| The Pediatrics Disease Spectrum Of The First Attached Hospital Of Xinjiang Medical University In Thirty Years Postgraduate 1)uan Yu-qing TutorLi Wei-cheng Objective To study the change of the pediatrics disease spectrum of the First Attached Hospital of Xinjiang Medical University during past thirty years, and to observe its?tendency; To find if it have the character of region; to evaluate the medical level of some common children diseases. Methods: put all of the first page of medical record in casebook pool data and analyze it statistically .Calculate the constituent ratio of every disease or every system disease and its?proportional mortality rate, observe its? change Statistic the cure rate , the fatality rate , the average days of hospitalization predict the quantity and the average hospitalization cost of every kind disease . Results 1. It take on the quickly ascending tendency that the in-patients quantity of the pediatrics and its cost , but it always been lower than whole hospital. .2. The general cure rate of pediatrics ascending and the fatality rate of whole pediatrics, the infectious disease, internal disease , and neonatal disease was decreased obviously .The most is neonatal disease , the next is infectious disease . 3.Recent 30 years , in our hospital pediatrics, the fatality rate and the constituent ratio of infectious disease was gradually deereased.4. The ascendance of in-patient quantity and the constituent ratio of internal disease companied with the smooth descend of the constituent ratio of infectious disease , among it the ascend of congenital disease ,alimentary system disease , tumor and circulatory system disease is obviously. 5. Prediction :To 2004, the in-patients quantity and the hospitalization cost of our hospital or our department of pediatrics will still take on a ascending tendency. Conclusion: During passed thirty years, the pediatrics disease spectrum changed obviously in the First Attached Hospital of Xinjiang Medical University .The children infectious disease still occupy the important... |