Literature DB >> 18218998

Inequalities in mortality during and after restructuring of the New Zealand economy: repeated cohort studies.

Tony Blakely1, Martin Tobias, June Atkinson.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To determine whether disparities between income and mortality changed during a period of major structural and macroeconomic reform and to estimate the changing contribution of different diseases to these disparities.
DESIGN: Repeated cohort studies. DATA SOURCES: 1981, 1986, 1991, 1996, and 2001 censuses linked to mortality data. Population Total New Zealand population, ages 1-74 years.
METHODS: Mortality rates standardised for age and ethnicity were calculated for each census cohort by level of household income. Standardised rate differences and rate ratios, and slope and relative indices of inequality (SII and RII), were calculated to measure disparities on both absolute and relative scales.
RESULTS: All cause mortality rates declined over the 25 year study period in all groups stratified by sex, age, and income, except for 25-44 year olds of both sexes on low incomes among whom there was little change. In all age groups pooled, relative inequalities increased from 1981-4 to 1996-9 (RIIs increased from 1.85 (95% confidence interval 1.67 to 2.04) to 2.54 (2.29 to 2.82) for males and from 1.54 (1.35 to 1.76) to 2.12 (1.88 to 2.39) for females), then stabilised in 2001-4 (RIIs of 2.60 (2.34 to 2.89) and 2.18 (1.93 to 2.45), respectively). Absolute inequalities were stable over time, with a possible fall from 1996-9 to 2001-4. Cardiovascular disease was the major contributor to the observed disparities between income and mortality but decreased in importance from 45% in 1981-4 to 33% in 2001-4 for males and from 50% to 29% for females. The corresponding contribution of cancer increased from 16% to 22% for males and from 12% to 25% for females.
CONCLUSIONS: During and after restructuring of the economy disparities in mortality between income groups in New Zealand increased in relative terms (but not in absolute terms), but it is difficult to confidently draw a causal link with structural reforms. The contribution of different causes of death to this inequality changed over time, indicating a need to re-prioritise health policy accordingly.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18218998      PMCID: PMC2244751          DOI: 10.1136/bmj.39455.596181.25

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMJ        ISSN: 0959-8138


  25 in total

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5.  Commentary: Did Preston underestimate the effect of economic development on mortality?

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6.  The changing relation between mortality and level of economic development. Population Studies, Vol. 29, No. 2, July 1975.

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7.  Commentary: Preston and mortality trends since the mid-1970s.

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  31 in total

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5.  Neonatal Mortality and Inequalities in Bangladesh: Differential Progress and Sub-national Developments.

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6.  Causes of death responsible for the widening gap in mortality among educational groups in Austria between 1981 and 1991.

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7.  Educational inequalities in mortality over four decades in Norway: prospective study of middle aged men and women followed for cause specific mortality, 1960-2000.

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8.  Factors associated with the prevalence of hypertension in the southeastern United States: insights from 69,211 blacks and whites in the Southern Community Cohort Study.

Authors:  Uchechukwu K A Sampson; Todd L Edwards; Eiman Jahangir; Heather Munro; Minaba Wariboko; Mariam G Wassef; Sergio Fazio; George A Mensah; Edmond K Kabagambe; William J Blot; Loren Lipworth
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9.  Trends in the educational gradient of mortality among US adults aged 45 to 84 years: bringing regional context into the explanation.

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10.  Stagnant neonatal mortality and persistent health inequality in middle-income countries: a case study of the Philippines.

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