TABLE 37
DEATHS DUE TO MEDICALLY TREATABLE DISEASES BY
SELECTED CAUSES AND GENDER
British Columbia, 1996-2000 and 2001

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- The medically treatable diseases presented in this table were selected according to Charlton's definition based on mortality in specific age groups that could potentially be avoided through appropriate medical attention (see Glossary). There were 122 deaths in 2001 that were identified as medically treatable according to this definition.
- Females accounted for 66 deaths from medically treatable diseases in 2001. Of the female deaths, almost three in seven (40.9%) were due to cervical cancer (27 deaths), more than one fifth (21.2%) were due to bacterial infections (14), and more than one in seven (15.2%) were due to pneumonia and unqualified bronchitis (10). In comparison, there were 56 male deaths (45.9%) from medically treatable diseases. In total, over a third (37.5%) of these male deaths were from bacterial infections (21), about one in five (21.4%) were due to hypertensive disease (12), and one fifth (19.6%) were from pneumonia and unqualified bronchitis (11).
- In the 1996-2000 period, three categories accounted for seven in ten of the 617 deaths from medically treatable diseases. These were cervical cancer (147 deaths), pneumonia and unqualified bronchitis (147), and bacterial infections (146).