Noncommunicable diseases attributed to low levels of physical activity in Brazil: an epidemiologic Global Burden of Disease Study.

The aim of the study was to present estimates of mortality from noncommunicable diseases attributable to low physical activity in Brazil in 2019.

An epidemiologic and descriptive study. We retrieved the data during the month of September 2023. Two independent researchers accessed the indicators in the Global Burden of Disease database: (i) number of cases and (ii) mortality from cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, kidney diseases, and neoplasms, and (iii) level of physical activity in Brazilian individuals for the year 2019. Data were extracted by two researchers independently for the states of Brazil, stratified by sex (male and female), age groups (15-49 years, 50-69 years, and 70 or more years), cause of death and corresponding mortality (cardiovascular diseases, diabetes and kidney diseases, and neoplasms) and classified by regions according to geographic and administrative distribution in North, Northeast, Southeast, South, and Central-West. The number of deaths, age-standardized mortality, and years of life lost due to the disease were extracted, gross and in rates per 100,000 inhabitants.

Mortality from noncommunicable diseases associated with low levels of physical activity in Brazil in 2019 was 293.39 deaths per 100,000 inhabitants, highest in Maranhão, with 407.98 deaths per 100,000 inhabitants, and lowest in the Distrito Federal and Minas Gerais, respectively.

Cardiovascular disease was the most prominent risk factor among the results of this study.
Non-Communicable Diseases
Diabetes
Cancer
Cardiovascular diseases
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Policy
Advocacy

Authors

Maciel Maciel, Pontes-Silva Pontes-Silva, Figueiredo Figueiredo, Franco Franco, Quaresma Quaresma, Nascimento-Ferreira Nascimento-Ferreira
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