| Literature DB >> 26166920 |
Tse-Chuan Yang1, Leif Jensen2.
Abstract
While there is evidence to suggest that socioeconomic inequality within places is associated with mortality rates among people living within them, the empirical connection between the two remains unsettled as potential confounders associated with racial and social structure are overlooked. This study seeks to test this relationship, to determine whether it is due to differential levels of deprivation and social capital, and does so with intrinsically conditional autoregressive Bayesian spatial modeling that effectively addresses the bias introduced by spatial dependence. We find that deprivation and social capital partly but not completely account for why inequality is positively associated with mortality and that spatial modeling generates more accurate predictions than does the traditional approach. We advance the literature by unveiling the intervening roles of social capital and deprivation in the inequality-mortality relationship and offering new evidence that inequality matters in US county mortality rates.Entities:
Keywords: Bayesian spatial modeling; conditional autoregressive modeling; deprivation; inequality; mortality
Year: 2015 PMID: 26166920 PMCID: PMC4493752 DOI: 10.1007/s11113-014-9350-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Popul Res Policy Rev ISSN: 0167-5923