Adults still account for many deaths from chickenpox
EDITORIt
was good to learn from Brisson et al's letter that the trend of an increasing
number of deaths from chickenpox hasreversed in the three years
since colleagues and I completed oursurvey. 12 However, Brisson et al disagree with our claimthat deaths in adults are rising and state that this is misleading.1
Our conclusion that adult deaths had risen was based on statistics covering a
period of 31 years (1967-97). Among certifieddeaths from chickenpox
adults accounted for 48% in 1967-77 (88deaths in 11 years), 64% in
1978-85 (120 deaths in eight years),3
and 81% in 1986-97 (269 deaths in 12years).
The contention that our data are misleading on the basis of three further
years of data compared with our span of 31 yearsclearly needs to be
placed in context. Moreover, there is a precedentfor periods of
lower mortality, as discussed below for the period1989-91. The main
body of our paper stated that deaths from chickenpoxin adults have
increased in number and proportion. We inadvertentlyused the present
tense in the abstract and cannot claim to seeinto the
future.
We looked at deaths noted by the Office for National Statistics for the
13 years 1985-97 (table). This table, which was notpublished in our
paper for reasons of space, shows that, exceptin two years, the
annual number of deaths was fairly consistent.The exceptions were
1989 and 1996, when the case fatality ratesbased on consultation
rates from the Royal College of GeneralPractitioners were also
exceptional. We have no explanation forthis.
Numbers of certified deaths from chickenpox and
estimated case fatality rates in England and Wales, 1985-97
The total number of deaths in 1986-8, 1989-91, 1992-4, and 1995-7 were
26, 22, 27, and 27 respectively. This does not showthat, as Brisson
et al state, "The number of deaths from chickenpoxand case fatality
rates were significantly higher in 1995-7 [theperiod of our study]
than at any other period." The overall casefatality rates in the
table do not show thiseither.
The main messages of our paper are that mortality from chickenpox is not
negligible; adults account for a high proportionof deaths; and the
number and proportion of adult deaths increasedsubstantially between
1967 and1997.
Norman Noah, professor of public health.
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London WCIE 7HT
norman.noah@lshtm.ac.uk
Rawson H, Crampin A, Noah N. Deaths from chickenpox in
England and Wales 1995-7: analysis of routine mortality data. BMJ
2001; 323: 1091-1093[Abstract/Full
Text].
Marc Brisson, W John Edmunds, Nigel J Gay, Elizabeth Miller, J Claire
Bramley, Ruby Devi, David Muir, Philip Rice, A H Mohsen, M W McKendrick, Neil
Roberts, Giles J Peek, Nikki Jones, Richard K Firmin, and Diana Elbourne
BMJ 2002 324: 609.
[Letter]
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