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MSU MEMO

Oct. 11, 2004    Volume 29, Issue 11


MSU to map disease, death by analyzing drugs

MSU to map disease, death by analyzing drugs

Last year, Mississippi State medical sociologist Lynne Cossman and medical geographer Ronald Cossman released a detailed report spotlighting clusters of "healthy" and "unhealthy" places throughout the United States.

Now, the research team at the university's Social Science Research Center is seeking to discover whether those locales-including many in Mississippi-correlate with the medical prescription of drugs for chronic diseases. If successful, the two will have developed a powerful new tool for identifying national pockets of illness.

The Cossmans will use prescription drug data drawn from 75 percent of all U.S. retail pharmacies. Funded by the U.S. Office of Rural Health Policy, the yearlong effort seeks to determine whether prescription drug data can generate reliable and valid information about disease and death rates at the county level.

"Currently, there is no existing county-level data," said Lynne Cossman. "We know there are geographic concentrations of mortality rates that persist over time, but we don't know if, or how, these relate to specific diseases."

The team's approach will test whether prescription drug data can serve as an indirect measure-or proxy-for chronic illnesses, Ronald Cossman explained. Conducted under the auspices of the SSRC's Mississippi Health Policy Research Center, the work is believed to be the first to take an explicitly geographic approach.

"We'll look at prescription drug data for the top mortality-causing diseases, as well as selected non-fatal illnesses that have disability implications," he said. Included will be prescription drugs related to heart disease; cerebrovascular diseases; bronchitis, asthma, and emphysema; diabetes; sinusitis and allergies; arthritis; attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder; and pain management.

In the United States, chronic diseases account for 60 cents of every dollar spent on health care. With this in mind, Lynne Cossman said understanding the geographic distribution "is one step in ensuring that resources are appropriately matched to needs."

The Cossmans and other research colleagues on the team will correlate prescription drug data with a variety of other sources, including U.S. Census data and the annual Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance Survey of the Centers for Disease Control. In addition to identifying locations with exceptional rates, they'll seek to find if any chronic-illness commonalities exist.

With the data, they then can visually display the geographic variability of disease prevalence, comparing it with their earlier maps based on death rates. By extending their study, they also can test whether prescription drug rates are a valid predictor of death rates.

Also participating in the study are SSRC director Arthur G. Cosby, sociologist Troy Blanchard and graduate student Wesley James of Conway, Ark., all of MSU. Others on the team include Richard Thomas of the University of Tennessee Health Science Center and Louis Pol of the University of Nebraska, Omaha.