 7% different for each category, although PURE households typically had higher levels of education. For example, 37.8% of PURE household members had completed secondary education compared to 31.3% in the national data. Age-adjusted annual mortality rates showed positive correlation for men (r = 0.91) and women (r = 0.92) but were lower in PURE compared to national statistics (7.9 per 1000 vs 8.7 for men; 6.7 vs 8.1 for women). CONCLUSIONS: These findings indicate that modest differences exist between the PURE household population and national data for the indicators studied. These differences, however, are unlikely to have much influence on exposure-disease associations derived in PURE. Further, incidence estimates from PURE, stratified according to sex and/or urban/rural location will enable valid comparisons of the relative rates of various cardiovascular outcomes across countries.
Suggested Citation
Corsi, Daniel J & S V Subramanian & Chow, Clara K & McKee, Martin & Chifamba, Jephat & Dagenais, Giles & Diaz, Rafael & Iqbal, Romaina & Kelishadi, Roya & Kruger, Annamarie & Lanas, Fernando & López-J, "undated".
"Prospective Urban Rural Epidemiology (PURE) study: Baseline characteristics of the household sample and comparative analyses with national data in 17 countries,"
Working Paper
94576, Harvard University OpenScholar.
Handle:
RePEc:qsh:wpaper:94576
Download full text from publisher
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